Humor, said Sid Caesar, is truth with little curlicues. In the "Caddyshack" Cinderella scene, Bill Murray understood with a comic's intuition how in our sports fantasies, everyone secretly and grandiosely self-narrates in an announcer's voice. In an inspired moment on a chaotic set, he channeled his genius for the freewheeling and bravely personal into 186 words that earned a rightful place on the American Film Institute's "100 Greatest Movie Quotes of All Time." In 2014, Murray said, "You have to remind yourself that you can do the very best you can when you're very, very relaxed." Murray's reverie of the "former greenskeeper about to become Masters champion," like his Dalai Lama soliloquy ("Big hitter, the Lama. Long."), was completely improvised. The scene's only stage direction: "Carl cuts off the tops of flowers with a grass whip." But after director Harold Ramis mused on the play-by-play device, Murray shot back, "Say no more." His curlicues--"tears in his eyes, I guess... this normally reserved Augusta crowd"--are slightly off in a way that is ineffably dead-on, so that a daydream becomes the most golf-authentic moment in the film (and the way Carl Spackler self-consciously lowers his voice around two Bushwood members is among the most authentically human). Spackler's concluding words, "It's in the hole!" sum up a perfect performance.