London – Just hours ago, the son of Mrs Brown’s Boys creator and star Brendan O’Carroll delivered an emotional message that has left fans in shock. After months of relentless online criticism accusing the 70-year-old comedy legend of “losing his spark” and “milking his fame for money,” Brendan’s family has revealed the painful truth: he has been silently battling a debilitating illness — and fighting to keep his career, his dignity, and his charity work alive.

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For weeks, fans noticed Brendan looking thinner and weaker in public appearances, but speculation online turned cruel. Social media posts accused him of cashing in on the once-beloved BBC comedy and no longer caring about its quality. “They had no idea what he was going through,” his son said, visibly shaken. “I couldn’t stand by and watch people tear down a man who spent his entire life giving to others while suffering in silence.”

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A lifelong fight to give more than he took

Far from chasing wealth, Brendan O’Carroll has spent decades using his success to help those in need. His son recalled a powerful story from years ago — when Brendan tried to sell his family’s only car because an orphan girl he’d been supporting needed urgent surgery. “Dad was ready to walk to every set he ever worked on. He told Mum: ‘What’s a car compared to saving a child’s life?’ They argued for days, but that’s who he is — he’s always been willing to give everything away for someone else.”

Through the years, Brendan quietly funded schools, orphanages, and local charities across Ireland and the UK. “He never wanted the cameras there. He didn’t want the applause,” his son said. “He wanted kids to have clothes. He wanted families to eat.”

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The illness he tried to hide

According to the family, Brendan was diagnosed last year with a rare autoimmune disease that attacks the nervous system, leaving him with chronic pain, muscle weakness, and exhaustion. The condition, while treatable, has no cure and has forced him to endure invasive treatments, powerful medication, and weeks of physical therapy.

Yet Brendan insisted on filming Mrs Brown’s Boys despite worsening symptoms. “He would wake up barely able to stand. He would throw up from the medication, then wipe his mouth and go straight into makeup,” his son said. “He said, ‘The audience came for a laugh, not a lecture about my health.’ He didn’t want pity — he wanted people to smile.”

Doctors advised him to take a full year off, but Brendan refused. He wanted to keep funding the charities he supports, even if it meant putting his health at risk. “He told us: ‘If I can still walk, I can still work. And if I can work, I can still give.’ That’s how stubborn he is,” his son added, holding back tears.

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A message to the critics — and to the fans

The family decided to speak out after seeing Brendan repeatedly attacked online. “People called him lazy. They said he’d stopped caring. That couldn’t be further from the truth,” his son said. “Every joke he writes, every line he performs — he does it in pain. But he does it because he loves it, and because that paycheck goes to someone who needs it more than us.”

As Brendan continues treatment, his doctors say his prognosis is uncertain but hopeful if he rests. Whether he will be able to keep performing at the same pace is unclear — but his son says that’s not what matters. “Dad’s legacy isn’t just a TV show. It’s the hundreds of lives he’s quietly changed. And even if the world never knew about his illness, he would have kept going. That’s the kind of man he is.”