![Two men in tuxedos and dark-rimmed glasses, one holding an Emmys statuette, sit and lean against each other.](https://ca-times.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/e491581/2147483647/strip/true/crop/2441x2441+0+0/resize/1000x1000!/quality/75/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcalifornia-times-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F85%2Ff8%2Fadc45b7e4bf9bf930fd48483c1dc%2Fdan-levy-eugene-levy-174139-0062-v17.jpg)
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In 2020, the sixth and final season of âSchittâs Creek,â which had finally made its way into popular consciousness after Netflix picked it up from Pop, its basic-cable home, swept the Emmys. This unprecedented and likely never-to-be-repeated sitcom shutout saw acting wins for Catherine OâHara, Eugene Levy, Dan Levy and Annie Murphy, writing and directing awards for Dan and a best comedy award for the series itself, co-created by the father and son Levys.
Now, in a sort of sequel, or a belated victory lap, Dan and Eugene return not exactly to the scene of their former glory â 2020 was the COVID year, and the âSchittâsâ cast accepted their honors from a tent in Canada â as hosts of the 76th Emmy Awards. This is as exciting to me, as a fan from first to last â before that, even, if we want to add âSCTV,â where OâHara and Eugene Levy first made their mark on television â as anything else that might conceivably, or inconceivably, happen during the ceremony, which will be broadcast Sunday on ABC from the Peacock Theater at L.A. Live in Los Angeles.
I spoke to the Levys by Zoom, for a look back and a look forward. These are edited excerpts from that conversation.
In honor of the series finale of âSchittâs Creek,â Times television critic Robert Lloyd looks back fondly on his encounters with the cast.
Take me back to 2020.
Eugene: Well, thatâs a good starting place, 2020. Itâs kind of burned into our memory. That was a pretty exceptionally outstanding night, the kind of night you donât have too many times in your life. It was a fun night, considering COVID had taken over the world. It was odd and wonderful.
Dan: Itâs a night that literally nobody had had before. It was incredible. I remember walking to the tent we had rigged to house us all, walking with Annie and sort of glancing over at her and having a flash to our first day on set. I told her that I was picturing our first day and how strange and wonderful our path was. We had broken through at that point, and that was the big deal for us, simply having the nominations, and the fact that we were all nominated as actors for the first time. We had a little moment before walking into the tent of just how wonderful it all was, expecting nothing. Then the night unfolded the way that it did. I donât think any of us genuinely saw that coming.
![Eugene Levy in a black suit speaking into a microphone and Dan Levy standing next to him holding a golden statuette.](https://ca-times.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/4d69588/2147483647/strip/true/crop/2500x1406+0+0/resize/2000x1125!/quality/75/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcalifornia-times-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F5b%2Fce%2Fe463a8a0448f923a909cedb73a59%2Fap20265171475808.jpg)
Eugene: And how about the fact that they lumped all the comedy categories together right off the top of the show? I donât think Iâd ever seen that before. So it was a Gatling gun of wins, just one after another. Itâs the kind of thing you dream about â âWhat if we just take every category?â You donât even think that. It doesnât even register. To be honest, I thought Catherine OâHara, if she doesnât win, then thereâs something wrong. To me that was the only sure win. And then the second win, and then I won, and then Daniel won.
Dan: The last award of our section was Annieâs award. Everyone else had won at that point, and I looked over at Annie and she gave me a face like, âIâm sorry if I fâ this up, Iâm sorry if I stand in the way of this streak.â Then she won, and I think I lost my mind more than she did. Mainly because of the conversation we had had earlier that day and the process of finding this actress in a haystack of auditions and instantly knowing her potential and then seeing her recognized and rewarded at the highest level of television â it was one of the most exciting moments for me certainly of that night. Very little of my excitement that night actually had to do with myself. It was looking at all the people we had essentially built this show with, with no expectations, âcause no one was watching for the entire run of our show. So it did catch up to you in that moment â this strange thing of, âWhat is happening now?â Weâd gone four seasons with nothing, fifth season with a couple of nominations, and by the time our sixth season was recognized, we had come to terms with the fact that the show would always be this kind of niche cult thing that people loved but wasnât mainstream.
âSchittâs Creekâ broke multiple records with its sweep of the comedy awards during the 2020 Emmys.
Eugene: Itâs an odd thing to say but COVID kind of came into play, because nobody was going out. I think there was a big discovery of our show with people looking for something somewhat uplifting they could be watching. The whole night was so surreal because weâre all masked up and half the people we invited we had to disinvite because the Ontario government came down with a new law the night before the Emmys where the number of people for an outdoor event, which was at 50, was cut down to 25. It was a very bizarre night but just crazy, crazy exciting.
When you were still mostly based in Canada, did the Emmys loom large in your imagination?
Eugene: Yeah, the Emmys were the Emmys â itâs like the Oscars are the Oscars. Thatâs the top of the heap. We had certainly experienced our share of Canadian awards at Canadian award shows, but the Emmys, my God, theyâre still unbelievable. I remember âSCTV,â when we were nominated for writing back in the early â80s, incredibly exciting, not only to be nominated but to be there and to be nominated. That doesnât go away.
So you went to the awards?
Eugene: Yeah, we were at the awards that night, the writers. It was the â82 Emmys, and when our show came up, the clip they showed was a piece I had written called âPerry Como: Still Alive,â and it went over so well in the theater, got huge laughs. And then when they announced the winner, we didnât win, there was an audible groan from the crowd.
![This video grab captured during the 72nd Emmy Awards shows Noah Reid](https://ca-times.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/e4b965e/2147483647/strip/true/crop/3360x1888+0+0/resize/2000x1124!/quality/75/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcalifornia-times-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F31%2F21%2F8e922d5e4d148e364c60f694dd19%2Fap20265088793697.jpg)
How did the invitation to host come your way?
Dan: We were asked before and it didnât feel like the right time for whatever reason. Then we were asked again this year, and I think ran out of reasons not to do it. It seemed like a fun little challenge â not little, quite huge actually.
Eugene: We were both obviously kind of nervous, because itâs kind of a tough thing to do â youâre letting yourself out there and whatever, whatever, is it worth it ? We could coast into the fall quite easily without doing this and have a fun time watching it on TV. But I guess something was drawing us into it â like, we could do it, it could be fun. We opened the SAG Awards a few years ago, and we had a ball doing it, and also it turned out really well; it seemed to work, and we got a taste of what thatâs like. So we jumped in and said yes. And what can happen, really?
Times columnist Glenn Whipp believes itâs going to be a big night for âThe Bear,â âBaby Reindeerâ and âShĆgun.â
Have you done other things together since the end of âSchittâs Creekâ?
Eugene: Well, we did some presenting. I know we presented at the SAG Awards two years ago.
Dan: You and Catherine did that, no?
Eugene: No, as a cast. You, me, Annie and Catherine. It was when the teleprompter wasnât on, and we had that thing â
Dan: That was the Emmys.
Eugene: That was the Emmys.
Dan: You said the SAG Awards.
Eugene: No, I said the Emmys. I think. But working together, not since the show.
Was there any feeling of deflation after you wrapped âSchittâs Creekâ and thought, âWeâre not coming back next year to do this again.â
Dan: None of us wanted to end the show. It just had to end because thatâs when the story ended. We got a fifth season pickup after the fourth season, and that felt like, âOK, I can finish the story in two seasons.â Any more and we would risk being one of those shows that stayed a little too long. All the shows I return to, to rewatch and rewatch and rewatch, are shows that left at just the right time. They left me wanting more. It was important for all of us, I think, to leave the audiences we respected so much â they are the reason that we got to this point, [the] people finding it on Netflix and sharing it and sharing the memes and sharing the gifs and all the sort of virality of it. Itâs a show that succeeded outwardly by way of the fans, so it was important to not get them to where they thought, âEh.â We wanted every season to beat the last one. I think that our last episode is one of the best weâd ever done. How lucky.
The 2020 Emmys were kind of like a bonus episode.
Dan: Yeah, the irony of Moira Rose never having an Emmy win and then all of us getting it felt like a really nice maraschino on top of everything. But listen, I fall asleep at least once every couple of weeks thinking, wishing, praying that an idea comes that would bring us all back together. It just hasnât happened yet. Despite what the media â every time you say, âWell, maybe,â itâs a whole headline thing â reunion! But itâs not for a lack of love, thatâs for sure.
But âdeflationâ like the last day of high school?
Eugene: Oh my God, yes.
Dan: I cried for 24 straight hours.
Eugene: The tears were going through the entire last week of the shoot. Every time you reached a final something â final scene in our motel room, final scene with the family â it was just heart-wrenching. Because it was ending, and nobody really wanted it emotionally to end. By the time we shot the wedding sequence, my God, there wasnât enough Kleenex in the studio.
A far-flung family, each member accustomed to doing exactly what he or she wants, finds itself suddenly brought together in reduced circumstances. How âSchittâs Creekâ unwittingly became a map of life at home amid the pandemic.
How have you been preparing for this upcoming job?
Dan: A lot of writing, thatâs for sure. We have a very tiny team of writers who are working with us. It really comes down to wanting it to feel celebratory, not wanting it to be too hard but still wanting a bit of an edge. People, from what Iâve been told, are kind of excited that weâre not hard-edged comics, that there will be a kind of warmth to the room. Itâs trying to marry all of those things without being boring, ultimately. But weâre getting there.
Eugene: And [itâs] also just paying tribute to television, certainly the nominees, but to the medium that gave us both our starts. Itâs always hit me in a funny way when jokes are done at the expense of people who are nominated â theyâve put in the work, and itâs their night, really, and you have to have enough respect for the awards show itself. Otherwise, why are we here? You want it to be funny, but itâs maybe a kinder, gentler approach. Itâs true, weâre not comedians, but weâre kind of funny working together. Itâs a relationship that was forged on âSchittâs Creek,â and it seems to continue. It really works for both of us, and I guess for whoever said, âCome on and do it.â
So youâll be doing a version of David and Johnny or Dan and Eugene?
Dan: I think in certain ways theyâre sort of interwoven; one is an extension of the other. So yeah, thereâs a nice little rhythm. Weâre going to keep it light and bright, thereâs still two weeks left, anything can happen, but thatâs the goal.
How does the pressure of being nominated compare to the pressure of running this three-hour ship?
Dan: Ultimately you just want to get through the monologue, and everything else will be an easier walk.
Eugene: Youâre setting a tone, and itâs our tone. It is what it is. Itâs kind of tricky when youâre in the weeds, but ultimately we have to be ourselves and go with what we think is funny. Weâre working with some really good people and weâre actually having fun in the process. Listen, itâs a first, and it is a big show; I think the key is just donât think about that, âcause that could take you down. So, get in, get out, dodge the bullets, say goodnight and God bless.
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