Dan Levy teams up with Canadian musician Peaches for score on Netflix’s ‘Big Mistakes’

Advertisement

Advertise with us

TORONTO -  

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

We need your support!
Local journalism needs your support!

As we navigate through unprecedented times, our journalists are working harder than ever to bring you the latest local updates to keep you safe and informed.

Now, more than ever, we need your support.

Starting at $15.99 plus taxes every four weeks you can access your Brandon Sun online and full access to all content as it appears on our website.

Subscribe Now

or call circulation directly at (204) 727-0527.

Your pledge helps to ensure we provide the news that matters most to your community!

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Brandon Sun access to your Free Press subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on brandonsun.com
  • Read the Brandon Sun E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
Start now

No thanks

*Your next subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $20.00 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.00 plus GST every four weeks.

TORONTO –  

Dan Levy is ready to grab the attention of Netflix audiences with his first original scripted series since “Schitt’s Creek” and he’s combining his comedy prowess with the avant-garde sounds of Canadian electroclash musician Peaches for the score.

“There is a euphoria that comes when you’re creating things and a piece of the puzzle comes in and just blows your expectations out of the water.”

Dan Levy is the star, as shown in this handout photo, executive producer and showrunner on his new Netflix series 'Big Mistakes' THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout-Netflix-Spencer Pazer
(Mandatory credit)
Dan Levy is the star, as shown in this handout photo, executive producer and showrunner on his new Netflix series 'Big Mistakes' THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout-Netflix-Spencer Pazer (Mandatory credit)

The heartbeat of the show is the music, with Levy’s sonic story pulsating in sync with an anxiety-inducing rhythm. 

Levy said a lot of Peaches music was on the mixtape he was listening to while writing the series and crafting the tone. 

“When it came time to get someone to score it, she was the only person I wanted.”

He created a mood board to set the landscape when pitching it to Peaches, whose real name is Merrill Nisker. He said she immediately got the thriller-comedy vibe he was going for, and the Toronto-born and Berlin-based musician signed on, teaming up with Grammy-winning composer Nora Kroll-Rosenbaum.

“The two of them just crushed. And it’s so good. And it’s singular, it feels like nothing I’d ever heard before as a score for a comedy,” Levy said.

Peaches, known for her provocative music and stage persona, broke out with her album “The Teaches of Peaches,” in 2000, and continued to build a dedicated following. This year she released her latest album “No Lube So Rude.” 

“I wanted it to have a Peaches esthetic. I think what I love about her music is, it is iconic. It’s self-aware in the best way possible. She has a wink and a nod to herself. She doesn’t take herself too seriously and yet never jokes about herself. So it felt totally in line with the show.”

“Big Mistakes,” takes viewers on a chaotic ride through the world of organized crime, blackmail and dysfunctional family dynamics.

Levy stars as a gay pastor who has to keep his relationship a secret because he’s expected to be “non-practising,” and he has a bickering relationship with his two sisters, one a people-pleaser, played by Abby Quinn, the other a cynical underachiever, played by Taylor Ortega. 

As co-creator and showrunner, he was responsible for finding the perfect cast and the first actor to sign on was Laurie Metcalf, playing the overbearing matriarch of the family.

“Laurie was sent the script I think on a Wednesday and by Thursday she had said ‘Yes’ and that was the greatest compliment.”

Metcalf approached the role from her theatre background, Levy said, planning each scene as if it was a stage play.

Levy’s writing included scenes that were far longer than the average television show script. He wanted the actors to have time to breathe and not be rushed. 

“Often now in television, we’re sort of catering to an audience that I think a lot of people undermine. I think we sort of feel like the audience doesn’t have the attention span.” 

For Levy, catering to the lowest common denominator, because an audience might be on their iPad (or their phone) at the same time, is never part of his writing. 

“I would much rather play to the top of their intelligence level than pander to the lowest level. I think she really responded to the fact that there were like three, four-page scenes that really had some meat to them.”

Levy’s next move was finding his on-screen counterpart, his younger sister, an elementary school teacher who starts to enjoy her new life of crime. He knew it was important their chemistry emulated the connection he had with Annie Murphy and her Emmy-winning performance as Alexis Rose on “Schitt’s Creek.”  

“Finding Annie Murphy in the mix of the ‘Schitt’s Creek’ casting and finding Taylor in the midst of the ‘Big Mistakes’ casting, it’s a very similar feeling of excitement that I have for them,” he said. 

“In both cases, it was an actor who, by way of circumstance and their own experience working their way up the industry met the project at the right time and exploded onto the screen.”

Taylor Ortega’s biggest role to date was her villainous turn in the 2019 Disney channel movie “Kim Possible.” Levy said he loves finding talent that are on the cusp of breaking big in Hollywood. 

Their chemistry combines sibling jealousy with a strong attachment and love, leading to scenes that are hilarious, but at times deeply emotional.

“I’m just vibrating at this point, wanting the show to come out so that everyone can see how incredible she was because she’s a real force.”

As Pastor Nicky, Levy joins the ranks of other man-of-faith characters in recent comedies including Adam Brody who plays a rabbi in Netflix’s “Nobody Wants This,” and Andrew Scott in “Fleabag.”

So, will audiences give his gay pastor character a moniker that matches Brody’s, who was dubbed “Hot Rabbi” online? 

“That’s for an audience to decide. That was certainly not top of mind,” he laughed. 

“But listen, if people wanna go there, I won’t stop them. But it was not the goal and I don’t think if you ask any of my friends they would think that’s what’s going to happen. But stranger things have happened.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 2, 2026.

Report Error Submit a Tip

Entertainment

LOAD MORE