Martin Short, star of Only Murders in the Building, mourns the tragic suicide of his adopted daughter, Katherine Harley Short, at age 42. The 75-year-old actor shared Katherine, a social worker, with his late wife, Nancy Dolman, who passed away in 2010.
A representative for Short confirmed: “It is with profound grief that we confirm the passing of Katherine Harley Short. 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 died suddenly on Monday, February 23. Grief specialist Maria Kontos, who focuses on counseling, psychotherapy, and child loss trauma, provides insight into the profound impact on parents like Short.
The Uniquely Shattering Weight of Child Loss
Child loss stands out as the most devastating bereavement. While grief affects everyone, losing a child imposes a distinct, instinctual burden, forcing parents to rewire protective impulses no longer needed.
Maria Kontos explains: “The death of a child is often described as the most devastating loss a person can endure. While grief is universal, child loss carries a uniquely shattering weight.”
She notes that traditional grief stages—denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance—do not apply linearly for parents. Instead, grief cycles unpredictably, intertwined with their core identity as caregivers.
Challenges of Grieving a Sudden Suicide
The abrupt nature of Katherine’s suicide leaves little time for preparation, intensifying the trauma. Parents face shock, intense longing, guilt, anger, and a disrupted sense of self, while striving to preserve bonds through memory.
Kontos states: “Parents may experience shock, intense yearning and overwhelming guilt, as well as anger and a destabilising shift in identity, together with an ongoing need to maintain a bond with their child in memory.”
“The instinct to protect a child is primal; when that child dies, that instinct has nowhere to go. Losing a child is particularly devastating because it shatters the natural order we instinctively believe life will follow,” she adds.
Sudden deaths like suicide amplify complications: intrusive thoughts, endless ‘why’ questions, searches for overlooked signs, shame, and isolation layer onto the pain.
Kontos elaborates: “When death is sudden, particularly in cases of suicide, grief is often compounded by trauma. There can be intrusive thoughts, relentless ‘why’ questions and a painful search for missed signs. Feelings of shame or isolation may surface, adding further layers to an already unimaginable loss.”
Navigating the ‘Should-Have-Beens’
Child loss disrupts life’s expected sequence, especially with unlived potential. Kontos draws from her own story: In October 2012, she lost her identical twin daughters, Lily and Elissa, born prematurely at 27 weeks. They spent brief time in the NICU before passing.
“Even in those brief days, they were deeply loved, fiercely fought for and forever mine. Each day brings quiet reminders of the life they should have had,” she shares.
She reflects: “Grief has become something I carry, enduring and intimate, woven into the love that still binds me to my daughters, not simply as a weight, but as a testament to the hope and future I once held in my arms, a love that did not end with their lives and never will.”

