Brenda Fricker, Oscar-winning star known for 'My Left Foot' and 'Home Alone 2,' dies at 81
Published in Entertainment News
LOS ANGELES — Irish actor Brenda Fricker, who won an Oscar for her role in "My Left Foot" and whose Pigeon Lady befriended Macaulay Culkin's Kevin McCallister in "Home Alone 2: Lost in New York," has died. She was 81.
Her talent agent Phil Belfield confirmed Fricker's death in a statement shared with The Times on Friday. The actor died peacefully Thursday evening in Dublin after a "period of ill health," he said.
"We will never see her like again and the world is lesser for the lack of her," Belfield said in the statement. "I was honored to know, love and work with her and she will always have a place in my heart and in the heart of so many film and TV fans the world over."
Fricker, who was born Feb. 17, 1945, in Dublin, appeared in nearly 100 TV, film and short projects since the mid-1960s. She reached international acclaim for her work in Jim Sheridan's 1989 comedy-drama "My Left Foot," based on the life of Dublin-born painter Christy Brown, who only had control over the titular limb due to cerebral palsy. Daniel Day-Lewis starred as Brown and Fricker played his supportive mother. She earned the Academy Award for supporting actress, becoming the first Irish female actor to win an Oscar, and Day-Lewis took home the prize for lead actor.
"My Left Foot" was also nominated for best picture, director and adapted screenplay.
In her review of the film for The Times in 1990, film critic Sheila Benson praised a "magnificent" Fricker for her portrayal of motherly love. "She plays [Mrs. Brown] like the rock she must have been, without a jot of martyrdom or a flicker of complaint and without an actressy moment," Benson wrote.
The '90s brought Fricker additional roles in productions including "The Field," "Home Alone 2: Lost in New York," "Angels in the Outfield," "A Time to Kill" and "Veronica Guerin." She counted Cate Blanchett, Joe Pesci, Tim Curry, James McAvoy, Fiona Shaw, Sean Bean, Richard Harris, Christopher Lloyd and Tony Danza as co-stars, to name a few.
For generations of movie audiences, however, Fricker will most likely be remembered as the Pigeon Lady from "Home Alone 2."
A sequel to the hit "Home Alone," Fricker's Pigeon Lady was a source of unexpected tenderness for Culkin's Kevin, now stranded during the holidays in New York. He first encounters Fricker's odd character in Central Park, dressed in oversized, dirty clothing with city birds resting on her head and shoulders. Though a terrifying sight at first, the film later reveals Fricker's character has a heartbreaking past.
"The man I loved fell out of love with me," she tells Kevin one evening, adding, "whenever the chance to be loved came along again, I ran away from it. I stopped trusting people."
Kevin later gifts his new friend a turtledove ornament after learning the animal represents friendship and love.
Fricker continued acting through 2015 — with roles in numerous TV movies, miniseries, more than 70 episodes of the show "Casualty" and films such as "Conspiracy of Silence" and "Rory O'Shea Was Here" — but her career tapered off. She was last credited for the 2024 film "The Shallow."
Fricker attended Catholic school but drifted away from religion in her late teens. She suffered injuries from a car crash at age 14, prompting her parents to spend their life savings on plastic surgery as part of her recovery. She also suffered other health issues during childhood and spent two years in a sanatorium.
"The positive side is, it taught me about self-sufficiency," she told The Times in 1993.
She was a journalist for the Irish Times, where her father had also worked, before she started acting. She graced the stage at Dublin's Abbey Theatre and the Royal Shakespeare Company in London, and never looked back.
Amid her mounting fame in the 1990s and early aughts, Fricker did not heed the call to move Stateside and remained in the U.K. "I didn't like Los Angeles," she recalled in 1993. "I don't like the heat and I found it uninteresting. I wasn't comfortable there."
Before her death, Fricker penned a memoir, "She Died Young: A Life in Fragments," about her upbringing and experiences with sexual violence and mental illness. In February, Fricker was awarded Honorary Freedom of the City of Dublin.
Lord Mayor of Dublin Daryl Barron honored Fricker in a statement shared Friday.
"She was a proud Dub with a sharp wit and warmth that exuded to all who knew her and experienced her work," Barron said. "She will be sorely missed."
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