James McAvoy recently surprised fans by disclosing that he has welcomed a second son, a four-year-old with wife Lisa Liberati. The Scottish actor, who shares 15-year-old son Brendan with ex-wife Anne-Marie Duff, noted that fatherhood at 42 feels easier because he worries less, though age brings more fatigue.
Longstanding Family Rift
McAvoy’s family dynamics remain marked by estrangement. He maintains no contact with his younger half-brother Donald, currently imprisoned at HMP Saughton in Edinburgh. Donald faces a potential life sentence after admitting to slashing fellow inmate Colin Lindsay’s face with a hidden blade on October 21, 2025, causing severe injury and permanent disfigurement.
Judge Norman McFadyen remarked during proceedings at the High Court in Edinburgh, “It is clear to me that you have met the criteria for risk needed for the making of an order for lifelong restriction.” Donald, with over 40 prior convictions, awaits further assessment, with the case resuming on June 9, 2026.
Estrangement from Late Father
The brothers share only their late father, James Sr., a former bus driver and builder. McAvoy’s parents separated when he was seven, and he was raised by his maternal grandparents, James and Mary Johnstone, on a council estate in Glasgow’s Drumchapel district, alongside sister Joy, now an actress in Two Doors Down.
James Sr. lived nearby with partner Mary McKinnon and son Donald. McAvoy ceased contact with his father at age 12. He has described the matter briefly: “It’s boring. I don’t want to talk about it. I know what happened and I know what didn’t happen.”
James Sr. attributed the rift to McAvoy’s discomfort with his new partner, stating he stepped back to avoid upsetting his son. In 2006, following McAvoy’s Rising Star BAFTA win, James Sr. publicly sought reconciliation but received no response. McAvoy later commented to The Guardian: “Quite strange… I know what made me, I know why I am the way I am. I don’t need to go hunting for missing answers.”
Contrasting Paths
McAvoy’s career soared after youth theatre work and studies at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland. Breakthroughs included Shameless in 2004, where he met Duff, and The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe as Mr. Tumnus in 2005, earning BAFTA nominations for The Last King of Scotland and Atonement.
Donald, however, entered prison at 19 for stabbing a man eight times and other violent offenses, including abducting a man over a drug debt. In 2013, he and James Sr. faced drug charges. James Sr. passed away while Donald was incarcerated; Donald inherited a substantial estate sum, which his lawyer Ian Sievwright noted could aid rehabilitation for his daughter’s sake.
McAvoy’s Current Life
McAvoy met Liberati, a production assistant, on the Split set in Philadelphia while separating from Duff after 11 years. They married in 2022 and split time between London and Philadelphia. Recently promoting his directorial debut California Schemin’, McAvoy reflected on fatherhood: “Having a kid at 42 is definitely easier in some ways—I worry less. I’m a bit more philosophical. But it’s also harder, because you’re just older and tireder.”
He aims to direct stories about working-class Scots: “I want to tell stories about working-class people with backgrounds that I recognise… I don’t know why they can’t be entertaining. I don’t know why they can’t be adventures,” critiquing typical depictions of Scotland involving abuse and poverty.

