Edie Baskin

Edie Baskin Bronson
Born
Edie Baskin

1945 or 1946 (age 79–80)[1]
Occupations
Years active1975 to present
Known forSaturday Night Live
SpouseRichard "Skip" Bronson
FatherBurt Baskin
Relatives

Edie Baskin Bronson (born c. 1946)[1] is an American photographer and art director.

She was Saturday Night Live's resident photographer from the show's premiere in 1975 until 1999.[2] She produced the pictures of New York City nightlife and portraits of the show's cast that appeared during the show's original title sequence, as well as portraits of the guest hosts that were displayed during each episode's opening and commercial bumpers.[3][4]

Early life

Baskin was raised in Studio City, Los Angeles, in a Reform Jewish household.[1][5] She is the daughter of Burt Baskin (1913–1967), co-founder of the Baskin-Robbins ice cream parlor chain, and Shirley Baskin (née Robbins, 1920–2022), sister of Baskin-Robbins co-founder Irv Robbins.[5] Her mother later married entrepreneur Isadore Familian.[6]

Prior to her career in photography, Baskin worked as a tour guide at Paramount Studios, as well as a fashion model.[7][8] She appeared in a small role as an unnamed model in Live a Little, Love a Little (1968), a musical comedy film starring Elvis Presley.[9]

She began taking photographs while visiting her brother, Richard Baskin, on the set of Robert Altman's Nashville, where he served as the musical director and produced the film's soundtrack.[10][11]

She later relocated to New York City, realizing an aspiration she had held since adolescence, drawn by the appeal of the city's bohemian subculture.[1]

Career

From the show's premiere in 1975 to 1999, Baskin was the chief photographer of Saturday Night Live (SNL).[2] Baskin was friends with the show's creator, Lorne Michaels, whom she had met in Los Angeles during a poker game.[12] While in New York, Baskin showed Michaels some of her photographs and asked if she could be part of the show he was creating.[12] Baskin introduced Michaels to Paul Simon, whom she was dating during SNL's inception.[8] Simon later became a frequent guest on the show and developed a close friendship with Michaels.[8]

Baskin's portraits of both the show's cast and guest hosts were featured weekly on the show, as well as her shots of New York city featured during the initial title sequence.[3][4] The photographs, taken in black-and-white, were hand-tinted with pastels, markers, pencils and oil paint.[1][12] She also co-authored the book Saturday Night Live: The First Twenty Years (1994) with editor Michael Cader.[4]

Photographer Mary Ellen Matthews joined the staff of SNL in 1993 as an assistant to Baskin, and took over from her after the 1999 season.[13] Matthews has referred to Baskin as her "hero and mentor."[2]

In addition to her work on SNL, Baskin's photographs have appeared in the title sequences of such shows as Steve Martin's NBC comedy special Steve Martin's Best Show Ever (1981), the CBS sitcom Square Pegs, and the PBS anthology series American Playhouse.[14] Baskin was nominated for two Emmy Awards in the category of Outstanding Individual Achievement in Graphic Design and Title Sequences: once in 1976 for her work on SNL (while it was still known as NBC's Saturday Night), and in 1982 for her work on Square Pegs.[15]

Baskin's photographs have appeared in such publications as Newsweek, Time, Vogue, New York, The Village Voice, The New York Times, Rolling Stone, as well as album covers, such as Simon's Still Crazy After All These Years, the Simon & Garfunkel single "My Little Town", Cheryl Lynn's In The Night, and the Streets of Fire soundtrack.[3][10][16]

Subsequent to her tenure at SNL, Baskin returned to the Los Angeles area.[17] Her photographs were included in Springsteen: Troubadour of the Highway, an exhibition of Bruce Springsteen photos, videos and memorabilia, that toured the US from 2002 to 2004.[18][19] In 2006 she exhibited Edie Baskin: New Native Americans featuring photographs of contemporary Native Americans.[17]

Live From My Studio: The Art of Edie Baskin, a retrospective of Baskin's work, is to be released in September of 2025.[20]

Personal life

Baskin is married to businessman and real estate developer Richard "Skip" Bronson.[21] They live in Beverly Hills, California.[22]

In 2018, Baskin and her husband received the "Visionary Award", presented to them by the Neurosurgery Division at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles for their financial support of the center's Neurovascular Research Program.[21][23] The centre also named their cerebral blood flow laboratory the Edie Baskin Bronson and Richard Skip Bronson CBF Laboratory.[24]

Bibliography

  • Cader, Michael; Baskin, Edie (1994). Saturday Night Live: The First Twenty Years. Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 9780395708958.
  • Baskin, Edie (September 30, 2025). Live From My Studio: The Art of Edie Baskin. ACC Art Books. ISBN 9781788843430.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Fessier, Bruce (February 13, 1981). "PS Notebook". The Desert Sun. p. C3. Retrieved May 3, 2025 – via Newspapers.com. She grew up in Studio City as a rebellious rich kid who wanted to live in New York, the center of the Bohemian movement, since she was 13. Finally she did and today, at 35, she's living in an environment where she can "do her own thing."
  2. ^ a b c "SNL photographer creates 'bumpers'". Telegraph-Journal. January 23, 2015. p. C8. ProQuest 1647537310. Retrieved May 3, 2025. Matthews joined SNL 22 years ago as assistant to Edie Baskin, the show's original photographer who in 1975 had established its enduring visual identity. Matthews calls her "my hero and my mentor." When Baskin left in 1999, Matthews took over.
  3. ^ a b c Tropiano, Stephen; Ginsberg, Steven (September 17, 2024). The SNL Companion. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 29. ISBN 9781493072613 – via Google Books. Edie Baskin (daughter of Burt Baskin , cofounder of Baskin - Robbins) contributed the photographs of New York City nightlife for the opening titles: a couple eating pizza, a cabbie eating watermelon, two cops on a street corner, and a couple [writers Michael O'Donoghue and Anne Beatts] having dinner, etc. As Baskin recalled in Shales and Miller's "Uncensored History", publicity photos of George Carlin were used during the "bumpers" (that's television lingo for the images that appear between the show and the commercial or vice versa).
  4. ^ a b c MacDonald, Patrick (October 27, 1994). "Oh ! No ooooo...it's Saturday Night Live's 20-year retrospective, a book that's almost as much fun as the show itself". The Hamilton Spectator. p. 10. ProQuest 269733593. Retrieved May 3, 2025. Yet the book Saturday Night Live: The First Twenty Years, has captured the look of the TV show. That's because Edie Baskin, one of SNL's production designers, whose title sequences and hand-tinted portraits of the guest hosts established the show's graphic style, supplied most of the photographs. She is listed as co-author of the book, along with editor Michael Cader.
  5. ^ a b "SoCal Jews — Flavoring the national taste". Jewish Journal. August 1, 2013. Retrieved May 3, 2025.
  6. ^ Altman, Larry (October 31, 2022). "Remembering KCET Co-Founder Shirley Baskin Familian (1920-2022)". PBS SoCal. Retrieved May 3, 2025.
  7. ^ Torrence, Dean (September 13, 2016). Surf City : the Jan & Dean story. SelectBooks. p. 110. ISBN 9781590793954 – via Internet Archive.
  8. ^ a b c Hill, Doug; Weingrad, Jeff (1986). Saturday Night : A Backstage History of Saturday Night Live. Beech Tree Books. p. 68. ISBN 9780688050993 – via Internet Archive.
  9. ^ Krasfur, Richard P (1976). The American Film Institute catalog of motion pictures [produced in the United States], F6 : Feature films, 1961-1970. R.R. Bowker. p. 621. ISBN 9780835204408 – via Internet Archive.
  10. ^ a b "Edie Baskins' work is more than alive". The Stuart News. January 2, 1980. p. D1. Retrieved May 3, 2025 – via Newspapers.com. Edie Baskin started taking photographs when she visited her brother on the set of Robert Altman's "Nashville," Since then her photos have appeared in "Newsweek", "Time", "Rolling Stone", "Vogue", "New York", the "Village Voice", "The New York Times", "Oui" and "Seventeen".
  11. ^ Campbell, Mary (June 26, 1975). "Actor's Songs Do Not Please Nashville Set". The Harlan Daily Enterprise. Associated Press. p. 13. Retrieved May 3, 2025 – via Google Books.
  12. ^ a b c "See What 'Saturday Night Live' Looks Like The Rest Of The Week". All Things Considered. NPR. February 13, 2015. ProQuest 2645224381. Retrieved May 3, 2025. LYNN NEARY: Edie Baskin's career at "Saturday Night Live" got its start at an LA poker game where she met Lorne Michaels. After he moved to New York to start a new late-night TV program, she showed him some of her photographs. . . LYNN NEARY: Baskin helped create the show's signature look with her nighttime shots of New York City and portraits of the cast and guest hosts, which she colorized by hand. EDIE BASKIN: I used markers, pencils, oils, colored chalk.
  13. ^ Zulkey, Claire (April 12, 2013). "The Mary Ellen Matthews Interview". WBEZ Chicago. Retrieved May 3, 2025.
  14. ^ Edie Baskin at IMDb
  15. ^ "Edie Baskin : Awards & Nominations". televisionacademy.com. Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Retrieved May 3, 2025.
  16. ^ Edie-Baskin discography at Discogs
  17. ^ a b "Gallery shows photos of Native Americans". Idaho Statesman. February 12, 2006. p. 42. Retrieved May 3, 2025 – via Newspapers.com. Photographer Edie Baskin unveils her new work of contemporary Native Americans. . . She is a resident of Los Angeles and Sun Valley
  18. ^ Schumacher, Mary Louise (September 27, 2002). "Exhibit parallels musical imagery". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. p. 16E. ProQuest 261704109. Retrieved May 3, 2025. The "Springsteen: Troubadour of the Highway" show, open through Jan. 19, presents the work of visual artists, mostly photographers, who have interpreted those themes in Springsteen's work, usually for album covers, posters or videos. . . Other artists in the exhibit include Annie Leibovitz, David Gahr, Joel Bernstein, David Michael Kennedy, Lynn Goldsmith, Edie Baskin, David Rose and Frank Stefanko.
  19. ^ "Springsteen's love of road explored". Today. Associated press. June 11, 2004. Retrieved May 3, 2025.
  20. ^ Baskin, Edie (September 30, 2025). Live From My Studio: The Art of Edie Baskin. ACC Art Books. ISBN 9781788843430.
  21. ^ a b "Starwood Property Trust (STWD: $19.44) climbs 2.5% against the trend" (Press release). News Bites US - NYSE. May 31, 2024. ProQuest 3062728870. Retrieved May 3, 2025. Richard D. Bronson has been a director of [Starwood Property Trust] since its inception in 2009. . . Mr. Bronson is on the Advisory Board of the Neurosurgery Division at UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles, and he and his wife, Edie Baskin Bronson, were the recipients of the department's 2018 "Visionary Award".
  22. ^ Baldwin, Alec (May 3, 2024). "Introducing: Our Way with Paul Anka & Skip Bronson". Here's The Thing with Alec Baldwin. 40:03 minutes in. iHeart. Retrieved May 3, 2025. So when Edie and I were first together, we lived in Fairfield County and Paul Newman lived close by. We moved in two thousand to Beverly Hills. The home that we live in was Ella Fitzgerald's house.
  23. ^ "UCLA Neurosurgery Goes Hog-Wild Over Actor-Comedian Tim Allen; Film And TV Star To Receive Rodney Dangerfield Legacy Award" (Press release). Targeted News Service. September 5, 2007. ProQuest 468226190. Retrieved May 3, 2025. In addition, Edie Baskin Bronson and Skip Bronson have been named Honorary Chairman's Sponsors in recognition of their profound commitment to UCLA Neurosurgery. The Bronsons have demonstrated extraordinary generosity to Dr. Martin by supporting his Neurovascular Research Program, an internationally recognized research initiative for the management of vascular diseases of the brain and spinal cord.
  24. ^ "Neurotrauma & Neuro Critical Care: Edie Baskin Bronson and Richard Skip Bronson CBF Laboratory". UCLA Health. Retrieved May 3, 2025.