'Emotional' Barry Keoghan reveals it feels 'right' to discuss the large scar across his wrist as he proudly bares it for first time

Barry Keoghan bravely displayed the large scar across his left wrist as he revealed it felt like the 'right time' to show it. 

The actor, 32, posed for a striking cover shoot for Hunger magazine, with the publication stating that he wanted to 'lay bare the scars that have shaped him - inside and out'. 

Speaking after the photoshoot, Barry revealed it had left him feeling 'emotional' as he explained: 'I won't go into how I got this scar, but I've got a scar that's like a millimetre away from my main vein on my left arm.' 

Discussing the scar, which is visible in the cover picture in which he wears a bracelet saying 'Debbie', he went on: 'I waited to do this with [photographer Rankin] to show that. You know, it just felt right.'

Barry - whose mother Debbie died from a heroin overdose when he was 12 - added: 'On one wrist you've got my mum's name and then on the other wrist you've got this constant reminder, this scar. 

'[Rankin and I] both looked at each other and went, "Wow! That's it."' 

Barry Keoghan bravely displayed the large scar across his left wrist for Hunger magazine as he revealed it felt like the 'right time' to show it

Barry Keoghan bravely displayed the large scar across his left wrist for Hunger magazine as he revealed it felt like the 'right time' to show it

Barry has spent years hiding his scar behind bracelets and watches (pictured in September)

Barry has spent years hiding his scar behind bracelets and watches (pictured in September)

MailOnline contacted Barry's representatives for clarification but have yet to receive a response. 

Barry also developed a scar that runs the whole length of his arm after he fell ill with a horrific flesh-eating bug which almost led to him having his arm amputated.

The actor was struck down with necrotising fasciitis, also known as the 'flesh-eating disease', which is a rare and life-threatening condition that can occur if a wound gets infected.

Before Barry started filming his 2022 film The Banshees of Inisherin, he was hospitalised with the illness. The original wound was caused when he was hit with a bottle in a pub.

Elsewhere in his chat, Barry revealed he's constantly working to better himself as an actor, father and human being as he hit back at trolls who labelled him a 'deadbeat dad'.

The Saltburn star is father to two-year-old son Brando with his ex-girlfriend Alyson Kierans, whom he split from in mid-2023. 

Last month, he revealed that trolls had unfairly branded him an 'absent father' and 'deadbeat dad' because he stopped posting as many pictures with his child. 

Hitting back, he told the publication: 'By God, didn't the feckin' internet do their work! "Deadbeat father", blah, blah, blah! 

'It's just because I don't post my child 24/7 or give the internet what they want. My son isn't a talking point. 

'It's not my place to be sticking up pictures of his face all over the internet - not in this day and age with the internet and how sick it can be. 

'People are so feckin' quick to judge. It can really affect you, but I'm a strong person. I do some therapy. I'm a work in progress. I'm constantly evolving as an actor, as a father, as a human. I'm always trying to grow.' 

Barry also developed a scar that runs the whole length of his arm after he fell ill with a horrific flesh-eating bug which almost led to him having his arm amputated (pictured in May)

Barry also developed a scar that runs the whole length of his arm after he fell ill with a horrific flesh-eating bug which almost led to him having his arm amputated (pictured in May) 

During an interview on The Louis Theroux Podcast, Barry reflected on living in foster care while his mother struggled with drug addiction. 

He said: 'If I didn't have tough skin... I wouldn't be sitting here.' 

'Of course, [my childhood is] going to affect me being a father when I had no blueprint to take from.

'People just read that [as] laziness and go, "Oh, that's no excuse to be an absent father". I'm not an absent father.'

The film star said he is infuriated by some of the comments he reads about himself online, describing those about his parenting or appearance as 'slander'.

He added: 'Just the audacity of some people, man. It sickens me, makes me furious. I've been off it [social media] because when I'm going through a role, I'm getting into character. I stay away from the internet.

'But, again, when I've got a bit of time, I am a curious being like all of us and you want to know what [people are saying online], especially when it's slander and when it's bad comments attacking my appearance or attacking me as a father.'

Barry said he is 'just trying to make a living, trying to get a good body of work and create safety for my child'. 

The Saltburn actor, 32, is father to two-year-old son Brando and hit out at trolls who labelled him a 'deadbeat' dad

The Saltburn actor, 32, is father to two-year-old son Brando and hit out at trolls who labelled him a 'deadbeat' dad 

Speaking about his mother, Barry described her as 'gorgeous, almost like six foot, dark hair, just beautiful,' but said drug addiction 'caught her'.

He added: 'It's sad to see the deterioration of people around the area and see people kind of struggle with it and the recovery they're in now.' 

'It caught my mum, it caught my uncle who died of it and caught my father as well.' 

Barry, who is from Summerhill in Dublin, went through more than ten foster homes before eventually settling with his grandmother. He said the experience 'kind of haunts me still'. 

Of being in care, Barry said: 'You don't forget waiting on the social worker steps and waiting for the new family to come and play with you in the playground they have in the office and see if it's going to work, and then go with them to a whole new area and a whole new home...

'And, you know, the car journeys there and they're the things that haunt. I don't blame her. It's a sickness.'

Speaking about his experience with The Sunday Times, Barry revealed he prays to his mother 'every day' following her death.

Barry has revealed how his upbringing has affected his parenting. He was 12 when his mother Debbie died from a heroin overdose and he had no relationship with his father (pictured with brother Eric)

Barry has revealed how his upbringing has affected his parenting. He was 12 when his mother Debbie died from a heroin overdose and he had no relationship with his father (pictured with brother Eric) 

He admitted that losing his mother 'wasn't a shock', adding: 'But oh, she was so beautiful.'

Barry struggled at school, where he was considered a naughty pupil, and was kicked out of school plays for 'messing about'.

But he previously revealed that acting helped him overcome some of the trauma of his childhood, after he initially pursued careers in boxing and football. 

The actor went on to star in international blockbusters like Eternals and The Batman before achieving critical acclaim for his role as Dominic Kearney in The Banshees of Inisherin.