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“I Moved For Love”: Inside Catherine O’Hara’s Hancock Park Estate with a Kidney-Shaped Pool, 1 Tennis Court, and 32 Years of Memories Behind the Gates.

In a city famous for reinvention, Catherine O’Hara has quietly practiced something far rarer: staying put. For more than three decades, the Schitt’s Creek icon has lived behind the same gates in Hancock Park, guarding a home that has become a living record of her life, her marriage, and her career. In Hollywood, where properties are flipped as casually as scripts are passed, longevity itself has become the luxury.

O’Hara purchased the 1920s traditional estate in 1994 for approximately $1.25 million—an almost unthinkable price by today’s Los Angeles standards. The timing mattered. Fresh off the global success of Home Alone, she wasn’t chasing status or spectacle. She was building a life.

“I Moved for Love”

The decision to settle in Los Angeles was deeply personal. O’Hara met her husband, acclaimed production designer Bo Welch, on the set of Beetlejuice, where she played Delia Deetz and he crafted Tim Burton’s surreal visual world. Their partnership quickly became permanent.

“I moved to L.A. to be with him,” O’Hara later said. “Yeah, I moved for love.”

That love anchored them in Hancock Park—a neighborhood known for discretion, old trees, and classic homes with history baked into the walls.

A House That Refused to Chase Trends

The estate itself rejects modern minimalism. Instead of glass boxes and showroom sterility, the home leans into warmth and character—an influence unmistakably shaped by Welch’s eye for storytelling spaces.

Out back sits a classic kidney-shaped swimming pool, a subtle nod to mid-century Hollywood glamour. Nearby is a private tennis court, tucked behind intentionally overgrown greenery that shields the family from the street. The garden, dense and slightly wild, functions as a natural privacy wall—no hedges trimmed for Instagram perfection.

Inside, the house has evolved slowly, organically, absorbing decades of life rather than undergoing dramatic reinventions.

Raising a Family Out of the Spotlight

The Hancock Park home became the foundation for raising their two sons, Matthew and Luke, largely away from paparazzi culture. While both eventually gravitated toward film and television—often working behind the scenes—their upbringing remained grounded.

During the later seasons of Schitt’s Creek, the family’s professional and personal worlds briefly overlapped, with both sons contributing to production work. It was a full-circle moment for a household where creativity had always been part of daily life.

A Career Reflected in One Address

From her early days on SCTV to global acclaim as Moira Rose, O’Hara’s career has deepened rather than burned out—mirroring the way her home accrued meaning over time. While her fictional character famously lost everything, O’Hara quietly proved the opposite path was possible.

In Hancock Park, neighbors have come and gone. The house has remained.

Catherine O’Hara’s estate isn’t just real estate. It’s a declaration—that in an industry obsessed with what’s next, choosing what lasts may be the boldest move of all.