Among Candy's memorable characterizations for SCTV were unscrupulous street-beat TV personality Johnny LaRue, 3-D horror
auteur Doctor Tongue,
sycophantic and easily amused talk-show sidekick
William B. Williams, and quiescent Melonville Mayor Tommy Shanks. Other characters included cheerful Leutonian clarinetist Yosh Shmenge, who was half of the
Happy Wanderers and the subject of the
mockumentary The Last Polka, folksy fishin' musician Gil Fisher, handsome if accent-challenged TV actor Steve Roman, hapless children's entertainer Mr. Messenger, corrupt
soap opera doctor William Wainwright and
smut merchant Harry, "the Guy With the Snake on His Face".
Mimicry was one of Candy's talents, which he used often at
SCTV. Celebrities impersonated by Candy include
Jerry Mathers,
Divine (Glen Milstead),
Orson Welles,
Julia Child,
Richard Burton,
Darryl Sittler,
Luciano Pavarotti,
Jimmy the Greek,
Tip O'Neill,
Don Rickles,
Curly Howard,
Merlin Olsen,
Jackie Gleason,
Tom Selleck,
Gordon Pinsent,
Ed Asner, Doug McGrath and
Hervé Villechaize.
By 1980, he began a more active film career having appeared as a soldier in
Steven Spielberg's big-budget comedy
1941 and had a supporting role as a police chief in
The Blues Brothers. A year later, Candy played the lovable, mild-mannered Army recruit Dewey Oxberger in 1981's
Stripes, one of the most successful films of the year. In the next two years, Candy did a small cameo in Harold Ramis'
National Lampoon's Vacation, appeared on
Saturday Night Live twice (hosting in 1983) while still appearing on
SCTV.
In 1983, Candy was approached to play the character of accountant Louis Tully in
Ghostbusters (completed and released 1984), but ultimately did not get the role due to his conflicting ideas of how to play the character; the part went instead to
Rick Moranis. (However, Candy was one of the many celebrities who appeared chanting "Ghostbusters" in
Ray Parker, Jr.'s hit
single for the movie). In 1984, Candy played
Tom Hanks's womanizing brother in the hit romantic comedy
Splash, considered to be his breakout role.
Throughout the latter half of the 1980s, Candy worked often taking roles in substandard films (even performing the voice of a talking horse in the
Bobcat Goldthwait comedy
Hot to Trot). Although Candy continued to play supporting roles in films like
Spaceballs, he was awarded the opportunity to headline or co-star in such successful comedy films as
Planes, Trains & Automobiles,
Brewster's Millions, The Great Outdoors, Armed and Dangerous,
Who's Harry Crumb? and
Uncle Buck.
He also continued to provide memorable bit roles, including a "weird"
disc jockey in the comic
musical film Little Shop of Horrors, and a state trooper in the
Sesame Street film
Follow That Bird.
He also produced and starred in an Saturday morning
animated series on NBC entitled
Camp Candy in 1989. The show was set in a fictional
summer camp run by Candy, featured his two children in supporting roles, and also spawned a brief
comic book series published by
Marvel Comics'
Star Comics imprint.