Catherine O'Hara poses for photographers upon arrival at the UK premiere of 'Beetlejuice Beetlejuice' on Aug. 29. 2024 in London (Photo by Scott A. Garfitt/Invision/AP)

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Catherine O’Hara, the Canadian-born comic actor who starred as Macaulay Culkin’s harried mother in two Home Alone movies and won an Emmy as the dramatically ditzy wealthy matriarch Moira Rose in “Schitt’s Creek,” died Friday, Jan 30. She was 71.

O’Hara died at her home in Los Angeles “following a brief illness,” according to a statement from her agency, Creative Artists Agency.

As Yahoo reported though:

Paramedics responded to a medical aid call at O’Hara’s home in the Brentwood neighborhood of Los Angeles at 4:48 a.m. on Friday, January 30, an LA Fire Department spokesperson told Page Six. She was rushed to the hospital, in “serious” condition, and later died, the outlet reported.

As Page Six noted, the Canadian actress was born with situs inversus, a rare condition in which the organs are on the opposite side of their body than most people’s. Though the condition is harmless, it can make diagnosis of other diseases more difficult, according to the Cleveland Clinic.

O’Hara’s career was launched at the Second City in Toronto in the in 1970s. It was there that she first worked with Eugene Levy, who would become a lifelong collaborator — and her Schitt’s Creek costar. The two would be among the original cast of the sketch show SCTV, short for Second City Television. The series, which began on Canadian TV in the 1970s and aired on NBC in the U.S. in the early ‘80s, spawned a legendary group of esoteric comedians including Martin Short, John Candy, Andrea Martin, Rick Moranis and Joe Flaherty.

Hollywood didn’t entirely know what to do with O’Hara and her scattershot style. She played oddball supporting characters in Martin Scorsese’s 1985 After Hours and Tim Burton’s 1988 Beetlejuice — a role she would reprise in the 2024 sequel.

She played it mostly straight as a horrified mother who accidentally abandoned her child in the two Home Alone movies. The films were among the biggest box office earners of the early 1990s and their Christmas setting made them TV perennials

Her co-star Culkin was among those paying her tribute Friday.

“Mama, I thought we had time,” Culkin said on Instagram alongside an image from Home Alone and a recent recreation of the same pose. “I wanted more. I wanted to sit in a chair next to you. I heard you. But I had so much more to say. I love you. I’ll see you later.”

O’Hara would find her groove with the crew of improv pros brought together by Christopher Guest for a series of mockumentaries that began with 1996’s Waiting for Guffman and continued with 2000’s Best in Show, 2003’s A Mighty Wind and 2006’s For Your Consideration.

Best in Show was the biggest hit and best remembered film of the series. It sees her paired as Levy’s wife as the couple, Gerry and Cookie Fleck, takes their Norwich terrier to a dog show, and constantly run into Cookie’s former lovers along the way.

The television series Schitt’s Creek would be a career-capping triumph and the perfect personification of her comic talents. The small show created by Levy and his son Dan about a wealthy family forced to live in a tiny town would dominate the Emmys in its sixth and final season. It brought O’Hara, always a beloved figure, a new generation of fans and put her at the center of cultural attention.

She told The Associated Press that she pictured Moira, a former soap opera star, as someone who had married rich and wanted to “remind everyone that (she was) special, too.” With an exaggerated Mid-Atlantic accent and obscure vocabulary, Moira spoke unlike anyone else, using words like “frippet,” “pettifogging” and “unasinous,” to show her desire to be different, O’Hara said. To perfect Moira’s voice, O’Hara would pore through old vocabulary books, “Moira-izing” the dialogue even further than what was already written.

The show also brought a career renaissance that led to a dramatic turn on HBO’s The Last of Us and a straitlaced role as a Hollywood producer in The Studio, both of which earned her Emmy nominations.

She is survived by her husband, Bo Welch, sons Matthew and Luke, and siblings Michael O’Hara, Mary Margaret O’Hara, Maureen Jolley, Marcus O‘Hara, Tom O’Hara and Patricia Wallice.

–Andrew Dalton and Jocelyn Noveck. AP Film Writer Lindsey Bahr and AP Writer R.J. Rico contributed to this piece. Yahoo excerpt by Jennifer Lenhart.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *