Harry Styles will be doing double duty on March 14 when he returns to “Saturday Night Live” as both host and musical guest. This will be Styles’ seventh “SNL” appearance.
Last month, Styles announced his fourth studio album, “Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally,” set to be released on March 6. He also announced his new “Together, Together” tour, which will launch this spring.
His tour has over 65 performances across seven cities, including a historic 30-night residency at Madison Square Garden in New York. Styles will also perform in Amsterdam, London, São Paulo, Mexico City, Melbourne and Sydney.
Tickets sold through Ticketmaster were gone almost immediately on the first day of general sale, even though the album has not yet been released. The only track currently available to listen to is “Aperture,” which garnered 12.478 million streams on Spotify on its first day, the biggest global debut for a solo male artist in Spotify history.
Looking back at Harry Styles’ past appearances on ‘SNL’
In 2012, 2013 and 2014, Styles performed alongside his former bandmates in One Direction as the musical guest on the show. He made his debut as a solo musical guest in 2017 and had his first stint as both host and musical guest in 2019. In 2020, Styles had a brief cameo in a cold open sketch, but was neither the official host nor musical guest.
Who will be the next host on ‘SNL’?
SNL will continue its 51st season this Saturday, Feb. 28, with “Heated Rivalry” star Connor Storrie as the host and musical guest Mumford & Sons.
On March 7, Ryan Gosling will host and Gorillaz will appear as the musical guest.
How to watch ‘SNL’
“SNL” is broadcast on NBC and streams live on Peacock at 11:30 p.m. ET/ 8:30 p.m. PT. All previous seasons are also available for watching on Peacock.
Live from New York, it’s Bad Bunny! The Puerto Rican rapper kicked off Season 51 of “Saturday Night Live” on Oct. 4 alongside musical guest Doja Cat. During his monologue, the singer reacted to being selected as the Apple Music Super Bowl LX Halftime Show performer and addressed his critics. “I’m very happy. I’m very happy, and I think everyone is happy about it – even Fox News,” he joked, before an edited clip of spliced-together footage from the network played, which stated: “Bad Bunny is my favorite musician. He should be the next president.” Afterwards, the Grammy winner delivered an empowering message to the Latino community in Spanish, highlighting their contribution to the U.S., and ended by saying in English, “And if you didn’t understand what I just said, you have four months to learn.” Plus, actor Jon Hamm also made a surprise cameo during the rapper’s monologue. You can watch Super Bowl LX Feb. 8 on NBC and Peacock.