The Hamilton Spectator

Eugene Levy and Catherine O’Hara? Call it teamwork

Loved them on Schitt’s Creek? There’s more where that came from

- ROBERT LLOYD

It is astonishin­g to contemplat­e — for someone who’s followed them since they co-starred on the Canadian comedy “SCTV” well back in the 20th century — that there may be fans of “Schitt’s Creek” only now becoming familiar with stars Eugene Levy and Catherine O’Hara.

They have not just been waiting around for you to find them. Far from it.

Each has starred in at least one cultural blockbuste­r — Levy in the “American Pie” films, in which he played the father of Jason Biggs, O’Hara as Macaulay Culkin’s mother in the “Home Alone” films.

Some may recall Levy from “Splash,” “Father of the Bride,” “Dumb and Dumberer” or “Madea’s Witness Protection.”

He also played Max Yasgur in Ang Lee’s “Taking Woodstock.”

O’Hara was in “Beetlejuic­e,” Martin Scorsese’s “After Hours,” four episodes of “Six Feet Under” and “A Series of Unfortunat­e Events” (whose production designer was her husband, Bo Welch).

And she appeared alongside Drew Barrymore in “Home Fries” and Jack Black in “Orange County.”

Still, their work together in “SCTV” and five seasons of “Schitt’s Creek” — as Johnny and Moira Rose, parents of David (Dan Levy) and Alexis (Annie Murphy), a formerly rich family coping with smalltown life — feels like a real partnershi­p, a product of overlappin­g sensibilit­ies and shared history.

Four decades after they first worked together, they have undeniably become a team. “SCTV”’ (1976-1984)

Levy and O’Hara met in the 1970s as castmates at the Toronto branch of the improv theatre Second City — the SC in “SCTV,” conceived as a Canadian cousin to the recently debuted “Saturday Night Live.”

(O’Hara joined Second City when Gilda Radner left to become a Not Ready for Prime Time Player).

Framed as a broadcast from a television station in the fictional metropolis of Melonville, it snuck onto American TV at odd hours, at first in syndicatio­n, then late-night NBC, and finally on Cinemax.

It was strange and scrappy and felt like a sort of secret — the Velvet Undergroun­d to “SNL’s” Rolling Stones.

In addition to Levy and O’Hara, its cast included at various times Harold Ramis, John Candy, Andrea Martin, Joe Flaherty, Rick Moranis, Dave Thomas, and Martin Short.

“The characters on ‘SCTV’ were definitely on the broader side of things,” Levy said when I interviewe­d him and O’Hara in 2015, just before “Schitt’s Creek’s” American debut, “but our approach to those characters was totally real.”

Levy’s characters included disco-era comedian Bobby Bitman, all gold chains and rings; actor Woody Tobias Jr., who plays henchman Bruno to Candy’s Doctor Tongue on “Monster Chiller Horror Theater”; and news-of-little-import anchor Earl Camembert.

O’Hara brought impersonat­ions of Brooke Shields and Katharine Hepburn. But her best-known recurring creation was the super-sensationa­l Lola Heatherton: “I love you! I want to bear your children!” was one catch-phrase, “It’s scary!” another.

Lola and Bobby would be seen together on “The Sammy Maudlin Show,” an orgy of ostentatio­us emotionali­sm and extreme mutual puffery.

In one memorable sketch within a sketch — layers were the show’s stock in trade —the two bring a clip of their remake of “On the Waterfront,” “On the Waterfront Again.” (“I think I added some twists in the part that Brando missed, to be quite frank,” says Bobby.)

“SCTV” could be loud and broad, or quiet and subtle — watch O’Hara’s Margaret Meehan as a high school student in a quiz show (hosted by Levy as “Alex Trebel”) slowly crumbling to pieces as she’s unable to stop herself answering questions before they’re asked —and sometimes all those things at once.

DVD sets of the series are still in print.

The Christophe­r Guest films

O’Hara and Levy appear together in the first four films directed by Christophe­r Guest, each improvised by the actors to an outline written by Guest and Levy.

Although the films are satirical and absurd, and at times emphasize the mock in “mockumenta­ry,” they are all also genuinely compelling, emotionall­y true investigat­ions into the creative impulse.

“Waiting for Guffman” (1996). Guest plays director Corky St. Clair in a comedy about small-town community theatre, once described by O’Hara as “a story about little people, little pathetic people who dare to want bigger lives.” A lock of hair teased into what she’s called a “mull-bang,” the actress is teamed with Fred Willard here, as travel agents Ron and Sheila Albertson, the Lunt and Fontaine of Blaine, Mo.; Levy is “newcomer” Allan Pearl, a dentist with a lazy eye. Their key scene together takes place on a double-date dinner in a Chinese restaurant scene, where a drunk Sheila has questions about circumcisi­on.

“Best in Show” (2000). Levy and O’Hara play Gerry and Cookie Fleck, owners of a Norwich terrier entered in a Philadelph­ia dog show; Gerry was born with two left feet, literally, and Cookie has a lot of ex-boyfriends. “I like to think that Cookie and I work as a team, although I do nothing,” says Gerry, describing their method.

“A Mighty Wind” (2003). A tribute concert reunites veterans of the 1960s folk revival; Guest, Harry Shearer and Michael McKean, who were Spinal Tap, perform as the Kingston Trio-esque Folksmen. Levy and O’Hara play Mitch and Mickey, an estranged ’60s popfolk duo, along the lines of Ian and Sylvia or Richard and Mimi Farina. He’s damaged goods, for whom every spoken sentence is a hill to climb; she’s down-toearth and ordinary. Their relationsh­ip is the emotional centre of the film, which hangs finally on the question of whether they’ll finish their song “A Kiss at the End of the Rainbow” with an actual kiss. It’s remarkable how present they are singing together, and how much meaning flows between them. With “Kiss” nominated for best song, Levy and O’Hara performed as Mitch and Mickey on the 2004 Oscars. (It didn’t win.)

“For Your Considerat­ion” (2006). O’Hara and Levy run on different tracks in a film about Hollywood comebacks and hopes. She’s Marilyn Hack, a long-struggling actress in the low-budget film “Home for Purim” (Guest plays a director again), a period piece about a Southern Jewish family. Levy is Morey Orfkin, who manages past-his-sell-by-date leading man Victor Allan Miller (Shearer).

Odds and ends

“The Last Polka” (1985). Cinemax gave “SCTV” polka heroes Yosh and Stan Shmenge (Candy and Levy) their own hour-long mockumenta­ry. O’Hara plays one-third of the singing group the Lemon Twins — that is the correct math — who appear in the special’s concert sequences, in interviews and in photos suggesting romantic connection­s between the married Shmenges and the Lemons. The two other twins are played by Catherine’s reallife sister Mary Margaret O’Hara, a singer-songwriter of cultish renown, and late-period “SCTV” player Robin Duke, who recurs on “Schitt’s Creek” as Blouse Barn proprietor Wendy Kurtz. Candy and Levy, who wrote the special, also teamed in the theatrical features “Armed and Dangerous” and “Speed Zone” (a.k.a. “Cannonball Fever,” a.k.a. “Cannonball Run III”).

“Committed” (2001). This Canadian cartoon series, whose 13 episodes are currently available for purchase on Amazon Prime, is the great not-quitelost, semi-known work in the O’Hara-Levy collaborat­ion canon. (That’s to say, I never knew of it until researchin­g this article.) A family comedy based on a comic strip by Michael Fry —a lso known for “Over the Hedge,” in whose film version O’Hara and Levy play a porcupine couple — it features the pair as Liz and Joe Larsen, challenged parents of three. It’s the sort of cartoon in which a mother, speaking with a school counsellor about a troublesom­e daughter, asks, “Do ya think this is because I didn’t breastfeed her long enough? Let me explain, I’m one of those people who really needs her sleep and this was before they had any decent breast milk pumps that weren’t steam-driven.” Fellow Canadian and Kid in the Hall Dave Foley plays the family dog, Bob; former “SCTV” castmate Martin plays grandma.

“From Cleveland” (1980). This pilot for a late-night series, which aired once on CBS before nothing came of it, features the great Bob (Elliott) and Ray (Goulding) as late-night DJs whose segments frame sketches performed by SCTV cast members on location in Cleveland. (I don’t know how one gets to see this, but I so want to: It’s the world’s funniest people all in one place.) Fun fact: Bob Elliott is the father of Chris Elliott, who plays mayor Roland Schitt on “Schitt’s Creek” — so Levy has worked with Chris Elliott’s father, and Elliott has worked with Levy’s son (and “Schitt’s Creek” co-creator and costar) Dan. It all comes around.

 ?? WILLY SANJUAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Four stars of “Schitt's Creek” — from left, Eugene Levy, Annie Murphy, Daniel Levy and Catherine O'Hara. The series tells of the wealthy Rose family who lose their fortune.
WILLY SANJUAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Four stars of “Schitt's Creek” — from left, Eugene Levy, Annie Murphy, Daniel Levy and Catherine O'Hara. The series tells of the wealthy Rose family who lose their fortune.

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