The entertainment world is in mourning as we say goodbye to the incomparable Catherine O’Hara. From her legendary “Kevin!” scream to the unforgettable fashion and wit of Moira Rose, she redefined comedy for generations. At 71, the Emmy-winning star has passed away, leaving behind a legacy of laughter that will never be forgotten. WATCH our retrospective on her iconic career and the touching tributes pouring in from Hollywood.
NEED TO KNOW
- Catherine O’Hara has passed at 71, PEOPLE can validate.
- A comedy luminary, O’Hara was renowned for roles in films like Beetlejuice, Home Alone and Christopher Guest mockumentaries like Best in Show.
- O’Hara is survived by her spouse and offspring.
Catherine O’Hara has died. The Canadian actress’s representative confirmed to PEOPLE on Friday, Jan. 30, that the comedy staple, known for roles in films like Beetlejuice, Home Alone and Christopher Guest mockumentaries like Best in Show, died at age 71. No additional details were shared. TMZ was the first to relay the news about the Schitt’s Creek star.
O’Hara was born in Toronto in 1954. She was the second youngest of seven children; her father worked for the Canadian Pacific Railway, and her mother was a real estate broker. Her initial acting gig was portraying the Virgin Mary in a Nativity play. After graduating from high school, she obtained a job as a waitress at the Second City Theater in Toronto.
“I was fortunate enough to watch everybody,” she told PEOPLE in 2024 of the theater’s legendary talent, which included Dan Aykroyd, Joe Flaherty and family friend Gilda Radner. When she auditioned to become a member, Flaherty had some uninspiring feedback. “He said, ‘Keep up the good work. Your day job, I mean: waitressing,’” she told PEOPLE. She didn’t listen and secured a spot when she auditioned again.
She joined the company in 1974. One of her colleagues was comedian Eugene Levy, who would become one of her closest friends and collaborators. O’Hara told The New Yorker in 2019 that at first she was apprehensive of being on stage. “My crutch was, in improvs, when in doubt, play insane. Because you didn’t have to excuse anything that came out of your mouth. It didn’t have to make sense.”
In 1976, the theater began its own TV show, called Second City Television (usually abbreviated as SCTV). O’Hara was a fixture of the sketch program, which aired on NBC in the ‘80s. O’Hara became known not only for her impressions of celebrities, including Meryl Streep and Brooke Shields, but also for original characters that became fan favorites.
O’Hara was satisfied with SCTV, but the show did not provide her with a consistent paycheck. “Our producer would get a deal with a network, and we’d have a show for a season or two, and then that deal would go away. There’d be a break, then we’d do the show again,” she told PEOPLE in 2024.
During one break in 1981, “I got asked to be on Saturday Night Live. And of course I said yes. Who doesn’t want to do that?”. But then SCTV was picked up again and she went back to her home — before she’d ever filmed a single episode of SNL. Her best friend from high school, Robin Duke, took her SNL slot. “It all worked out the way it was intended,” she reflected. As part of the SCTV writing staff, she received five Emmy nominations, winning once.
SCTV ended in 1984, which O’Hara believed was for the best. By the end, she told PEOPLE in 1986, she found it “less than fulfilling. I lost enthusiasm. I wanted to learn more about acting. I wanted a personal life. I wanted to get scared again.” Due to her withdrawing from SNL and other roles she declined, she had a reputation at the time that she didn’t want to work. “It’s not true,” she told PEOPLE. “I read scripts and get a gut feeling about whether I want to be a part of them. Do I want my parents to see this? I’d just rather stay home than do something I know is bad and have to defend it later.”
Her film debut was 1980’s Double Negative, which also featured Levy and other SCTV costars like Flaherty and John Candy. Next, she appeared in Martin Scorsese’s 1985 black comedy After Hours and 1986’s Heartburn. In 1988, she had a role in Beetlejuice as Delia Deetz, the stepmother of Winona Ryder’s Lydia. O’Hara revisited her role in the 2024 sequel Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice.
In 1990, she was cast in Home Alone as the stressed mom of Macaulay Culkin’s Kevin. “It’s a perfect movie, isn’t it?” she reflected to PEOPLE in 2024. “I need to care about the whole thing,” she said of how she selects projects. “I don’t care to do a great role in a bad project. You want to be part of something good, and that’s how you go.” She reprised her role for 1992’s Home Alone 2: Lost in New York.
Other major roles for O’Hara in the ‘90s included 1993’s The Nightmare Before Christmas, in which she voiced Sally, and 1994’s Wyatt Earp. In 1996, she appeared in her first Guest mockumentary, Waiting for Guffman. She would also appear in 2000’s Best in Show and 2003’s A Mighty Wind, in which she and Levy sang together. PEOPLE called the actress the “talented queen of the bittersweet” in a review of 2006’s For Your Consideration, another collaboration with Guest.
In 2015, she partnered with Levy once again for Schitt’s Creek, created by his son Dan. It was not the first time she and Levy played characters who were romantically involved. Of their long working relationship, she told PEOPLE at the time, “I would love to think we continue to challenge each other, like a good married couple would do.” The show had a modest start — in Canada it aired on the CBC, and in the U.S. on the Pop network — until fans started to gravitate to it when it became available for streaming on Netflix.
“I used to mostly get people named Kevin who’d come up to me and ask me to yell ‘Kevin!’ in their faces,” O’Hara told PEOPLE in 2020, referencing her famous Home Alone line. “Now it’s mostly about Moira and Schitt’s Creek. I’ve never received this kind of attention in my life. It’s crazy.” Moira was a constant scene-stealer, with her extravagant outfits and unique enunciation.
Moira also had a massive collection of wigs. “I suggested, or actually begged for it,” O’Hara told WWD in 2021 about the wigs. “When we were all developing our characters, I said, ‘I’d like to wear a wig depending on my mood.’ It kind of scared everyone at the beginning, like ‘Wait a minute, how much work are you asking the hair department to do and how much planning is there?’ And I said, ‘No, it’s according to how she feels that day.’”
In 2020, she won the Emmy for outstanding lead actress in a comedy series for the role. “I will forever be grateful to Eugene and Daniel Levy for the opportunity to play a woman of a certain age, my age, who gets to fully be herself,” she said in part during her speech. She also won a Golden Globe and a SAG Award for the series.
Other TV roles for O’Hara included guest spots on Six Feet Under, Curb Your Enthusiasm and 30 Rock. She also received an Emmy nomination for her performance in the 2010 TV film Temple Grandin. She voiced characters in the animated films Frankenweenie, The Addams Family and Elemental, and in 2024, she appeared in the action film Argylle and season 2 of The Last of Us.
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In 1992, she married Bo Welch. They met when he worked as a production designer on Beetlejuice. They shared sons Matthew and Luke. “People always say, ‘Communicate,’ right? ‘Tell them how you’re feeling.’ We do a lot of it with jokes,” she told PEOPLE in 2024 of her marriage. “We’ll make fun of each other instead of yelling at each other. Sarcasm helps!”
O’Hara is survived by her husband and children.
