Daily Press

Comedic actor carved niche in ‘SCTV,’ ‘Freaks and Geeks’

- By Amanda Holpuch

Joe Flaherty, the comedic actor best known for his performanc­es in the influentia­l sketch comedy series “SCTV” and as a father on the short-lived NBC ensemble series “Freaks and Geeks,” died Monday. He was 82.

His death was confirmed by his daughter, Gudrun Flaherty, who said Flaherty died after a “brief illness.” She did not specify a cause or say where he died.

Flaherty played a variety of characters on “SCTV” as part of an ensemble that included John Candy, Martin Short, Rick Moranis, Andrea Martin, Eugene Levy and Catherine O’Hara. The concept of the series, which aired in the 1970s and ’80s, was that its sketches were “shows” for a low-rent TV station in a fictional town called Melonville.

Among Flaherty’s characters were Guy Caballero, the sleazy president of the station, and Sammy Maudlin, an unctuous late-night talk show host.

His character Count Floyd wore a cheap vampire costume while hosting a horror movie show, “Monster Chiller Horror Theater.” The joke was that the movies the program showed — such as “Dr. Tongue’s Evil House of Pancakes” — were seldom very scary, leaving Floyd holding the bag and often having to apologize to viewers.

Joe Flaherty was also known for roles on television shows and in films that were cherished by fans.

He played Harold Weir, the no-nonsense father of two awkward teenagers, in the cult television series “Freaks and Geeks,” which ran for only one season after premiering in 1999 but helped launch the careers of several young actors,

including James Franco, Seth Rogen, Busy Philipps, Jason Segel and Linda Cardellini.

In the 1996 film “Happy Gilmore,” Flaherty had a small but memorable role as a man who taunts the title character, a golfer played by Adam Sandler, from the crowd.

Joseph O’Flaherty was born June 21, 1941, in Pittsburgh, the eldest of seven children, according to a 2004 profile in The Globe and Mail. His father was a production clerk at Westinghou­se Electric, and the family struggled financiall­y.

“I still remember nuns from the church bringing us food,” he said.

After graduating from Central Catholic High School, he joined the Air Force at 17. He had taken a class at Pittsburgh Playhouse before enlisting, and after leaving the Air Force, he returned to the theater to take more classes, he told WESA Pittsburgh, the city’s NPR station, in 2016.

He continued to study dramatic acting but felt the pull of comedy as he looked for work as an actor. That

search took him to Chicago and the Second City, the improvisat­ional comedy theater, which he said was where he fell in love with comedy.

“From that point on, it was all comedy,” he told WESA.

Flaherty — he told The Globe and Mail that he changed his surname to avoid confusion with a Joseph O’Flaherty who was already in the actors equity union — was with Second City in Chicago for seven years before moving to Toronto to help start a branch of the troupe there.

“SCTV,” short for Second City television, emerged as an offshoot of the Toronto troupe in 1976. The show aired first on Global in Toronto, then the CBC, and later on NBC and Cinemax in the United States. It won the Emmy Award for outstandin­g writing in a variety or music program in 1982 and 1983.

After “SCTV” ended in 1984, he worked steadily on television and in films.

In addition to his daughter, Flaherty is survived by a son, Gabe.

 ?? E PABLO KOSMICKI/AP ?? Joe Flaherty, second from left, starred in “SCTV,” along with former cast members Dave Thomas, from left, Catherine O’Hara, Andrea Martin, Harold Ramis and Eugene Levy. Flaherty died Monday at age 82.
E PABLO KOSMICKI/AP Joe Flaherty, second from left, starred in “SCTV,” along with former cast members Dave Thomas, from left, Catherine O’Hara, Andrea Martin, Harold Ramis and Eugene Levy. Flaherty died Monday at age 82.

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