Times Colonist

Eugene Levy returns to his roots in The Reluctant Traveler

- BILL BRIOUX Murders in the Building, Only

PASADENA, California — Eugene Levy admits it takes a lot to get him out of the house.

“There isn’t one place I’m dying to get to,” the Schitt’s Creek star and SCTV alumnus told TV critics gathered in Pasadena, California, last month.

Suggest a jaunt to the Philippine­s or India, for example, and Levy believes he would probably say: “You know what? Maybe not this year.”

But for the second season of AppleTV Plus’s The Reluctant Traveler with Eugene Levy, he agreed to explore Europe on what would be a dream itinerary for most people. There are stops in Sweden, France, Italy, Germany, Greece and Spain. He shares cocktails and caviar with Dame Joan Collins in SaintTrope­z.

And while there is no stop in the fictitious nation of Leutonia — home of the polka duo Shmenge brothers, played by Levy and the late John Candy on SCTV — he makes his first visit to Scotland, the birthplace of his late mother.

That trip was a revelation, Levy said.

“My mom was born in a section of Glasgow called the Gorbals,” he said. “And that was a very, very tough working-class tenement situation.”

She was one of 11 family members crammed into a threeroom apartment, where the kitchen doubled as a bedroom, he added.

Levy’s mother was 12 when her family immigrated to Canada, eventually settling in Hamilton. The actor said he was surprised to learn that there is a Hamilton, Scotland — near where his mother was raised.

He said she had no desire to return to her homeland.

“She never talked about how bad it was in this place,” said Levy, who visited the site of the original tenement. “Being there was much more meaningful to me than I really ever thought it would be.”

The first season of The Reluctant Traveler forced Levy to step outside his comfort zone as he visited unfamiliar places such as Tokyo, Finland and Costa Rica.

In Season 2, the balancing act continues with the 77-year-old award-winning comedian, writer and producer playing a version of himself, with one expressive eyebrow tilted toward a possible punchline. That’s the Levy grousing about getting swarmed by mosquitoes in Sweden or spitting out oysters in France.

In the Scotland episode, however, he is who he is. That trip, he admits, “really put a charge in me. I’m glad I did it.”

Not for the haggis, however. “It’s a horrible thing. I mean, it’s every part of an animal’s body you would not want in a recipe,” he said.

Nor was it for the pure, unrefined Scotch whisky he sampled at a distillery. Levy may be half Scottish, but said “it was like drinking gasoline.”

That episode of the new season, as executive producer David Brindley said, was “very different to any we had made before.”

It wasn’t so much about travelling to another country. For Levy, it was more like going home.

That’s because he found himself surrounded by people with a familiar, droll sense of humour. The people he met stirred memories of “my uncles and aunts and my mom … the same sensibilit­y.”

One of the funniest fellows helped him pick out a tartan for a kilt.

“He was a riot,” said Levy. The pattern chosen — a Jewish tartan — seemed specially woven to tie together two sides of his heritage.

Levy’s sense of humour recently secured him a spot in Canada’s Comedy Hall of Fame and he will soon join another Hall of Famer and former SCTV mate Martin Short on the fourth season of Disney Plus/CTV’s murder-mystery comedy

which also stars Steve Martin.

 ?? APPLE TV+ ?? Eugene Levy in Strathdon, Scotland, in a scene from The Reluctant Traveler with Eugene Levy.
APPLE TV+ Eugene Levy in Strathdon, Scotland, in a scene from The Reluctant Traveler with Eugene Levy.

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