Much-loved actress who won an Emmy for Schitt’s Creek
“Kevin!” With that one word, delivered to camera, Catherine O’Hara cemented her place in cinema history as one of the screen’s most neglectful parents, said The Guardian. Her role in the 1990 box-office smash “Home Alone”, as the suburban mother who realises, mid-flight to Paris, that her youngest son (Macaulay Culkin) has been left behind, made her face familiar to millions. Many “Home Alone” fans were not aware, however, that O’Hara had already developed a gift for quirky comic roles, which later made her a star of independent cinema. So there was some excitement during lockdown when they realised that Kevin’s mother was now one of the stars of “Schitt’s Creek”, the Netflix hit about a rich couple and their spoiled adult children who lose their fortune and move to a rural backwater.
As the self-centred but lovable ex-soap star Moira Rose, O’Hara wore a variety of outlandish wigs and had an affected accent that was “mystifyingly wayward”, said The Guardian. Her son David became “Dare-vid”, and “baby” was rendered “bare-bare”. The script, written by her friend Eugene Levy and his son Dan (who played her husband and son) also gave her some great one-liners. “What have I told you about putting your body on the internet?” Moira asks her daughter in one episode, before adding: “Never! Never without proper lighting!” For her sublime performance, she won both an Emmy and a Golden Globe.
Catherine O’Hara was born in Toronto into a Catholic family where, she said, “laughing and being funny” was encouraged. Via her brother’s then-girlfriend, the actress Gilda Radner, she became involved in the Second City improv group, said The New York Times. There, she befriended Levy, among others, and when the troupe got its own TV sketch show, “Second City Television”, she became a star in Canada and won recognition in the US, too. Film roles followed, including in Martin Scorsese’s “After Hours” and Mike Nichols’ “Heartburn”. It was Tim Burton who elevated her to the A-list, said The Times, when he cast her in “Beetlejuice”. In one memorable scene, she had to dance like a deranged marionette to Harry Belafonte’s “Day-O”. Burton also set her up with the film’s production designer Bo Welch. She had taken a shine to Welch but had been too shy to ask him out. They married in 1992, and had two sons. She and Levy continued to work together in a series of Christopher Guest films beginning with “Waiting for Guffman” (1996), then in the mockumentaries “Best in Show” (2000) and “A Mighty Wind” (2003), and lastly in the comedy “For Your Consideration”, in 2006. By the time Levy co-created “Schitt’s Creek”, he and O’Hara had known each other for about 50 years.
The success of “Schitt’s Creek” opened new doors. O’Hara had recently been nominated for a further Emmy for her role in the TV series “The Studio”, and in 2024 she was invited to the Oscars to hand out the award for hair and make-up. Paying tribute to its nominees, she noted that “the last thing we [actors] want is for anyone knowing what we really look like”. She had remained in touch with her on-screen son Culkin through the ups and downs of his adult life. She is survived by her husband and her actual sons. |