My Summer Lair Chapter #338: What Does John Candy Mean To You?
John Candy passed away on March 4, 1994. So it’s time to revisit his legacy and his comedic and cultural contributions.
On this MSL episode writer and musician Paul Myers confirms: “It’s the 75th anniversary of John Candy’s birth. So I’d rather celebrate that than his passing. He would have been 75 and I say should have been 75. So, it’s a great time to celebrate John Candy.”
And to kick off the celebrations Paul Myers has written a fantastic Candy biography. The back of the book reads: “John Candy: A Life in Comedy celebrates the comedian’s unparalleled talent, infectious charm, and generosity of spirit.”
More from John Candy: A Life in Comedy:
“Drawing on extensive research and exclusive interviews with many of Candy’s closest friends and colleagues, including Dan Aykroyd, Chevy Chase, Tom Hanks, Ron Howard, Steve Martin, Catherine O’Hara, Martin Short, and many more, John Candy: A Life in Comedy celebrates the comedian’s unparalleled talent, infectious charm, and generosity of spirit. Through ups and downs, successes and failures, and struggles with anxiety and self-doubt, Candy faced the world with a big smile and a warm demeanour that earned him the love and adoration of fans around the world.”

In this dynamic MSL conversation with Paul Myers he touches upon an underappreciated aspect of John Candy’s legacy.
“Americans love Planes, Trains and Automobiles and Uncle Buck. They don’t go, that’s Toronto’s John Candy. They just see a great character actor, a great character comedian. They have their own associations with John Candy,” Paul tells me reflecting on and comparing the American and Canadian perspectives on John Candy.
John Candy had a singular Canadian impact. On the surface, there are lots of obvious similarities between Canada and the United States of America. But when you’ve traveled through both countries extensively, you realize they are truly unique countries. It’s easy to point out Canadians enjoy poutine and ketchup chips, however that list of notable eh? distinctions should include John Candy.
In this conversation Paul emphasizes context; which I so treasure. He wants to bring contemporary readers into the context of the John Candy era. Because there is a significant you had to be their element to it. I never watched the first 5 seasons of Saturday Night Live in real time from 75 to 80. I never saw the Ramones or Talking Heads live at CBGB. Beatlemania. I read about those massive cultural experiences as historical events…recognizing they have a profound impact on my current pop culture.
But with John Candy, with Second City and SCTV, the sketch comedy revolution, Mike Myers on SNL (yes, Paul’s brother)…I was there. Even if some of it was through reruns. I learned to swim in that comedy wave. When Michael Jordan retired I was a punk kid…I was shocked. I somehow believed Jordan would just play forever. I didn’t fully grasp that no matter how special an era is, it will come to an end.
I’m so thankful for Paul Myers’ biography: John Candy: A Life in Comedy.
John Candy: A Life in Comedy pairs well with the Prime Video John Candy documentary. You can see many of the visuals, including SCTV sketches that Paul writes about. (And you can hear and see the stirring Dan Aykroyd eulogy; which no joke will be one of his greatest performances of all time.)
Paul Myers wisely points out: “I actually think books do a whole different thing. And I’m telling a narrative story that I hope is engaging and something you can take with you and read, but if you wanted to see the visuals instead of doing what I did, which is have to scour YouTube for 3 years; I’m sure the Colin Hanks film is packed with amazing clips. So think of it as the photo section for my book.”
I wonder what John Candy would think and say about all this fuss and turning 75. There are times in his life where it appears he did not know or could not understand just how well loved he truly was. (I’m not not talking about his fans. I mean the people that truly knew John, who worked with him and of course, his family.)
That broke my heart. It’s not quite the same but it’s like when you give a girl a compliment and she kinda freaks out…really? for real?! Yo…it’s all good, you look hot in that dress just say thank you. It’s tragic however, we sometimes like to dictate how we want to be loved to know we are loved…and love doesn’t work like that.
Love is a language. So sometimes it’s like when you visit a strange country where they don’t speak English. It’s hard to communicate for what you want.
This isn’t limited to John Candy. What about his frequent collaborator John Hughes? I wanted insight from Paul Myers about their professional (and maybe even personal) connection. What they did together, often worked so well. Paul nods: “John Candy knew that John Hughes was his guy. If John Hughes had kept making movies and John Candy had lived, who knows what they could have done? And that’s one of the sad questions I ask all the way through the book: what did we lose?”
That all circles back to John Candy: what did we lose?
Grief is one of the weirdest pop culture experiences. Real grief…when you lose somebody you know and you love—a family member—that stays with you. After a while the pain isn’t sharp but the loss…that remains sharp.
It’s hard and weird to grieve famous folks and yet we do it. And maybe that pain never fully goes away?
This episode with Paul Myers covers Steve Martin, Martin Short, Dan Ackroyd, Chevy Chase…countless others. His biography is called John Candy: A Life in Comedy. Highly Recommended Reading.
If you’re a comedy fan, if you grew up in Toronto when Sam the Record Man was on Yonge Street…if you’re a John Candy fan…you gotta get this book into your life.
John Candy lived a blessed life and in turn we got blessed.
Paul Myers @ W • T • F
Host Sammy Younan
Recorded: Wedneday, September 17, 2025 at 4:30 pm (EST)
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