Irish Star FLEES HOLLYWOOD: CHRIS O’DOWD ‘Abandons’ LA After 16 Years

Wednesday, September 17, 2025  Read time3 min

SAEDNEWS: In a surprise move that has Hollywood gossip mills racing, Chris O’Dowd has left America after 16 years — returning to Britain with his wife Dawn O’Porter and their two sons, and insisting that the humble puffin helped soothe their decision to come home.

Irish Star FLEES HOLLYWOOD:  CHRIS O’DOWD ‘Abandons’ LA After 16 Years

According to Saed News, the actor best known for The IT Crowd and his affable turn in Bridesmaids quietly relocated back to the UK a year ago, citing family, a thirst for normality and fewer local filming opportunities as the reasons for the seismic life-change. O’Dowd — who at 6ft 4in cuts a far taller figure in person than his on-screen comic humility might suggest — told reporters he and Dawn simply “made a run for it” when they realised their parents were aging and that, for their boys, being present mattered more than the glitter of Hollywood.

The move is not the product of scandal or burnout; rather, it reads as a gentle, almost domestic revolt against the peripatetic nature of modern acting life. O’Dowd admits he did plenty of work while in the US — often shooting in Vancouver, Atlanta and Toronto — yet rarely in California itself once the tax incentives dried up. Ultimately, he says, the calculus shifted: “More than anything, the move was about me living in a place where I could also be a parent.”

Far from mourning Tinseltown, the star seems quietly liberated. “Nobody really likes Hollywood, unless you’re a big party person,” he observed, adding with a shrug that he was never that person. The choice to return appears as much about small, lived things — easier visits to grandparents, a steadier home life, and calmer routines — as it is about career recalibration.

Ironically, it is an unexpectedly tender children’s show that cements much of O’Dowd’s present public affection. As the narrator of the soothing preschool hit Puffin Rock, he revealed a genuine love for the resilient seabirds and praised the show’s gentle ethos. “The show forces me to sound lovely and calm. It’s impossible to feel agitated after a recording,” he said, describing how the role’s soft rhythms translate into real domestic comfort — for him and countless families who use the programme as a bedtime ritual.

O’Dowd’s narration, he believes, benefits from the Irish voice’s “elongated vowels,” a cadence studies have praised as particularly soothing. For parents who dread screen-time clamor, Puffin Rock represents a rare, restorative counterpoint: quiet storytelling that teaches kindness, curiosity and care for the world. O’Dowd confessed to being moved by messages from families — including one mother who said her formerly non-verbal son began singing the theme tune — and admitted he was reduced to tears reading the fan mail.

Professionally, O’Dowd’s career has run the gamut from Channel 4’s cult comedy to mainstream Hollywood fare. He remembers The IT Crowd fondly: the show launched him to wider recognition and remains a proud chapter. Yet the realities of modern TV and film production — tax breaks, location shoots and the endless travel — ultimately made his U.S. life more transitory than the stability he sought for his family.

At home in Britain, the actor is rediscovering landscapes reminiscent of his youth. The fictional Puffin Island mirrors the wild beauty of places like Inishbofin, County Galway, where family ties run deep and the pace is more measured. His sons, now mixing American, English and Irish accents, are thriving in the blend of cultures; one, Valentine, is even obsessed with terrariums — a curious, wholesome hobby that delights his father.

O’Dowd’s return is notable not because it signals retreat, but because it signals choice: a deliberate prioritising of family and calm over constant career churn. He’s not vanishing from screens — narrating beloved children’s series and taking on roles will likely continue — but he’s doing it on terms that let him be present at home.

For fans and onlookers, the story reads as a reminder that stardom need not be synonymous with exile. Sometimes, after years in the glare, even successful actors choose the quieter life — and, in O’Dowd’s case, they bring a little of the wild Atlantic back with them, one puffin tale at a time.



Latest news  
Afghanistan Emphasizes Using Iran’s Route to Boost Global Trade ✅ UK Declares Major Incident Following Severe Flooding Street Art Masterpieces Around the World That Turn Walls into Galleries — How a Pen Can Make the World More Beautiful + Photos Mohammad Reza Pahlavi Visiting the Paris Mosque in France, 1948 / Gaining Public Trust to Spread Corruption in the Country (Photo) (Video) Dutch Engineering and Architectural Masterpiece: How Nature Became the Key Element in Designing a Billion-Dollar Residential Building Photo | Mozaffar ad-Din Shah’s Luxury Car from Europe: A Historic Trail Leading to the Failed Assassination of Mohammad Ali Shah Video | Did You Know Saffron, the Red Gold, Could Help Treat Stress and Parkinson’s? Video | Step into the Magical World of the Pharaohs: Are You Ready to Experience Ancient Egypt Up Close? (Video) Introducing Iran’s National Jewels in the Treasury: Unique and Majestic Treasures with Pearls and Stunning Gemstones! The Most Scenic Tourist Spot: Klarabad, Mazandaran – Northern Iran’s Coastal Paradise with Pristine Forests and Beautiful Beaches + Video 2026 Color of the Year Announced: How Celebrities Are Styling the Trendy Shade + Photos Serious Warning: Signs Your Relationship Is Falling Apart Vengeful Cat Always on the Scene 😼 / Cat Boosts Speed, Dog Rockets Off Treadmill + Video The Warmest Winter Breakfast: How to Make Date Qeysava or Date Khagineh to Boost Your Energy 5 Mysterious Houses of the World: Incredible Japanese Architectural Creativity in Building a House You’ll Never Want to Leave + Photos