Catherine O’Hara’s Most Famous Fictional Homes

The legendary “Schitt’s Creek” actress passed away on Friday, leaving behind a legacy of wit, sincerity, and deep sense of home.

Catherine O’Hara passed away on Friday at age 71, as reported by Variety. Over the course of her Emmy-winning career, O’Hara, most famous for “Home Alone” and “Schitt’s Creek,” occupied a wide range of fictional homes, each one tuned to the character inside it. Whether suburban mansions, rural motels, or aggressively curated art houses, the spaces framed her performances as well as define them. 

Let’s take a look back at O’Hara’s most memorable homes, remembering who she was and the worlds she helped create.

1. The McCallister House – “Home Alone” (1990, 1992)


As mother Kate McCallister, O’Hara lived in perhaps the most famous family home of the 1990s: A sprawling, stair-filled suburban house home to a beloved child repeatedly forgotten at Christmas, and sometimes, an entire extended family. That it becomes a battleground for slapstick crime only cements its place in cinema history.

The “Home Alone House” is famously a real-life property in one of Chicago’s most affluent suburbs: 671 Lincoln Ave, Winnetka, IL 60093. The iconic residence last sold in 2025 for $5.5 million, and is a well-known tourist destination.

2. The Rosebud Motel (Rooms 6 & 7) – “Schitt’s Creek” (2015-2020)


O’Hara’s award-winning portrayal of the once-wealthy Moira Rose begins in motel rooms that are the opposite of everything she believes she deserves. Yet over six seasons, this dingy temporary housing evolves into something permanent: A place where she finds a new identity and deepens family bonds.

Exterior shots of the Rosebud Motel were filmed at the real-life Hockley Motel outside Toronto, Ontario. The 10-room, renovation-ready property last sold for $1.6 million in 2021 and is not an active motel.

3. The Rose Mansion – “Schitt’s Creek” (Flashbacks)


Seen only in flashbacks, the Roses’ former mansion is set in the opulent Le Belle Maison in Toronto, Ontario: 30 Fifeshire Rd, North York, ON. The 12-bed, 16-bath house was designed to impress rather than comfort—a visual shorthand for the family’s former wealth and emotional distance. Its loss looms over the series, making the motel’s intimacy feel earned rather than tragic. The present-day home last sold for $15.2 million in 2022.

4. The Deetz House – “Beetlejuice” (1988) “Beetlejuice Beetlejuice” (2024)


As Delia Deetz, O’Hara helped transform a quiet New England home—the “Maitland Residence”—into a monument to avant-garde excess. Under her influence, the house becomes a living art installation, with sharp angles, brutalist flourishes, and furniture that dares you to sit on it. It’s less a home than a declaration—but that embodies Delia’s performative taste and self-assured nature.O’Hara reprised her role as Delia in 2024.

The exterior shots were not of a real house, but of a set built in East Corinth, Vermont. The set was rebuilt for the sequel.

5. The Del Boca Vista–Style Condo – “For Your Consideration” (2006)


In Christopher Guest’s Hollywood satire, O’Hara’s Marilyn Hack resides in a remarkably plain Florida condo. Beige, low-stakes, and quietly depressing, the home mirrors the industry’s indifference to aging actresses—comfortable enough, but stripped of glamour or promise. O’Hara and Guest were frequent collaborators. 

6. Sheila Albertson’s Small-Town House – “Waiting for Guffman” (1996)


Another Christopher Guest classic, O’Hara plays Sheila, who lives in a modest small-town home that reflects community theater earnestness rather than ambition. It’s practical and unflashy, which is a quiet counterpoint to the big dreams she pours into local productions.

The film is set in the fictional town of Blaine, Missouri, but was shot in Lockhart, Texas. Exterior shots of Corky St. Clair’s iconic apartment building were filmed at a building in the real-life 101 S. Main St.

7. The Aerobics-Era Suburban Home – “After Hours” (1985)


In her brief but memorable role as Gail, O’Hara inhabits a sharply ‘80s Manhattan apartment that feels controlled, insular, and slightly threatening. It’s a domestic space that quickly becomes claustrophobic—proof that not all homes are meant to comfort.

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