Dan Levy Reveals Why He Needed a Neck Brace While Shooting for Schitt's Creek

As a writer, showrunner and star of the hit sitcom Schitt's Creek, actor Dan Levy wore many hats throughout the five-year run of the beloved show. But with many roles and responsibilities, come some setbacks.

Schitt's Creek Creator Dan Levy (Photo Credits: Twitter)

As a writer, showrunner and star of the hit sitcom Schitt's Creek, actor Dan Levy wore many hats throughout the five-year run of the beloved show. But with many roles and responsibilities, come some setbacks. The actor recently revealed that while working on the Emmy-winning show, he endured some physical struggles behind the scenes. He said that the many responsibilities resulted in so much physical stress that he at one point required a neck brace, reported The Hollywood Reporter. Schitt’s Creek Star Dan Levy Extends Support to Netflix’s Trans Employee Walkout.

The star has previously spoken about his lack of social life while working on the hit show. The social isolation was largely driven, he said in a new interview with British GQ, by his many creative roles on the show which required long hours and saw him get little sleep. Levy told the magazine that his days would start at 5 am when he would drive to the set before rehearsing and rewriting scenes, make wardrobe and set decisions, approve budgets, and go on to film -- sometimes as an actor and other times as a director. Schitt’s Creek Creator Dan Levy Inks Exclusive TV Deal With Netflix , Will Write, Direct and Produce Several Projects.

That was on top of spending several hours running the show's writer's room. By the time he went home, he'd only have time to quickly eat before returning to write until about 2 am. The star admitted that for some weeks, "I didn't sleep more than eight hours." That physically demanding schedule only got worse as the seasons went on. "Because the more we built the show, the more proud of it I was. And the more I wanted to create more compelling and dimensional stories, the more we wanted to expand our world," he said.

That hyper-focus on the series led to increasing stress, and by the show's sixth season, it was so bad he required a neck brace. "The anxiety in my neck was so bad I couldn't move it," he explained. "At one point there was an acupuncturist and a chiropractor coming to set every day at lunch to work on my neck so that I could actually perform and not, you know, look like I needed a neck brace," he added.

The pandemic, the actor shared, gave him a much-appreciated opportunity to pause and be with his family in Toronto. "It was actually kind of amazing," he said. "Like, whenever would you have the time to reset like that?" With 'Schitt's Creek' behind him and the pandemic offering him a chance to recalibrate, Levy shared that he's started working on his latest creative project -- a gay rom-com.

"I've always wanted to make a romcom," he said. He added, "I've always wanted to be in one. And as a gay person, you don't ever get that kind of opportunity. You get to play the zany friend or Pepe the coworker. So I'm really excited and honoured to have that opportunity: to put a gay person front and centre in a rom-com."

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