Conan O'Brien Says He Once Caught Tom Hanks Sleeping 'Like Christ' in theSNLWriters' Room

Mar. 15, 2025

Tom Hanks on ‘SNL’ in 1992.Photo:Alan Singer/NBCU Photo Bank

SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE – Episode 19 – Pictured: (l-r) Kevin Nealon, Chris Farley, Bruce Springsteen, Tom Hanks on May 9, 2010

Alan Singer/NBCU Photo Bank

Conan O’Brienis revealing the hilarious wayTom Hanksrecharged while prepping for one of his many hosting gigs onSaturday Night Live.Hanks joined the comedian and formerSNLwriter on a recent episode of his podcast,Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend. O’Brien praised theHerestar, who has guest hosted NBC’s long-running sketch comedy show a total of 10 times since 1985.“He would show up, caffeinated, ready to go, like, ‘Hey! Hey, everybody. What have you got?’ ” O’Brien said.“Most hosts, they hang around a little bit. They sense the sadness, the desperation, they smell the odors, and they leave. Then they come back refreshed at the read-through,” O’Brien explained of the week-long writing process leading up to each episode ofSNL.Tom Hanks on ‘SNL’ in 2006.Dana Edelson/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via GettyHanks however, stuck around. But even the caffeine and enthusiasm couldn’t see the actor through one late-night writing session in 1988, according to O’Brien.“I came out, and there’s this giant [table] in the conference room, and you were sitting there, and you had been working on your own idea," O’Brien told Hanks. “They had shoved all the tables together, and you were lying on the tables like Christ, with some pages over your eyes, because you were trying to catch a couple of winks before you woke up and got back to writing at three in the morning.”Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.“I’d always heard that that was the great power of the hang,” Hanks said. “You got there, and all night Monday, and all night Tuesday, you’re going. Now they kinda take the host around, but I wanted to get in there and mix it up.”Hanks’ willingness to “mix it up” with theSNLwriters — not to mention his uncanny power-napping technique — has paid off. Not only has he returned to the show multiple times over the decades, his “David S. Pumpkin” Halloween sketch is one of the show’s standouts.At the same time, Hanks explained that he’s learned not to be too insistent upon putting his own ideas on air.“You say, ‘Hey, I have some ideas for some for some sketches,’ and every writer goes, ‘Well, that’s just great. You have ideas that will rob us of the opportunity to get our ideas read. How wonderful,’ ” he told O’Brien.His takeaway? “You’re the host,” Hanks said. “Concentrate on the monologue and then walk away. But it’s a great hang.”

Conan O’Brienis revealing the hilarious wayTom Hanksrecharged while prepping for one of his many hosting gigs onSaturday Night Live.

Hanks joined the comedian and formerSNLwriter on a recent episode of his podcast,Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend. O’Brien praised theHerestar, who has guest hosted NBC’s long-running sketch comedy show a total of 10 times since 1985.

“He would show up, caffeinated, ready to go, like, ‘Hey! Hey, everybody. What have you got?’ ” O’Brien said.

“Most hosts, they hang around a little bit. They sense the sadness, the desperation, they smell the odors, and they leave. Then they come back refreshed at the read-through,” O’Brien explained of the week-long writing process leading up to each episode ofSNL.

Tom Hanks on ‘SNL’ in 2006.Dana Edelson/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty

SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE – Episode 17 – Aired 05/06/2006 – Pictured: (l-r) Tom Hanks as Eli, Horatio Sanz as Rick, Amy Poehler as Kaitlin during “Kaitlin’s Iguana” skit on May 6, 2006

Dana Edelson/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty

Hanks however, stuck around. But even the caffeine and enthusiasm couldn’t see the actor through one late-night writing session in 1988, according to O’Brien.

“I came out, and there’s this giant [table] in the conference room, and you were sitting there, and you had been working on your own idea,” O’Brien told Hanks. “They had shoved all the tables together, and you were lying on the tables like Christ, with some pages over your eyes, because you were trying to catch a couple of winks before you woke up and got back to writing at three in the morning.”

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

“I’d always heard that that was the great power of the hang,” Hanks said. “You got there, and all night Monday, and all night Tuesday, you’re going. Now they kinda take the host around, but I wanted to get in there and mix it up.”

Hanks’ willingness to “mix it up” with theSNLwriters — not to mention his uncanny power-napping technique — has paid off. Not only has he returned to the show multiple times over the decades, his “David S. Pumpkin” Halloween sketch is one of the show’s standouts.

At the same time, Hanks explained that he’s learned not to be too insistent upon putting his own ideas on air.

“You say, ‘Hey, I have some ideas for some for some sketches,’ and every writer goes, ‘Well, that’s just great. You have ideas that will rob us of the opportunity to get our ideas read. How wonderful,’ ” he told O’Brien.

His takeaway? “You’re the host,” Hanks said. “Concentrate on the monologue and then walk away. But it’s a great hang.”

source: people.com