In the mid to late
1980s, Sandler played Theo Huxtable's friend, Smitty, on
The Cosby Show (1987–1988). He was a performer for the
MTV game show Remote Control, on which he made appearances as the characters "Trivia Delinquent" or "Stud Boy". Sandler started performing in clubs early on, taking the stage at his brother's urging when he was only 17. He was then discovered by comedian
Dennis Miller, who caught Sandler's act in Los Angeles. Miller immediately recommended him to
Saturday Night Live producer
Lorne Michaels. Sandler was hired as a writer for SNL in
1990 and became a featured player the following year, quickly making a name for himself by performing amusing original songs on the show, including "
The Chanukah Song". He left the show in
1995 to focus on his acting career.
Sandler's first starring role was in
1989 when he starred in the movie
Going Overboard. In
1995, he starred in
Billy Madison, in which he plays a grown man repeating grades 1–12 to earn his father's respect back, along with the right to inherit his father's multi-million-dollar hotel empire. He followed this movie up with other financially successful comedies such as
Bulletproof (1996),
Happy Gilmore (1996) and
The Wedding Singer (1998). He was initially cast in the bachelor-party-themed comedy/thriller
Very Bad Things (1998), but had to back out due to his involvement in
The Waterboy (1998), one of his first hits.
Although most of his earlier films were almost universally despised by movie critics, many of his recent films, starting with
Punch-Drunk Love (2002), have received almost uniformly positive reviews, leading many movie critics to believe that Sandler possesses considerable acting ability that they believed had been previously wasted on poorly written scripts and characters with no development. Audiences have remained faithful to Sandler's slapstick humor to the tune of US$100-million-plus grossing movies. Sandler has moved outside the genre of goofball humor to take on more serious parts such as the aforementioned
Punch-Drunk Love (for which he was nominated for a
Golden Globe), Spanglish (2004) and
Reign Over Me (2007) He also plays a loving father figure in
Big Daddy (1999). Ironically, during filming, he met
Jacqueline Samantha Titone -- his future wife and mother of his daughter. Jackie was cast as the charming waitress from The Blarney Stone Bar.
At one point, Sandler was considered for the part that went to Jamie Foxx in
Collateral (2004). He also was one of the finalists along with
Jim Carrey and
Johnny Depp for the role of Willy Wonka in
Tim Burton's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005), but Depp in the end got the role. He returned to more dramatic fare with
Mike Binder's Reign Over Me (2007), a drama about a man who lost his entire family in
9/11 and rekindles a friendship with his old college roommate (played by
Don Cheadle). Most recently, he starred in the movie
I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry (2007), where he stars along side
Kevin James as a New York City fireman pretending to be gay keep up an insurance scam, so his best friend's children can have benefits. His next comedy will be
You Don't Mess with the Zohan (2008) a film written by Sandler,
The 40-Year-Old Virgin writer-director
Judd Apatow (who was an old roommate of Sandler's when both were starting out), and
Triumph, the Insult Comic Dog creator
Robert Smigel and being directed by
Happy Gilmore director
Dennis Dugan about a
Mossad agent who fakes his own death and moves to the United States to become a hair stylist,. He will also be working on
Bedtime Stories (2008), a fantasy film being directed by
Bringing Down the House director
Adam Shankman about a stressed real estate developer whose bedtime stories he reads to his niece and nephew begin to come true, which will mark Sandler's first family film and first film under the
Walt Disney banner. Sandler has also been long-rumored to costar with
Michael Madsen in
Quentin Tarantino's upcoming
World War II saga
Inglorious Bastards..
In
June 2007, it was announced that his production company,
Happy Madison, had made a preemptive acquisition for
Mitch Albom's screenwriting debut.