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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Fifth series for Mrs Brown's Boys

Brendan O’Carroll's comedy being recorded next month

Mrs Brown's Boys is to return to BBC One.

The new episodes will comprise the fifth series of Brendan O’Carroll’s love-it-or-hate-it sitcom outside the  Christmas specials and come two years after the last non-festive run, which comprised four episodes.

The new shows will be recorded in front of audiences in the BBC's Pacific Quay studios in Glasgow, on the first four Thursdays in May, with two recordings a day. Enter a random draw for free tickets here.

The broadcaster says: ‘Agnes Brown and the gang from Finglas are back! Everyone's favourite Irish Mammy returns for a brand new fifth series featuring all your favourite characters, so get ready for more slapstick shenanigans this spring!’

The 2024 Christmas Day special attracted just 2.2 million people - a far cry from its 2013 peak of 11.52 million. However, catch-up viewing in the next seven days boosted the figure to 3.88 million, making it one of the top 10-most watched British TV comedies of the year.

Recording was also marred by controversy as O’Carroll made a ‘clumsy’ joke implying the n-word during rehearsals. 

The line, said in character as Agnes Brown, was reportedly ’I don’t call a spade a spade, I call a spade a n…’ before being stopped by O’Carroll wife Jennifer Gibney, in character as Agnes’s daughter Cathy.

The comic apologised after the joke ‘backfired and caused offence’.

It was clearly a far cry from the sensitive and nuanced way the comedy usually portrays its ethnic characters:

@mrs.brown.boys24 #mrsbrownsboys #funny #comedyvideo #fyp #makemefamous ♬ original sound - mrs brown boys

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Published: 5 Apr 2025

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