1990–1995: Saturday Night Live Along with
Chris Rock, Farley was one of the new
Saturday Night Live cast members announced in early 1990. Popular characters performed by Farley included
Matt Foley, an over-the-top
motivational speaker who frequently reminded other characters that he was "living in a van down by the river!" The character was created by
Bob Odenkirk when he and Farley were performers at Second City. The character's name came from a longtime friend of Farley's who became a Catholic priest and currently serves as pastor at St. James Catholic Church in
Arlington Heights, Illinois. In early renditions of the character, Farley used other names, depending on whom he knew in the audience, until the real-life Foley went to the show and had his name used, at which point Farley felt the name best suited the character and refused to change it. Some of the mannerisms of the character were a combination of the positions Farley noticed his rugby teammates took on the pitch coupled with his high school football coach's habit of squatting down when giving pep talks and the voice his father used when he was angry. Other famous Farley characters included Todd O'Connor of
Bill Swerski's Superfans, a group of stereotypical Chicagoans who repeatedly shouted
"da Bears!"; a would-be
Chippendales dancer, in
a famous sketch that paired him with guest host
Patrick Swayze; one of the "
Gap Girls", who worked together at a local mall; a stereotypical
lunch lady, to the theme of "Lunchlady Land"' performed by Adam Sandler; Bennett Brauer, a
Weekend Update commentator who often divulged his personal and hygienic problems via
air quotes; and himself on
The Chris Farley Show, a talk show in which Farley "interviewed" the guest with poorly conceived questions or trailed off about subjects not germane to the guest. Some of these characters were brought to
SNL from his days at Second City. Farley also performed impersonations of
Tom Arnold (who gave Farley's eulogy at his private funeral),
Andrew Giuliani,
Jerry Garcia,
Meat Loaf,
Norman Schwarzkopf,
Dom DeLuise,
Roger Ebert,
Carnie Wilson,
Newt Gingrich,
Mindy Cohn,
Mama Cass,
Hank Williams Jr., and
Rush Limbaugh. Off-screen, Farley was well known for his pranks in the offices of
Saturday Night Live. Sandler and Farley would make late-night prank phone calls from the
SNL offices in
Rockefeller Center, with Sandler speaking in an old woman's voice and Farley farting into the phone and
mooning cars from a limousine, and even once defecating out a 17th floor window. He was also known to frequently get naked and do various stunts for laughs, including imitating
Jame "Buffalo Bill" Gumb from the then-current film
The Silence of the Lambs. Rock once claimed that he probably saw Farley's genitals more than Farley's girlfriend did. Farley, alongside Sandler, was
fired by NBC in 1995.
1991–1997: Film career During his time on
SNL, Farley appeared in the comedy films ''
Wayne's World, Wayne's World 2, Coneheads, Airheads, and had an uncredited role in Billy Madison. He also appeared in the music video for the Red Hot Chili Peppers single "Soul to Squeeze", which was featured on the soundtrack to Coneheads''. After Farley and most of his fellow cast members were released from their contracts at
Saturday Night Live following the
1994–95 season, Farley began focusing on his film career. In his first two major films,
Tommy Boy and
Black Sheep, he starred with
SNL colleague and close friend
David Spade. These were a success at the domestic
box office, earning around $32 million each and gaining a large
cult following on
home video. The two films established Farley as a relatively
bankable star, and he was given the title role of
Beverly Hills Ninja, which finished in first place at the box office on its opening weekend. Farley was particularly dissatisfied with
Black Sheep, an attempt by the studio to recapture the chemistry in
Tommy Boy, and which was only 60 pages into the script when the project was green-lit. As a result, he relapsed on the night of the premiere, which required further rehab before he could begin work on
Beverly Hills Ninja. His final completed films —
Almost Heroes and
Dirty Work — were posthumously released in May and June 1998, respectively.
1996–2022: Unfinished projects Farley was originally cast as the voice of the
title character in the animated film
Shrek (2001), recording 85% (or 95% by some accounts) of the character's dialogue, but he died just before the voice-over was completed. Farley's former
SNL castmate
Mike Myers replaced him in the role, and insisted Shrek's lines be rewritten. The original version of Shrek was more like Farley himself, according to his brother. Additionally, in
Dana Carvey and
David Spade's podcast
Fly on the Wall tribute episode to the 25th anniversary of Chris's death,
John Farley said he had been approached by the studio to complete Chris's lines due to his voice sounding almost identical to his brother's. While lamenting he wished he had completed the film for Chris, John admitted he just could not bring himself to do it at the time, even though Chris had five days left of line readings. Farley was slated for another voice role in
Dinosaur (2000) as a young male
Brachiosaurus named Sorbus who, despite his gigantic stature, was frightened of heights. After his death, the character was rewritten as Baylene, an elderly female
Brachiosaurus voiced by
Joan Plowright. At the time of his death, Farley had been in talks to co-star with
Vince Vaughn in
The Gelfin, and to star in a biographical film about comedian
Fatty Arbuckle to be written by
David Mamet.
Jim Carrey's role in the 1996 film
The Cable Guy was originally intended for Farley, but scheduling conflicts forced him to decline. Farley was also offered the role of Ishmael (eventually played by
Randy Quaid) in
Kingpin, though he was forced by Paramount to turn it down to honor his commitment to star in
Black Sheep. Farley was slated to appear in a third
Ghostbusters film, which was at the time intended to be about a new trio of Ghostbusters taking on overpopulation in Hell.
Dav Pilkey, author of the children's book series
Captain Underpants, had wanted Farley to play the title role in a potential live-action television series based on the books. Farley had been in talks for the lead in an adaptation of the novel
A Confederacy of Dunces. Farley even expressed interest in portraying
Atuk in an adaptation of the novel
The Incomparable Atuk. Both of these shelved projects, along with the Arbuckle biopic, have been alleged to be cursed as Farley,
John Belushi, and
John Candy were each attached to both roles, and all three died before any of the films entered production. Farley was written in mind for a part in
Grown Ups during early conception of the film. Development was put on hold due to his death and would not be released until 2010 with
Kevin James in his place as Eric Lamonsoff. Two months before his death, Farley had a conversation with Spade about a hypothetical third film that would have starred the duo (based on the box office successes of
Tommy Boy and
Black Sheep). Although nothing was ever formalized, director
Stephen Surjik developed a script for a film named
Tree with both Farley and Spade in mind. The plot was described as "...involving a low-level White House employee who goes to the Pacific Northwest in search of a presidential Christmas tree. The White House staffer hooks up with a quirky truck driver and hijinks ensue", presumably with Spade as the White House employee and Farley as the truck driver. ==Personal life==