"Salad daze" is a Shakespearean idiomatic expression to refer to a youthful time, accompanied by the inexperience, enthusiasm, idealism, innocence, or indiscretion that one associates with a young person. More modern use, especially in the United States, refers to a heyday, a period when somebody was at the peak of their abilities?not necessarily in that person's youth.In the 1987 Joel and Ethan Coen film Raising Arizona, Nicolas Cage as H.I. ?Hi? McDunnough uses the expression twice in the first few minutes of the film. Speaking as the background voiceover rather than as a character, he first says, ?These were the happy days, the salad daze as they say, and Ed felt that having a critter was the next logical step. It was all she thought about." A few moments later, again as the voiceover, he says, "Our love for each other was stronger than ever, but I preminisced [sic] no return of the salad daze."
Episode 33 of the television series Monty Python's Flying Circus is called "Salad daze".
The 1996 film Independence Day contains the line "Are the salad daze over for President Whitmore?"
Salad daze is a musical with music by Julian Slade and lyrics by Dorothy Reynolds and Julian Slade.
Salad daze is the name of a documentary film released in 2014 about the evolving punk and hardcore scene in Washington DC during the 1980s and 1990s. The choice of name hints at the 1985 Salad daze (EP) by the Washington DC band Minor Threat.
In the television series Frasier, season 10, episode 20, Frasier sarcastically tells the cafe owner, "Perhaps you two used to gig together in your salad daze."
In the television series Californication, season 1, episode 2, Hank Moody refers to the period when he was writing the original film adaptation of his novel God Hates Us All as his "salad daze." A subsequent reference is made in season 1, episode 10, by Hank's agent Charlie Runkle as the two commiserate while drinking.
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