Martin Short addresses daughter's tragic death publicly for the first time two months after she took her own life at 42 21%
By Adam S. Levy0% Ashleigh Gray0%
5/10/2026, 10:48:18 PM
BS Summary: This article contains 32 faulty reasoning types, including Appeal to Emotion, Confirmation Bias, and Anecdotal, with Halo Effect as the most egregious example at 15.1% saturation with 176 hits. Analysis detected 1,994 faulty-reasoning hits from 1,165 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 34.9% and a BS Rank of 21% (13,389 of 16,813 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 79.60% of the article peer group.
Martin Short has opened up about the tragic suicide of his daughter Katherine Hartley Short at 42, less than three months ago, saying her loss has 'been a nightmare' for all who loved her while sharing a poignant message about mental health.
Katherine died in February from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, authorities with the Los Angeles Police Department confirmed in February.
Short, 76, spoke with CBS Sunday Mornings about the family tragedy, comparing her battle with mental health to that of the 2010 death of his wife Nancy Dolman, who passed away from cancer.
'The understanding [is] that mental health and cancer, like my wife's, are both diseases, and sometimes with diseases they are terminal,' said the star of Father of the Bride, Three Amigos!
and Only Murders in the Building.
He continued, 'My daughter fought for a long time with extreme mental health, borderline personality disorder, other things, and did the best she could until she couldn't.'
Short said his aim was to support a mental health awareness organization founded by Glenn Close called Bringchange2mind.
He said the nonprofit aims to take 'mental health out of the shadows' and conduct frank discussions on the important topics at hand.
Short shared a moving message which touched on how he hopes struggles with mental health can be understood.
'Not being ashamed of it, not hiding from the word suicide, but accepting that this can be the last stage of an illness - and that’s my approach to this,' he said.
Short dedicated the documentary to both Katherine and his late friend and colleague Catherine O'Hara, who died in January at the age of 71.
'There was no one more brilliant.
There was no one sweeter,' Short told CBS of O'Hara.
'And there was no one funnier.
'And she, more than anyone on SCTV, would sit behind the camera and give you suggestions: "Marty, try that."'
Oh, okay.'
And then you always just did it.'
The entertainer appeared on the network amid the release of his new Netflix documentary Marty: Life Is Short.
Short told CBS of surviving early life tragedies including the death of his brother (when he was 12) and parents (as a teen): 'What it developed in me was this muscle of survival and handling grief and a perspective on it.'
The veteran entertainer added, 'I think if you've gone through that, an audience not liking you is really not that important anymore.'
He added to the network about life's tragic moments: 'I did have an understanding from my childhood [that] the end of life was going to happen to all of us, and [for] some, it's too early.
'We have to celebrate and be lucky enough the experiences that we've had with them.'
Short said his mentality is 'just to think of them, they've just gone into the next room for a while.'
The comic star also touched on how he has managed to keep such a positive public face in the wake of multiple family tragedies.
After he was asked about a quotation from his friend Tom Hanks, who said that Short 'operates at the speed of joy,' Short was at first hesitant to 'analyze' himself.
However, he accepted Hanks's judgment and admitted, 'I think I do have the happy gene, and I think my orientation is to be happy.'
Short told People May 7 in LA, 'My older brother David died first.
He was the star of the family.
'Then my mother was diagnosed with cancer at his funeral and died three years later.
My father died the year after that.'
A representative for Short confirmed the tragic passing of his daughter in a statement in February.
'It is with profound grief that we confirm the passing of Katherine Hartley Short,' Short’s representative said in a statement.
'The Short family is devastated by this loss, and asks for privacy at this time.
'Katherine was beloved by all and will be remembered for the light and joy she brought into the world.'
Katherine was a licensed clinical social worker with a master’s degree from the University of Southern California.
Officials with the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner's Office confirmed O'Hara's cause of death as the result of a pulmonary embolism, with rectal cancer listed as an underlying cause.
Short told CBS that losing his daughter, O'Hara and longtime friends Diane Keaton and Rob and Michele Reiner in a short span been 'staggering.'
He said when contemplating the painful losses, 'You just have to breathe in, breathe out.'
Short is father to Katherine and sons Oliver Patrick, 39, and Henry Hayter, 36, with his late spouse.
Short and Dolman were married for 30 years before she died of ovarian cancer in 2010.
Of his late spouse, Short told the network, 'She was funny - she had lots of edge.
It was an equal ping pong match. … although Tom Hanks would go up to Nancy, "Aren't you tired of laughing at his jokes?"'
Short told CBS Sunday, 'Nan’s last words to me were, "Marty, let me go," and [Katherine] was just saying, "Dad, let me go."'
In the wake of his daughter's tragic death, Short was visited at his Southern California home by peers such as Eugene Levy, Steven Spielberg, Kurt Russell and Paul Shaffer.
Speaking about his late wife in a 2019 AARP interview, Short described their marriage as a 'triumph.'
He said: 'She died in 2010, but I still communicate with her all the time.
It’s “Hey, Nan,” you know?
How would she react to this decision or that, especially regarding our three kids.'
Short also said that he has never been one of those people who think death means means 'the end.'
'I believe that when people die, they zoom into the people that love them,' said Short.
'This idea that it just ends, and don’t speak of them – that’s wrong.
That’s based on denial that we’re all going to die.
So to me, she’s still here.'
In his 2014 memoir I Must Say: My Life As a Humble Comedy Legend, Short said Dolman's death is 'by far the most awful thing I've been through.'
And as he supported his children through the grief of losing their mother, Short drew from his own experiences.
Speaking to his youngest child, son Henry, the night before his wife died, he told him: 'This will make you stronger.
This will make you more determined.'
In the interview, Short recalled how Nancy encouraged him to continued taking roles amid her ailment, as he landed a part on the FX drama Damages at the time.
'I didn't work as much, but I remember I was doing Damages at the time,' he said.
'This was the last five months, but I went for a month to shoot, and I remember getting to set, and no one knew.
'And Glenn would go, 'Marty's here, yay!
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