For her work on the 1974 Lily Tomlin special, Lily, Miller earned an Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Writing in a Comedy, Variety or Music Special. One of the special's producers, Lorne Michaels, was assembling the writing staff for Saturday Night Live, and he asked Miller to join. Though she at first declined, she was convinced to join the show's original writing staff at the age of 25. She was one of only three women on the staff, along with Anne Beatts and Rosie Shuster.[1]
On SNL, Miller's writing appeared in the "Judy Miller" and "Rhonda Weiss" recurring sketches, both for Gilda Radner. She collaborated with Steve Martin and Dan Aykroyd on the "Festrunk Brothers" ("Wild and Crazy Guys") sketches. She also wrote the classic "Dancing in the Dark" sketch for Radner and Martin in 1978. For her work on SNL she won two Emmys and received three other nominations, as well as winning several Writers Guild of America Awards.[1]
Miller was diagnosed with advanced breast cancer[6] in 1992. She returned to the writing staff of SNL later that year. In 1998, she wrote an episode about breast cancer for Murphy Brown, winning a Humanitas Prize.[7] In 2001, she won her third Writers Guild Award for SNL's 25th anniversary show, Saturday Night Live 25.[1]
Book
Miller is the author of How to Be a Middle-Aged Babe (published in 2007), "a bawdy, smart satire of earnest women's magazines and self-help books".[8]
^Hemmingway, Susan (May 11, 2008). "Life As A Boomer Babe". The Tampa Tribune. Florida, Tampa. p. Getaway - 10. Retrieved April 29, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
^Bancroft, Colette (January 12, 2008). "Funny, isn't it?". Tampa Bay Times. Florida, St. Petersburg. p. E - 1. Retrieved April 29, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.