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Belfast Live
Belfast Live
Entertainment
Katie Gallagher & Nadia Breen

Liam Neeson calls Jimmy Kimmel's jokes at Oscars about Irish people 'racist'

Ballymena actor Liam Neeson has said Jimmy Kimmel's jokes about Irish people at the Oscars were "being a bit racist".

The US comedian has come under fire over jokes he made about Irish people while hosting the 2023 Academy Awards ceremony last week in front of a record-breaking number of Irish nominees in the crowd, reports the Irish Star.

Neeson was not in attendance at the awards but when asked what he thought, he told The Times: “I heard he was being a bit racist. Jokes about Irish fighting, drinking, and all that. I don’t know what to say.”

Read more: Liam Neeson tells Northern Ireland politicians to ‘get back to work’

Kimmel kicked off the jokes in the opening monologue of the ceremony, saying: "It was some year for diversity and inclusion. We have nominees from every corner of Dublin. Five Irish actors are nominated tonight which means the odds of another fight on stage just went way up."

The Taken actor, who has also faced his own racism controversy in the past, did not discuss that in the interview, but instead reflected on his career to date, as he reaches his 100th movie and the milestone age of 70.

His latest film, Marlowe, which marks 100 in his wide-spanning catalog, sees him once again in an action role, playing Raymond Chandler's iconic detective Philip Marlowe, who is hired to find heiress Clare Cavendish's (Diane Kruger) missing former lover.

Following his own iconic Taken performance, the star said the violence and action scripts keep rolling in despite his age.

Asked if he ever thinks there could be a link between violence on screen and in real life, he told the publication: “It’s very much an American problem — that Second Amendment.

“And, OK, I’ve made a few violent films and used a gun quite a few times, but, speaking for myself, I grew up surrounded by violence. Certainly from 1969 onwards . . .”

The star, who grew up during the Troubles, added: “And I grew up with matinees. Cowboys slaughtering Indians and vice versa. I loved having a toy gun but was never drawn to think, ‘I wonder what it’s like to shoot with a real gun?’ But gun violence in the US is staggering. A few weeks ago, a six-year-old shot his teacher.”

Asked if it would ever make him reconsider violent films, he added: “It gives me pause for thought, yes.”

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