"I had a lot of fun working with John Candy. We had a pretty good rapport"
About this Quote
Comedy chemistry is the least glamorous form of magic: if it works, it looks effortless; if it doesn’t, everyone can see the seams. Harold Ramis’s line about John Candy is doing that very Ramis thing - underplaying the achievement while quietly testifying to it. “A lot of fun” sounds casual, almost throwaway, but in film comedy it’s code for trust: the willingness to try a take that might bomb, to let someone else win the laugh, to improvise without protecting your ego. Fun, here, isn’t leisure. It’s a working condition.
The phrase “pretty good rapport” is even more telling in its restraint. Ramis could have canonized Candy (as many did after his death), but he reaches for a professional compliment instead of a eulogy. That’s subtextual respect: Candy wasn’t just lovable; he was usable, reliable, a partner in timing. Rapport is about rhythm - the micro-negotiations of scene work, when to step on a line, when to leave air, when to play the straight face so the other guy can detonate.
Context matters because Ramis came out of a generation that treated comedy like craft, not confession: Second City discipline, studio schedules, jokes that had to survive the edit bay. In that world, saying you had fun with someone is a quiet endorsement of their generosity and competence. It’s also Ramis’s public persona in miniature: dry, unflashy, allergic to hype, letting the work speak while hinting at the human warmth that made it possible.
The phrase “pretty good rapport” is even more telling in its restraint. Ramis could have canonized Candy (as many did after his death), but he reaches for a professional compliment instead of a eulogy. That’s subtextual respect: Candy wasn’t just lovable; he was usable, reliable, a partner in timing. Rapport is about rhythm - the micro-negotiations of scene work, when to step on a line, when to leave air, when to play the straight face so the other guy can detonate.
Context matters because Ramis came out of a generation that treated comedy like craft, not confession: Second City discipline, studio schedules, jokes that had to survive the edit bay. In that world, saying you had fun with someone is a quiet endorsement of their generosity and competence. It’s also Ramis’s public persona in miniature: dry, unflashy, allergic to hype, letting the work speak while hinting at the human warmth that made it possible.
Quote Details
| Topic | Friendship |
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