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'You never stop thinking about John Candy': How a pair of projects keep his legacy alive
If there’s a scene that best encapsulates the tragically abbreviated career of John Candy, it’s not necessarily from his time on the sketch-comedy series “SCTV” or from movies like “Stripes” or “Uncle Buck.” It’s a moment in the 1987 comedy-drama “Planes, Trains and Automobiles,” when his reluctant roommate Neal Page (played by Steve Martin) has spent several minutes berating him for his relentless storytelling.
With a lump in his throat, Candy’s wounded character Del Griffith replies that he’s proud of who he is. “I like me,” he says. “My wife likes me. My customers like me. Because I’m the real article — what you see is what you get.”
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How John Candy inspired a young and impressionable Conan O’Brien
The new documentary âJohn Candy: I Like Meâ arrives Friday on Prime Video, with a number of family members, stars, and former colleagues sharing touching tributes to the late actor.
Among the many big names who appear â and there are many: Mel Brooks, Catherine OâHara, Tom Hanks, and Bill Murray, just to name a few â Brookline native Conan OâBrienâs memories of the comedian stand out. OâBrien explains in the film how the Canadian comic and âSecond City Televisionâ alum inspired him, eventually setting OâBrien on a path to pursue late-night TV stardom.
âIâm at that impressionable age. Iâm a comedy freak, and here comes John Candy, and Iâm like, âWho is that guy?ââ OâBrien says in the documentary, later pointing to Candyâs âSCTVâ Yellowbelly sketch, about a cowardly soldier in the Old West, as âthe Oppenheimer blastâ for his comedic inspirations. âThat wiped my mind clean, that you could do a sketch where someone shoots a mother and a child in the back while a fun song plays.â
