If any state had the right to claim Betty White as its Beloved Elder, it would be Minnesota. She played one of us in her two most iconic roles -- happy homemaker Sue Ann Nivens, who scandalized Minneapolis in "The Mary Tyler Moore Show," and naive Rose Nylund, whose St. Olaf roots informed her every earnest reaction on "The Golden Girls."
But these days, everyone wants to adopt the comic legend. At age 88, White has reluctantly agreed to host next weekend's edition of "Saturday Night Live," a gig sandwiched between her scene-stealing turn in "The Proposal" and the start of her umpteenth sitcom, "Hot in Cleveland," which debuts in June on TV Land.
Last week she took time to talk about the pressures of live TV, the Facebook groundswell that led to "SNL" and the reasons she's forever connected to Minnesota.
QWhat did you think about the Facebook campaign to have you host the show?
AAt first, I thought people were putting me on. I told my agent, "Please say thank you, but no thank you." I'd rather watch it than do it. But he insisted, and I trust his judgment.
QWhat scares you the most about it?
AThe fact that you work from cue cards. I've never been able to do that. I either memorize everything or I ad lib, and I know that won't be possible with this, because the script changes at the last minute. I just hope the print is big enough so I don't have to wear my glasses.
QAny nightmares from your past experiences doing live TV?