What happens to every key character in 'Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy'
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Miramax / Jay Maidment / Universal Pictures
- "Bridget Jones: Mad About The Boy" is the fourth and final installment of the rom-com franchise.
- Most of the main cast are returning.
- Here's where each returning character ends up, including Bridget Jones' parents, lovers, and close friends.
Warning: This article contains spoilers for "Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy."
"Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy," which is available to stream on Peacock, is the final chapter of the British rom-com series.
Renée Zellweger returns as the hapless and lovable diarist who now finds herself in middle age, raising two kids, and ready for love again.
The cast includes a few new faces, including Chiwetel Ejiofor and Leo Woodall, who play Bridget's love interests.
There are also a number of returning cast members, including Hugh Grant, Jim Broadbent, and Sally Phillips, who make up Bridget's nearest and dearest.
Here's a breakdown of where every character ends up.
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Miramax / Jay Maidment / Universal Pictures
When audiences first met Bridget in the 2001 movie, she was a single, 30-something Londoner whose New Year's resolution was to find a nice, sensible boyfriend.
Over the course of the four films, Bridget falls in love and marries human rights barrister Mark Darcy (Colin Firth), but her path to her happily ever after wasn't exactly straightforward.
When audiences meet Bridget again in "Mad About the Boy," she's single once again but raising two children.
After embarking on an ill-fated fling with Rockster McDuff (Leo Woodall), a man twenty years her junior, Bridget finds herself falling for the stern, straight-laced science teacher, Mr. Wallaker (Chiwetel Ejiofor).
The two share a kiss in the street following a school Christmas concert, and in the final scene of the film, Mr. Wallaker is among those seen ringing in the New Year with Bridget and her loved ones.
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Miramax / Universal Pictures
Daniel Cleaver (Hugh Grant) is Bridget's former boss. As audiences will recall from the first film, after flirting via instant messaging in the office, the two embark on a relationship that ends sourly when Bridget finds out that Daniel is cheating on her with — as she put it — an "American stick insect."
While Bridget and Daniel reconnect in Thailand in the second film, "The Edge of Reason," he is absent in the third film.
When we see Daniel in "Mad About The Boy," he and Bridget have a platonic, teasing relationship, deepened by their decades of friendship. He is even referred to as "Uncle Daniel" by Bridget's children and babysits them.
Still a bachelor in his 50s, Daniel has a much younger girlfriend at the start of the film. Following a health scare, however, Daniel breaks up with her.
When audiences last see Daniel at Bridget's party, he and Bridget's colleague and friend Miranda (Sarah Solemani) have hit it off, to put it delicately.
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Miramax / Universal Pictures
In the first film, Darcy is introduced as a human rights lawyer who has known Bridget since she was a toddler, running around naked in his paddling pool.
While they made an unlikely couple, Bridget and Mark eventually get together.
However, it's revealed in "Mad About The Boy" that Mark was killed on a humanitarian mission in Sudan four years before the events of the film, leaving Bridget a widow and single mother.
As a result, Mark is mostly absent from the latest installment, except for a couple of scenes in which Bridget reminiscences about life before the tragedy.
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Miramax / Universal Pictures
Shazzer is Bridget's bold, feminist friend who doesn't fear confrontation. In the first film, Bridget introduces Shazzer (Sally Phillips) as a journalist who "likes to say 'fuck' a lot."
Shazzer's personality has not changed much since the first film, and she now hosts a feminist podcast. She is last seen celebrating New Year's at Bridget's house.
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Miramax / Universal Pictures
Another close friend of Bridget is Tom (James Callis) an arrogant, drama-loving retired '80s pop icon.
In the first film, Tom uses his one-hit-wonder status to get laid. By the final film, he has become a life coach and is still single.
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Miramax / Universal Pictures
Rounding off Bridget's close friends is Jude (Shirley Henderson), the most emotional member of the friendship group.
In the first film, Jude is the head of investment at Brightlings, a fictional bank, and cries on multiple occasions to Bridget about her relationship problems.
In "Mad About The Boy," Jude has leveled up at work, but Bridget is not sure whether she is a "COO" or "CEO."
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Miramax / Universal Pictures
Bridget has always been close with her father, Colin (Jim Broadbent), even after her he and mother briefly split during the first movie. But Bridget does not have Colin as her rock in "Mad About The Boy."
Partway through the film, a flashback scene reveals that Colin died a few years prior. Before his death, Colin tries to persuade Bridget to live life to the fullest after he's gone and not wallow in grief.
Toward the end of the film, Bridget writes in her diary that she realizes what Colin meant by this while watching her son, Billy, overcome his grief to give with a genuine smile at his school's Christmas concert.
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Miramax / Universal Pictures
Despite often despairing of her daughter's sartorial choices and approach to dating, Pamela (Gemma Jones) has stuck by Bridget's side throughout the films.
In "Mad About The Boy," she has moved into a nursing home, which Bridget and the rest of the family have been instructed to refer to as a "hotel," alongside her lifelong pal Una (Celia Imrie).