Times Colonist

Comedians have high hopes for Creek’s debut

- LAURA KANE

TORONTO — Eugene Levy was surprised when his son Daniel first approached him about collaborat­ing on the riches-to-rags comedy Schitt’s Creek.

“My heart was palpitatin­g because I thought, ‘Is he asking me to work with him on a show? I never thought I’d hear this,’ ” recalled the Canadian funnyman in a recent interview.

The Levys began working on the script three years ago but weren’t sure the show would ever materializ­e. Now that Schitt’s Creek is premièring tonight on CBC, the proud papa couldn’t be more thrilled.

“It went from a nice father-son project to a discovery that [Daniel] is a great producer and a great writer and an amazing actor,” Levy said.

Eugene Levy stars as Johnny Rose, a wealthy video store magnate who loses everything in a Ponzi scheme and is forced to move his family to a crudely named backwater town — Schitt’s Creek — which he once bought as a joke for his hipster son David (Daniel Levy).

Fellow SCTV alum Catherine O’Hara plays family matriarch Moira, a pampered soap star, while newcomer Annie Murphy rounds out the cast as socialite daughter Alexis.

The comedy’s dry tone is inspired by the films he cowrote with Christophe­r Guest, including Best in Show and A Mighty Wind, said the older Levy. He described the show as “totally character-driven and grounded to a great degree in truth.”

Daniel Levy, famed for co-hosting MTV Canada’s The After Show, echoed this idea. He wanted Schitt’s Creek to be a “funny but real” exploratio­n of a rich family losing all their money, and thought Eugene would fit right in.

“I think everything he’s done with Chris Guest, and all the character work he’s done with Second City and SCTV, there’s just such a lovely truth and an honesty and reality to everything he does,” he said.

“Collective­ly, we were able to bring two different worlds to the show: a younger world and a more sophistica­ted, worldly world. … Those two paths sort of met up on this really nice parallel journey together.”

O’Hara has known the younger Levy all his life and is proud of his work on Schitt’s Creek. She said the 31-year-old isn’t just following in his father’s footsteps.

“He’s got his own footsteps going,” she said.

“That’s been really a lovely, delightful surprise, is seeing how really great at this Daniel is. This could have gone really wrong. ‘Oh, just because you’re Eugene’s son, you’re getting your own show. Is that it?’ ”

Asked whether he felt added pressure because of his famous father, Levy said he had been so busy making the show that he hadn’t had a spare moment to worry.

“If I actually gave it a second’s thought as to who I was working with and the calibre of talent that I was being thrown into, I probably would have freaked out a lot. But there was no time for it,” he said with a laugh.

“It’s been a very intense, full-on experience and by the time I got to performing in the show, I didn’t have the time to worry about it. If I did, it would be a spiral into anxiety and fear.”

Tonight at 9, CBC

 ??  ?? From left, Eugene Levy, Chris Elliott, Annie Murphy, Catherine O'Hara, and Daniel Levy star in Schitt’s Creek.
From left, Eugene Levy, Chris Elliott, Annie Murphy, Catherine O'Hara, and Daniel Levy star in Schitt’s Creek.

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