
Jim Sheridan: 'I blamed my father for brother's death'
Oscar-nominated director Jim Sheridan has opened up about his complicated relationship with his late father, saying that "somewhere deep down" he blamed him for his brother's death, and recalled the poignant last moment he and his father shared. Jim Sheridan and Brendan Courtney on Keys to My Life, RTÉ One and RTÉ Player on Friday, 26 December at 8pm Jim Sheridan (pictured here in 1998) speaks about the grief of losing his younger brother Frankie Jim Sheridan with his parents - mother Anna in fur coat and father Peter with glasses - at the My Left Foot Dublin premiere Brenda Kneafsey and Jim Sheridan presenting Motley aged 19 (1969) Jim Sheridan and his wife Fran, pictured in their early 20s Jim Sheridan said of Fran's passing in 2021: "That was a shock." Pictured in 1994 The acclaimed Dublin filmmaker appears in a special hour-long St Stephen's Day episode of Keys to My Life , the RTÉ show in which presenter Brendan Courtney meets Irish personalities who reveal how the places they've lived in have shaped their lives. The My Left Foot and In the Name of the Father director visited his childhood home in a boarding house off Dublin's Sheriff Street, where he recalled how his teenage years shaped his relationship with his father, Peter Sheridan. "By the time I was 16/17, I was a little monster. I remember taking him on, on everything, arguing with him on everything," he said. "This got very serious when my brother died, because somewhere deep down, I blamed my father for his death - who had nothing to do with it." Sheridan's younger brother Frankie died of a brain tumour in 1966, aged 10 years old. "He was only 10, so everybody in the family believed they were somehow responsible for his death," Sheridan said. "I remember the day he died, the moment he died. I just slid down the wall. For me, it came at the same time as I was becoming an adult, so it was complicated." He remembered an incident when his father hit him in the face and one of his teeth fell out. "I was in such a rage, I went upstairs and pulled a mirror off the wall and went down, kicked the door in and held it up in front of my dad and said, 'Look at yourself'," the filmmaker told Courtney. Sheridan said he came to forgive his father later in life. "I always made him the bad guy in films and plays, and then one day I realised, it's just a product of our history - that all the fathers are bad fathers, and he's a great guy," he said. "So I started saying to him, 'I think I'll make a movie about a good father'. And I made Giuseppe [Conlon, the father of Gerry Conlon] in In The Name of the Father . "On the opening night [of the film], my dad's here with my mother - she's the prototype for the mother...
Preview: ~500 words
Continue reading at Rte
Read Full Article