Once you present up on your first day of faculty, you by no means know who your roommate will probably be. You might be assigned a slovenly celebration animal who makes your life depressing or a studious bookworm you don’t see all semester.
Or perhaps you share a set with a younger Adam Sandler, earlier than both of your careers have even begun, and collectively you go on to create a few of the most profitable and enduring comedies of the final 30 years.
That’s the unbelievable however blessedly easy origin story of Tim Herlihy, a onetime enterprise and accounting scholar turned practising lawyer, whose screenplay credit for his pal Sandler embody “Billy Madison,” concerning the endearing layabout; the romantic comedy “The Wedding Singer”; and “Happy Gilmore,” about an awesome (however ill-tempered) hockey participant who discovers he’s an awesome (however ill-tempered) golfer.
Over a decades-long partnership, Herlihy and Sandler have realized their achievements largely by following wherever their very own goofy muses lead them. However now they’re about to attempt one thing they’ve nearly by no means executed: a sequel.
“Happy Gilmore 2,” which Netflix launched on Friday, finds its titular dangerous boy properly into maturity and extra mellowed out. Within the star-studded follow-up — whose solid additionally consists of Dangerous Bunny, Travis Kelce and Benny Safdie — Gilmore is extra involved with the wants of his household and questioning what his legacy will probably be.
Benito Antonio Martinez Ocasio, a.okay.a. Dangerous Bunny, left, and Adam Sandler in “Happy Gilmore 2.”
(Scott Yamano / Netflix)
Herlihy mentioned the thought of a “Happy Gilmore” sequel is one which he and Sandler resisted over time however embraced in “a weak moment.”
“The reason we made it is the same reason I have a dog,” Herlihy mentioned. “I’m like, ‘No, I’m not getting a dog. No, I’m not getting a dog.’ And then one day you’re like, ‘Well, what if I had a dog?’ And then two days later, you have a dog.”
As he appears over his profession, Herlihy is as stunned as anybody to seek out himself in a long-lasting and prolific inventive partnership. However he’s not too deeply sweating questions on why it really works or what all of it means.
“It’s a fool’s errand to try and cultivate a persona,” Herlihy mentioned. “At a certain point, I’m having the most fun with Adam. I’m doing the best work with Adam. I’m not making compromises with Adam.”
Herlihy, 58, who was born in Brooklyn and raised in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., spoke over lunch earlier this month at a West Village bistro not removed from the New York College dormitory the place he and Sandler met as freshmen in 1984.
As Herlihy recalled their fateful encounter from the day he moved into the dorm, he remembered being impressed by Sandler’s obvious self-assurance. “He seemed to know his way around, and his mother was cleaning the bathroom,” Herlihy mentioned. “I’m like, they put me with a sophomore?”
Sandler, in a video interview, mentioned that Herlihy struck him as equally assured. “I said, ‘What do you want to do?’” Sandler recalled. “He goes, ‘I think I want to be a billionaire.’ Wow — OK. I didn’t even think that was possible.”
They shortly bonded over their mutual love of films like “Caddyshack” and different shared tastes in well-liked tradition. “I showed up with a Police T-shirt and he had a Rodney Dangerfield T-shirt,” Sandler mentioned. “We were both the same size, so we traded. I said, ‘Can I have that Rodney shirt?’ He said, ‘If you give me that Police shirt.’”
Adam Sandler and Tim Herlihy met at NYU and bonded over their shared tastes in popular culture. “At a certain point, I’m having the most fun with Adam. I’m doing the best work with Adam,” Herlihy mentioned.
(Justin Jun Lee / For The Instances)
Extra crucially, when the fledgling Sandler mentioned he was going to start out performing stand-up comedy and wanted materials, Herlihy used a weekend’s value of practice rides to and from Poughkeepsie to scribble down some jokes for him. (At this time, Herlihy claims to not bear in mind any particular jokes. “It wasn’t the Algonquin Round Table at that point,” he mentioned. “It’s probably even worse than you’re imagining.”)
Within the years that adopted, as Herlihy attended and graduated from NYU’s regulation college and entered the skilled world, he continued to produce Sandler with concepts and materials. When Sandler landed at “Saturday Night Live,” Herlihy helped him devise sketch characters just like the slack-jawed Canteen Boy. Collectively, they wrote the screenplay for what grew to become Sandler’s 1995 starring automobile “Billy Madison,” buying and selling pages by fax whereas Herlihy typed late at night time on a pc at his regulation agency.
“Happy Gilmore,” launched the next 12 months, was began earlier than “Billy Madison” was launched, however writing a second film proved no simpler for Herlihy and Sandler after having written their first.
“Your first movie, you put your whole heart and soul into, and every joke you ever thought of,” Herlihy defined. “Then when you have to do another one, you’re like, what are we going to do?”
Nonetheless, Herlihy, who later grew to become an “SNL” head author himself, saved going from one Sandler movie to the following — “Happy Gilmore” begat “The Wedding Singer” which begat “The Waterboy” — till he seemed up and realized he was a movement image screenwriter.
“Around the time of ‘Mr. Deeds,’ we started having multiple things happening,” Herlihy mentioned. “I think I’m going back to the one-at-a-time thing, more out of laziness than anything else. I can only handle one at a time.”
For Herlihy, that portfolio included a sequel to “Happy Gilmore” after the unique — which was a modest $40 million hit in 1996 — went on to develop into a cult phenomenon.
As Christopher McDonald — who has acted in some 200 totally different movies and TV reveals however remains to be acknowledged as Completely happy Gilmore’s malaprop-spouting nemesis, Shooter McGavin — defined, there’s one purpose for the movie’s endurance.
“Television, television, television,” McDonald mentioned. “It went crazy. People started watching and going, ‘Oh my god, get the grandkids in here. This is sick — this is generational.’ Everybody laughs, and it still holds up.”
Christopher McDonald, left, reprises his position as Shooter McGavin, Completely happy Gilmore’s (Adam Sandler) nemesis, within the sequel.
(Scott Yamano / Netflix)
However writing “Happy Gilmore 2” proved as difficult as its predecessor. Herlihy and Sandler spent lengthy days within the foyer of Sandler’s manufacturing firm, Completely happy Madison, shifting index playing cards round a bulletin board, toying with and tossing out plot factors, attempting to determine what might encourage Gilmore to choose up his golf equipment once more at this stage of his life. (This time, he’s attempting to satisfy the ballet-school desires of his daughter, performed by Sandler’s real-life daughter Sunny.)
The manufacturing additionally required Herlihy to be on set every day and give you new traces as wanted, as he did approach again on the unique “Happy Gilmore.”
Julie Bowen, the “Modern Family” star who performs Gilmore’s love curiosity, Virginia, in each films, recalled Herlihy as mild and good-natured on that first movie — hardly the kind of man who might have helped conceive a now-famous “happy place” fantasy sequence that had her toting two pitchers of beer whereas wearing white lingerie. “I never felt objectified or stupid,” Bowen mentioned of that scene. “I felt like I was part of one of the best jokes ever.”
On “Happy Gilmore 2,” Bowen mentioned she noticed Sandler and Herlihy working in even higher synchronicity, scouring each take and each joke to get it excellent.
“If they see something not working,” she mentioned, “they’re like, ‘Give me a second,’ and they’ll change it. They don’t think that they’ve written Shakespeare and you can’t change a comma. It’s, let’s do the funniest thing that we can.”
Kyle Newacheck, who directed “Happy Gilmore 2,” mentioned it was each thrilling and intimidating to be working along with Sandler and Herlihy, whose title he acknowledged from Sandler’s movies and comedy albums like “They’re All Gonna Laugh at You!”
“You can tell that they go way back,” mentioned Newacheck, who beforehand directed Sandler in “Murder Mystery.” “It’s one of those relationships where somebody can move a certain way and you know that they don’t particularly like that, or they have another pitch or they think they can beat it.”
Newacheck added, “I got an incredible opportunity to sit there with, arguably, the two people that shaped my comedic membrane, and then to add what I thought could be funny. There’s nothing better than saying something that makes them laugh.”
So far as Sandler is worried, there may be one easy purpose why his partnership with Herlihy has lasted all this time: “He’s just a good, good man, funnier than everybody. I love him so much. I love every conversation with him. It’s exciting to hear what his thoughts are on whatever’s going on.”
Going all the way in which again to their first assembly, Sandler mentioned, “I was like, boy, this guy’s quiet. He doesn’t talk very much. And then throughout the year, I was like, he’s funnier than everybody.”
However from Herlihy’s standpoint, the collaboration thrives on contrasts between the 2 longtime associates. Sandler, he mentioned, is the workaholic of the duo, working with different administrators, making dramas and comedies and producing movies for different writers and performers.
“The more he’s doing on a movie, the more he’s happy,” Herlihy mentioned. “I just like time off.”
Herlihy additionally has a novel tie again to their previous stomping grounds at “SNL”: his son Martin, a member of the comedy trio Please Don’t Destroy, is a author and performer there, and so they sometimes verify in to share tales and recommendation.
When Dangerous Bunny, who has made a number of appearances on “SNL,” together with as host and musical visitor, was being thought of for a job in “Happy Gilmore 2,” he requested Martin about him. “He said he was really funny, but Martin never says anything bad about anybody,” Herlihy mentioned.
(As he was completely satisfied to find, “Bad Bunny had tremendous capabilities that we were not aware of,” Herlihy mentioned.)
Whether or not his personal profession is finally outlined by his shut affiliation with Sandler, Herlihy mentioned, will probably be as much as historical past and out of his fingers. However he mentioned such distinctions had been unlikely to matter in the long term, pointing to the truth that although he’s a screenwriter, he not often remembers who wrote the films he has seen.
“I don’t know anybody who wrote the Marx Brothers movies,” he mentioned. “I don’t know who wrote ‘Kramer vs. Kramer.’”
Then his thoughts went to an much more absurd and over-the-top state of affairs.
“What if you’re a great movie star, you have a fantastic career, and then when you’re 70 years old, you get diarrhea on Sunset Boulevard and then your obituary is ‘Diarrhea Actor’?”
The underside line, Herlihy mentioned: “You have no control over your obituary. Just enjoy your family and have some laughs.”