logo
Adam Sandler to stop in Toronto for ‘You're My Best Friend' stand-up comedy tour

Adam Sandler to stop in Toronto for ‘You're My Best Friend' stand-up comedy tour

CTV News27-06-2025
Adam Sandler attends the "Adam Sandler: Love You" premiere at The Plaza on Tuesday, Aug. 20, 2024, in New York. (Photo by Charles Sykes/Invision/AP)
Adam Sandler has announced his upcoming 'You're My Best Friend' tour and Toronto is the only Canadian stop on the list.
The comedian, whose long-awaited 'Happy Gilmore 2' is set to be released next month, released the dates in an Instagram post on Thursday.
The North American tour kicks off on Sept. 5 in Jacksonville, Fla. and will wind up the States before making one trip across the border on Oct. 12.
Tickets for the Toronto show at Scotiabank Arena go on sale Friday.
Sandler is no stranger to the city and has filmed a number of movies here, including 'Billy Madison,' 'Pixels,' and 'You're So Not Invited To My Bat Mitzvah,' the last of which resulted in several fan sightings of the comic in Yorkville.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Here's what to expect at this year's Toronto International Film Festival
Here's what to expect at this year's Toronto International Film Festival

CBC

timean hour ago

  • CBC

Here's what to expect at this year's Toronto International Film Festival

Films starring Sydney Sweeney, Angelina Jolie and Aziz Ansari will premiere at the 50th Toronto International Film Festival, festival organizers announced Monday. TIFF laid out the selections to its galas and special presentations programs, which make up the bulk of the red carpet premieres to North America's largest film festival. Films making their world premieres include Ansari's Good Fortune, starring Keanu Reeves as an angel trying to teach a struggling man (Ansari) a lesson; David Michôd's Christy, with Sweeney playing the boxer Christy Martin; and Alice Winocour's Couture, starring Jolie as an American filmmaker attending Paris Fashion Week. Those films join previously announced TIFF world premieres including Rian Johnson's Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery. All three of Johnson's Knives Out films have premiered in Toronto. Also debuting in Toronto will be Derek Cianfrance's Roofman, starring Channing Tatum as a struggling father turned thief; Nia DaCosta's Ibsen adaptation Hedda, starring Tessa Thompson; Nicholas Hytner's WWI drama The Choral, with Ralph Fiennes; Steven Soderbergh's third 2025 release, The Christophers; Hikari's Rental Family, starring Brendan Fraser as an American actor in Japan; and Paul Greengrass' The Lost Bus, with Matthew McConaughey as a bus driver navigating California's 2018 Camp Fire. The festival will kick off Sept. 4 with the debut of the documentary John Candy: I Like Me, from director Colin Hanks and producer Ryan Reynolds. The festival runs through Sept. 14. Toronto has long been one of the prized launching pads to the fall movie season, though many of the top films often first go to the Venice or Telluride film festivals. This year, that includes TIFF selections like Chloe Zhao's Hamnet, Guillermo del Toro's Frankenstein, Benny Safdie's The Smashing Machine and Edward Berger's Ballad of a Smaller Player. The designation of those premieres suggests Frankenstein and The Smashing Machine will first play Venice, while Zhao's and Berger's films will likely play both Venice and Telluride. IN PHOTOS: On the red carpet for TIFF 2024 premieres: Other notable films premiering in Toronto include James Vanderbilt's Nuremberg trials drama Nuremberg, with Rami Malik and Russell Crowe; Rachel Lee Goldenberg's Swiped, starring Lily James as Bumble founder Whitney Wolfe Herd; and Agnieszka Holland's Franz Kafka drama Franz. Several directorial debuts will be landing in Toronto including those by Brian Cox (Glenrothan) and Maude Apatow (Poetic License). Other selections include Bad Apples, with Saoirse Ronan as a teacher with a poorly behaved student; Easy's Waltz, a Las Vegas-set drama starring Vince Vaughn and Al Pacino; and Alex Winter's Adulthood. A number of standouts from May's Cannes Film Festival will also play in Toronto, such as Jafar Panahi's Palme d'Or winner It Was Just an Accident, Joachim Trier's Sentimental Value, Oliver Laxe's Sirât and Richard Linklater's Nouvelle Vague. WATCH | TIFF organizers adapt strategy as competition from other festivals grows: TIFF facing stiff competition from Venice Film Festival for world premieres 10 months ago With TIFF now getting fewer world premieres due to stiff competition from the Venice Film Festival which happens a week earlier, TIFF organizers are adapting their strategy by embracing more homegrown films.

Tobi's high-energy motivational anthem, and 3 more songs you need to hear this week
Tobi's high-energy motivational anthem, and 3 more songs you need to hear this week

CBC

timean hour ago

  • CBC

Tobi's high-energy motivational anthem, and 3 more songs you need to hear this week

Scroll down to discover the songs our producers are loving right now. For even more new music, check out our SYNTH playlist on Youtube. He's So Good, Tobi When Nova Scotia hip-hop producer and rapper Classified sent Tobi a pack of beats, the Toronto rapper said that what's now the backbone of He's So Good immediately stood out to him. "It was high-energy, positive, very confident," Tobi explained via email, and recorded his lyrics, freestyle, right away. The result is an affirmation song heavy with swagger, as compliments tumble out verse after verse over bright horn samples and a Classified Easter egg: that tongue-in-cheek "you gonna find out" is a sample from his 2006 song Find Out, as he told Exclaim!. "My mission with this song was to create something that I could say to myself in the morning before tackling the day," wrote Tobi, and it's a fitting chapter from his new album, Elements, Vol. 2, which braids Tobi's vulnerabilities with the award-winning rapper's well-earned confidence. — Holly Gordon Wheel, Living Hour On Oct. 17, Winnipeg band Living Hour will return with their fourth studio album, Internal Drone Infinity. Its lead single, Wheel, is a powerful jolt of shoegaze-inspired rock full of dreamy vocals, but punctuated by a palpable angst. The track was inspired by an experience singer Sam Sarty went through buying a car off of Facebook Marketplace that turned out to be junk. "I was driving through the mountains, and the headlights were so dim, and for a stretch there was nowhere to turn off," she explained in a press release. "It felt like a weird, horrific video game – navigating the road and dodging danger and trying not to die. I also felt so deeply betrayed by all the men involved in the whole thing." Wheel finds Sarty reclaiming that experience and turning the tables on those men, putting them in the same danger they put her in, posing the scenario: "What happened/ When I went/ Falling off the wheel." — Melody Lau Nothing to Do, Emmett Jerome Country singer-songwriter Emmett Jerome has crafted a sunny ode to growing up in a small town with his latest track, Nothing to Do. Over shimmering pedal steel and a warm harmonica riff, he looks back on fond memories of Bragg Creek, Alta., defined by moonlit nights, red dirt roads and stolen cases of beer. The intoxicating hold of nostalgia keeps Jerome in its grip as he sings, "I can walk into any liquor store and lay my money down, it just don't feel the same." A warm synchronicity flows through the song, which can be attributed to the track being recorded live off the floor: "We wanted to use the same technology our favourite classic records were made with. Real analog gear and real musicians," he said in a press release. Next up, he'll be dropping a new song every few weeks throughout the summer. — Natalie Harmsen Colorado, TX, Mah Moud It's been a fair while since we've heard new music from Mah Moud. The Toronto artist's last release was 2022's abdalla, an explorative and spellbinding debut album that made CBC Music's best albums list that year. In November, he teased some new music while opening for Mustafa at Roy Thomson Hall, and now, eight months later, it's finally here. Colarado, TX is the first single from Mah Moud's upcoming album, Alexander Mure's songs in the key of C-minus. After witnessing the effects of gentrification on his life-long neighbourhood of Leslieville, Mah Moud created the character of Alexander Mure to symbolize the heartbreak, rage and anxiety that come with feeling pushed out of your home. Colorado, TX is the introduction to Mure, a vigilante outlaw, who after being gentrified out of his home takes a journey back, only to find the Toronto he returns to is unrecognizable. The country-folk road song is anchored by Mah Moud's soaring, impassioned vocals and a meandering pedal steel that mimics the nomadic journey Mure has embarked on. — Kelsey Adams

In ‘Happy Gilmore 2,' Christopher McDonald will still eat you for breakfast
In ‘Happy Gilmore 2,' Christopher McDonald will still eat you for breakfast

Toronto Sun

time2 hours ago

  • Toronto Sun

In ‘Happy Gilmore 2,' Christopher McDonald will still eat you for breakfast

Published Jul 21, 2025 • 8 minute read Old rivals come face to face in "Happy Gilmore 2." Photo by Netflix / Scott Yamano/Netflix Reviews and recommendations are unbiased and products are independently selected. Postmedia may earn an affiliate commission from purchases made through links on this page. Christopher McDonald does not deliver threats in rhymes. He does not tell fans to go back to their shanties. He would never say he eats 'pieces of s— like you for breakfast.' (He'd prefer to have a green smoothie with protein powder, spinach and fruit.) He is not, in other words, Shooter McGavin. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account But also, kind of, isn't he? Almost 30 years after he first played the role, McDonald is picking out his beige Polo and getting his 9-iron ready for his return as the rival to Adam Sandler's failed hockey player turned links champion in 'Happy Gilmore 2,' which arrives on Netflix on July 25. The warmly remembered, thoroughly silly 1996 sports comedy helped lay the groundwork for Sandler's stratospheric career – and made McDonald's face synonymous with his character, the kind of guy who'll let someone know he's a jerk by asking for a Diet Pepsi. (In the words of McGavin: 'Choke on that, bay-bay!') It almost didn't happen. By the time he was 40, McDonald was already considered one of Hollywood's most dependable heels – the strikingly handsome dude with the mug you wanted to repeatedly punch who was churning out scene-stealing performances in films like 'Thelma and Louise.' But he turned down the part in 'Happy Gilmore' not once but twice in 1995. It's not that he didn't believe in the script or Sandler, then a recent SNL alum. But after more than three months filming the science fiction thriller 'Unforgettable,' McDonald was burned out and didn't want to be an absentee dad to wife Lupe and their kids. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 'It's exceptionally difficult to do that and to leave your partner with that kind of responsibility,' McDonald, now 70, says in a video conversation in early July. 'So, I just said no to Adam.' Then, McDonald played a hell of a round of golf and immediately wondered if Sandler and the producers still needed him on the green. 'I was feeling my oats,' he says. He agreed to do the film when he and his family got housing near the set in Vancouver for the summer. 'They paid me to play golf,' he says, 'and I'm still pinching myself.' For years, McDonald hoped the industry's opinion of him would shift from supporting actor to leading-man material, saying in 2000, 'I've been one away from something huge for the longest time.' But in a career in film and television that's included more than 100 projects over nearly a half-century, McDonald has had something huge all along in McGavin, the finger-gun-blasting, sweater-draped, privileged doofus who has earned his place among the greatest sports villains in cinematic history. Your noon-hour look at what's happening in Toronto and beyond. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 'That was my one away, probably, because I can't walk down the street without getting, 'Shooter! Shooter! Shooter!'' McDonald says. Once, a guy recognized McDonald as Shooter as he was relieving himself at a urinal at a Buffalo Bills game. 'Shooter is the gift that keeps on giving.' – – – Being a compelling jerk on screen – and McDonald has played more than a few of them – is an art. Just ask Sandler. 'Chris was the real deal – more than us comedians – and he took it serious. We were kind of like, 'Here comes the real actor,'' Sandler says of McDonald's original performance as McGavin. 'He took every costume serious, every scene meant a lot to him, and he thought through everything.' The news of the 'Happy Gilmore' sequel follows McDonald's standout role as casino CEO Marty Ghilain in the HBO Max comedy 'Hacks,' which earned him an Emmy nomination in 2022. Together, the projects have brought about a period of appreciation for the performer, from peers and fans of a character actor whom everyone loves to hate. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 'He understands how to elevate something that isn't overdone, but it lets the audience know that it's a comedy and he's playing a despicable villain,' says John Slattery, who performed alongside McDonald in the Broadway revival of 'The Front Page' in 2016. 'He's in on the joke – and he's everything you want in an actor like that.' Julie Bowen agrees, noting how McDonald could have played McGavin as a cartoon character who 'could just be nothing but smarm and a big smear of gross.' 'But there's something about the way Chris plays it that's right behind the eyes. When he says, 'I eat pieces of s— like you for breakfast,' he doesn't just scowl. There's a drop in his face and this look of, 'Oh no, I didn't mean that,'' says Bowen, who is reprising her role as Virginia Venit in the sequel. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. It's a few days after the July Fourth holiday, and McDonald is hiding out in his colorful man cave while some friends are watching Wimbledon in the other room. He remembers the days before Shooter McGavin well, even if some people don't. Raised as one of seven children in Romulus, New York, by his father, James, a high school principal, and his mother, Patricia, a real estate agent, McDonald was premed at Hobart College before deciding to give acting a try his senior year and continuing his drama studies in London. After some early unforgettable films, including as T-Bird member Goose McKenzie in 'Grease 2,' McDonald unleashed his inner blowhard in 'Thelma and Louise' as Darryl Dickinson, the patronizing, chauvinistic husband who desperately struggled for any sense of control. While he maintains he never tried to be a career villain, audiences and studios saw him as the actor who could find humanity in the bad guy. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 'You can never judge your character, and you can never say, 'Well, this guy's a major a-hole.' You just say, 'This is how he thinks, and we're going to push that to the limit and see how far we can get,'' McDonald says. 'I guess I get typecasted a bit because people love the way I play the jerks and the bad guys.' When Tim Herlihy co-wrote the 'Happy Gilmore' script with Sandler, he says, they didn't have a specific inspiration in mind for McGavin, other than someone who was handsome and preppy and would grow increasingly deranged over Gilmore's success. But by the time McDonald came on board, Herlihy emphasized, the actor's ability to 'make the straight lines funny' is what made McGavin such a great, pompous fool, in the lineage of Ted Knight's Elihu Smails in 'Caddyshack.' This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 'I don't want to overstate this, but coming from SNL, me and Adam sometimes viewed actors as people to work around, almost like, don't screw this up,' says Herlihy, who also co-wrote 'Happy Gilmore 2' with Sandler. 'Chris was one of the first times we got more than what we imagined in our heads, and we imagined it pretty good.' Bowen initially thought of McDonald as Hollywood in the best way: charming, funny, smooth. Their takes from the 'Not Happy Place' – where Venit, Gilmore's love interest in lingerie, and McGavin, both dressed in all black, aggressively make out in a nightmare daydream – turned McDonald from co-worker to friend, she says. Years later, Bowen remembers going down an escalator after one of her Emmy wins for 'Modern Family' and seeing McDonald come up another escalator next to her. Without missing a beat, they knew what to do. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 'Immediately, we leaned over the two escalators, and I'm with my husband at the time and I'm holding an Emmy, and I lean over, and we just go [disgusting make-out noise with her tongue]. And we never mentioned it again,' she says, through laughter. 'I turned to my husband and I was like, 'You're cool with that, right?' He was like, 'Trust me, yeah, but you guys are weirdos.'' There's a scene in the new movie where McGavin and Gilmore come face to face in a graveyard, before a fistfight nearly 30 years in the making. At the cemetery, there are headstones honouring the characters from the first film who have died. In a film full of nostalgia and cameos, mortality is front and centre for these characters. The topic comes up a couple of times, unprompted, in our chat. A few days earlier, McDonald's longtime friend, actor Michael Madsen, died of cardiac arrest at the age of 67. He lists the names of other actor friends who've died too young in recent years, like Ray Liotta and Bill Paxton. 'It's just crazy,' he says, admitting he's still overwhelmed by Madsen's passing. 'That's what hits me at a certain age. We're only here for a short time.' This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. The deaths of his friends and peers have, in some ways, served as another reminder of how being largely recognized as McGavin has been a blessing. The character's popularity surged into the 21st century once the film hit Blockbuster and cable channels like Comedy Central, where a modest box-office success morphed into a rewatchable cult classic for '90s kids. McDonald's popularity as McGavin soared even higher in the social-media age, where he's been frequently GIFified for memes. McDonald even set up a Cameo account where people can still pay to have him send a personalized message as McGavin. 'I've embraced this character,' he says. 'It's been a godsend in a lot of ways.' – – – It was McDonald's last day of shooting, and McGavin had just thrown a cup of scalding-hot coffee in the face of Frank Manatee (played by Benny Safdie), the owner of rival golf league Maxi Golf. When they got the scene done in one take, the crew applauded McDonald for bringing McGavin back to life. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Then McDonald looked over and saw Sandler, holding the elusive gold jacket. The last time we saw McGavin with the gold jacket, he had stolen it from Gilmore and was running away from an angry golf mob. But now, finally, it was Shooter's turn. 'He said, 'Alright, Shooter. I know you've wanted this. This is for you,'' McDonald recalls. Sandler had the gold jacket made up for McDonald, hoping they could find a way in the script to give McGavin what he's always wanted. When that didn't pan out, Sandler thought, Well, we made the coat, so we might as well give to the man. The crew howled as if McGavin had actually won the Tour Championship. McDonald welled up, overcome by the act of kindness. Wearing the gold jacket, McDonald channeled his inner McGavin and started strutting, saying, 'That's right, baby!' 'He stayed in character and acted like it was the greatest moment of his life,' Sandler remembers. 'It was a well-deserved moment for Chris and Shooter.' This is what it might have looked like if McGavin had won the gold jacket all those years ago. What's better than that? 'There were tears welling up, not just because it's a gold jacket, but the fact that they saved one for me,' McDonald says. 'You don't forget that.' Read More Toronto & GTA Uncategorized Editorial Cartoons Canada Football

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store