
Dan Levy has found a source of “great comfort” amid the death of his “Schitt’s Creek” co-star and on-screen mom, Catherine O’Hara.
Levy, who played David Rose on “Schitt’s Creek,” opened up about O’Hara’s death on the March 31 episode of “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.”
“It’s like a collective loss, I think. She was the greatest,” he said. “She’s irreplaceable, and I think the great comfort for me has just been to see how loved she was, you know what I mean? The outpouring. Everyone felt like they kind of knew her.”
“She was one of the funniest comedians I’ve ever seen,” Fallon said.
“Unbelievably talented at improvising. One of the great, great, great, great queens,” Levy added.
O’Hara died in January at the age of 71 of a pulmonary embolism after having rectal cancer. She was beloved for her role as Moira on “Schitt’s Creek,” playing the eccentric matriarch of the Rose family with an untraceable accent that became her calling card.
“The accent was kind of up to me,” she told TODAY’s Willie Geist during a Sunday Sitdown interview in 2024. “The accents, I should say. When people try to imitate that character, the mistake most people make is to be consistent.”
O’Hara was a comedy icon with 10 Emmy nominations and two wins, one for best actress in a comedy series for “Schitt’s Creek” and another for her writing on “SCTV Network.”
O’Hara also starred in the first two “Home Alone” movies, “Best in Show,” “Beetlejuice” (and its 2024 sequel, “Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice”), “The Nightmare Before Christmas,” “The Last of Us” and, most recently, Apple TV’s “The Studio,” which got her an Emmy nomination for supporting actress in a comedy series.
In March, O’Hara posthumously won an Actor Award for outstanding performance by a female actor in a comedy series for her work on “The Studio.” Co-star Seth Rogen raved about her when he accepted it on her behalf.
“Something that I’ve just been marveling at over the last few weeks was really her ability to be generous and kind and gracious while never, ever minimizing her own talents and her own ability to contribute to the work that we were doing,” he said.
“She knew she could destroy, and she wanted to destroy every day on set.”
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