Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Tim Herlihy has written or co-written the feature films Billy Madison, Happy Gilmore, The Wedding Singer, The Waterboy, Big Daddy, Little Nicky, Mr. Deeds, Bedtime Stories, Grown Ups 2, Pixels, The Ridiculous Six and Hubie Halloween.

  2. Timothy Patrick Herlihy (born October 9, 1966) is an American screen actor, film producer, screenwriter, and Broadway musical bookwriter. Films written or produced by Herlihy have grossed over $3 billion at the worldwide box office. He frequently collaborates with Adam Sandler, who played a Saturday Night Live character, "The Herlihy Boy", in honor of Tim Herlihy. While double majoring in ...

  3. May 30, 2024 · Tim Herlihy is a highly successful Hollywood screenwriter. Tim Herlihy has made a significant impact in the film industry with his impressive writing skills. He is well-known for his collaborations with comedian Adam Sandler, crafting hilarious and memorable scripts.

  4. Martin Herlihy (born September 13, 1998) is an American writer and comedian part of the sketch comedy trio Please Don't Destroy (alongside John Higgins and Ben Marshall). In 2021, for season 47, the trio was hired to write on Saturday Night Live. Their pre-taped sketches have appeared several times throughout season 47. Herlihy is the son of former SNL writer/Adam Sandler collaborator Tim ...

  5. Martin Herlihy (born September 13, 1998) grew up in Ridgefield, Connecticut, the son of Tim Herlihy, the longtime comedy partner of Adam Sandler and a writer/producer for SNL in the 1990s. Herlihy attended Ridgefield High School and graduated from NYU Tisch in 2019. At NYU, he was involved in Astor Place Riots stand up comedy.

  6. Jul 1, 2019 · Tim Herlihy has produced an incredibly successful career that has largely been associated with Adam Sandler. Tim Herlihy was born on October 9, 1966 in Brooklyn, New York but raised in Poughkeepsie.

  7. Adam Sandler had an idea for a comedy about a wedding singer who gets left at the altar, and suggested it to Tim Herlihy. Inspired by the radio show "Lost in the '80s" Herlihy decided to set the film in that decade. Herlihy had not set out to do anything different and thought the script was similar to his previous collaborations with Sandler.