Schitt’s Creek rises as its characters accept their fall
Eugene Levy used to regard the Canadian television sketch comedy show “SCTV” as a career high. Now, that distinction goes to “Schitt’s Creek.”
As the CBC riches-to-rags comedy returns for its fifth season amid an explosion of international attention, the Hamiltonborn comedy star says “the awareness factor has really been percolating in the past year” for the series he co-created with his actor-son, Daniel Levy.
The two also star as father and son, alongside fellow “SCTV” alum Catherine O’Hara as the mother and Annie Murphy as the daughter of the vainglorious Rose family, who lost their fortune due to back taxes and have to live in a motel in the small town they own, Schitt’s Creek.
“When I was doing ‘SCTV,’ we thought that was kind of the end-all and be-all,” Eugene Levy, a two-time Emmy Award winner, said in a recent phone interview.
“We were young, not making a lot of money, working 20-hour days and loving every second of it. It was just the most fun, and probably up until ‘Schitt’s Creek,’ was the greatest experience I’ve had in my career.”
“Schitt’s Creek” has drawn the kind of praise that would even please O’Hara’s attention-hungry actress character, Moira.
“Eugene says it’s ‘The little engine that could, finally reaching the train station,’” said O’Hara, an Emmy winner who hails from Toronto.
In the past few weeks alone, the 11-time Canadian Screen Award winner has been nominated for a Critics’ Choice Award for best comedy series, been featured on “The Ellen DeGeneres Show” and various U.S. morning programs, and earned laudatory reviews in major American publications, including Vogue, Variety and the New York Times.
The series has also spawned a live show, “Schitt’s Creek: Up Close & Personal,” which has sold out several cities already and hits Toronto Feb. 25.
O’Hara chalked up the growing recognition to the show’s presence on Netflix (it also airs on Pop TV in the U.S.) and the “love and respect” Daniel Levy, who is also the showrunner, puts into the characters.
“I think particularly because we’re entering our fifth season and usually for most television shows, attention and viewership diminishes season after season,” Levy said.
But he also noted they’re the same hard-working, small operation they were in season 1, when residents of Goodwood, Ont., would bring baked goods to the local set and sit on lawn chairs watching them film.
“Recognition in the States is a wonderful thing, but oftentimes it’s compared to or contrasted with recognition in Canada,” Daniel Levy said. “For me it’s important to note that our Canadian fans have been there from the beginning and that we are by no means quantifying our success by way of American recognition.”
Daniel Levy also notes audiences are also growing more emotionally attached to the Roses as the characters shed their superficiality and accept their humble lifestyle in the town run by Roland Schitt (Chris Elliott).
“Schitt’s Creek” also appeals with an authenticity, he added, noting it doesn’t play into expectations or let outside factors affect its very specific world.
Season 5 started with Moira shooting a film in Bosnia and continues a love story involving Daniel Levy’s fashion-plate character, David, who identifies as pansexual (someone who is open to all sexual orientations or gender identities).
Noah Reid plays his boyfriend, Patrick, who serenaded him last season in a scene the New York Times called “one of the most romantic, adorable moments on TV this year.”
“Schitt’s Creek” airs Tuesday at 7 p.m. on CBC.