Brendan O'Carroll

Brendan O'Carroll

Brendan O’Carroll is a writer, actor and comedian, best known for creating the Irish mammy Agnes Brown, star of the BBC One sitcom Mrs Brown’s Boys. The youngest of eleven children, O’Carroll was born and raised in Dublin, and ran his own bar and cabaret lounge before turning to comedy.

He originally thought up the character of Mrs Brown for a two-week radio show in 1992, unintentionally becoming the character after the actress supposed to play her failed to turn up. Agnes Brown became the lead character in The Mammy, O’Carroll’s first book, written in 1994. It became a bestseller and was turned into a 2000 film, starring Angelica Huston as Mrs Brown. O’Carroll followed it up with other books: The Chiselers, The Granny and Sparrow’s Trap.

O’Carroll also wrote five plays based on Mrs Brown between 2001 and 2009, including Mourning Mrs Brown, For The Love Of Mrs Brown, and How Now Mrs Brown Cow? The stage phenomenon began at the Glasgow Pavilion, and in 2010 BBC Scotland in 2010 to turn the various adventures of Mrs Brown into a TV show. The finished product, Mrs Brown’s Boys, was broadcast on BBC One in 2011 to divided critical opinion, but growing audience. The shown returned for a second series in 2012, and won a BAFTA in the same year for best sitcom, as well as O’Carroll being nominated for best male performance in a comedy programme.

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Brendan O’Carroll's racist joke

Production worker reportedly quit over Mrs Brown's Boy 'clumsy' comment

The racist joke Mrs Brown’s Boys star Brendan O’Carroll told in rehearsals has been reported today.

It comes amid separate reports that a junior member of the production team was so upset by the comment that they walked off the show.

Yesterday the 69-year-old comedian apologised for a a ‘clumsy’ joke where a ‘racial term was implied’.

Today, the Daily Mail reports that he was reading a script in the character of matriarch Agnes Brown when he said ‘I don’t call a spade a spade, I call a spade a…’

He then started to utter the N-word before he was stopped by his wife Jennifer Gibney, in character as Agnes’s daughter Cathy.

O’Carroll’s representative told the newspaper: ‘We would also like to clarify that the "n" word was absolutely not spoken, it was implied. Agnes began the word but was stopped from finishing it by her daughter Cathy, as she knew she would be.’

Meanwhile The Sun reports that  the junior member of staff was so offended by the joke they quit their job. 

The offending comment, made at the BBC’s Pacific Quay studios in Glasgow, was first reported by the Mirror.

When the story broke, O’Carroll said: ‘At a read-through of the Mrs. Brown’s Boys Christmas specials, there was a clumsy attempt at a joke, in the character of Agnes, where a racial term was implied. It backfired and caused offence which I deeply regret and for which I have apologised.'

The BBC added: ‘Whilst we don’t comment on individuals, the BBC is against all forms of racism and we have robust processes in place should issues ever arise.’

Earlier this week, O’Carroll said that his new sitcom Shedites was due to be screened on the BBC this autumn.

Starring veteran comic Tommy Cannon, 86, the show is about about lonely men and their sheds, with the O’Carroll saying: ‘‘It’s using comedy to touch on men's mental health.’

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Published: 16 Oct 2024

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