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Maureen O'Hara (born August 17, 1920) is an Irish film actress and singer. The famously red-headed O'Hara has been noted for playing fiercely passionate heroines with a highly sensible attitude. She often worked with director John Ford and longtime friend John Wayne. She published her autobiography, Tis Herself, in 2004.

Early life and careerO'Hara was born Maureen FitzSimons on the Lower Churchtown Rd in the Dublin suburb of Churchtown, Dublin 14, Ireland.[1] She was the second oldest of six children by Charles Stewart Parnell FitzSimons and Marguerita Lilburn FitzSimons. Her father was a Dublin businessman and part owner of Shamrock Rovers Football Club.,[2] whom she has supported since childhood.[3] Her mother, a former operatic contralto, was a successful womans' clothier. Her siblings were Peggy, the oldest, and younger Charles, Florrie, Margot and Jimmy. Peggy dedicated her life to a religious order, Sisters of Charity, and the younger children all went on to receive training at the Abbey Theater and the Ena Mary Burke School of Drama and Elocution in Dublin. O'Hara's dream at that time was to be an opera singer like her mother.

O'Hara's father was a very practical man and did not entirely support her theatrical aspirations. He insisted she learn a skill so that she would have something to fall back on to earn a living in case her experience in the performing arts was not successful. She enrolled in a business school and became a proficient bookkeeper and typist. Those skills proved helpful many years later when she was able to take and transcribe production notes dictated by John Ford for the screen adaptation of Maurice Walsh's short story The Quiet Man.

She did well in her Abbey training and was given an opportunity for a screen test in London. The studio adorned her in a "gold lamé dress with flapping sleeves like wings"[4] and heavy make-up with an ornate hair style. Reportedly, her thoughts concerning the incident were, "If this is the movies, I want nothing to do with them!"[5] The screen test was deemed to be far from satisfactory; however, actor Charles Laughton later saw the test and, despite the overdone makeup and costume, was intrigued, paying particular notice to her large and expressive eyes.

Laughton subsequently asked his business partner Eric Pommer to see the film clip. Pommer agreed with Laughton and O'Hara was offered an initial seven-year contract with their new company, Mayflower Pictures. Her first major film was Jamaica Inn (1938) directed by Alfred Hitchcock. Laughton was so pleased with O'Hara's performance that he cast her in the role of Esmeralda opposite him in The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1939), which was to be filmed at RKO Studios in Hollywood that same year. After the successful completion of Hunchback, World War II began, and Laughton, realizing their studio could no longer film in London, sold O'Hara's contract to RKO. That studio cast her in low-budget films until she was rescued by director John Ford, who cast her as Angharad in How Green Was My Valley, which won the 1941 Academy Award for Best Picture. Six years later, in 1947, she made what is perhaps her best-remembered film, starring as Doris Walker and the mother of a young Natalie Wood in 20th Century Fox's Miracle on 34th Street, which, despite being released in May, has become a perennial Christmas classic, with a traditional network television airing every Thanksgiving Day on NBC. The film also helped to further establish O'Hara's career after the film garnered several awards, including an Academy Award Nomination for Best Picture.

In 1946, she became a naturalized citizen of the United States.

In addition to her acting skills, O'Hara had a soprano voice and described singing as her first love. The studio heads never capitalized on her musical talent, as she was already big box office in other genres of film. However, she was able to channel her love of singing through television. In the late '50s and early '60s, she was a guest on musical variety shows with Perry Como, Andy Williams, Betty Grable and Tennessee Ernie Ford. In 1960, she starred on Broadway in the musical Christine and released two successful recordings, Love Letters from Maureen O'Hara and Maureen O'Hara Sings her Favorite Irish Songs. Love Letters from Maureen O'Hara has been released on CD in Japan and is now out of print; Maureen O'Hara Sings Her Favorite Irish Songs has yet to be released on CD.

An icon of Hollywood's Golden Age, at the height of her career O'Hara was considered one of the world's most beautiful women. She is often remembered for her on-screen chemistry with John Wayne. They made five films together between 1948 and 1972: Rio Grande, The Quiet Man, The Wings of Eagles, McLintock!! and Big Jake. A clip of O'Hara's radiant face as she waves from a gate in John Ford's Academy Award-winning How Green Was My Valley, remains one of the most classic images preserved on film, and is often featured as a clip in montages and promotions.

Marriage, retirement and comeback

In 1939, at the age of 19, O'Hara secretly married Englishman George H. Brown,[6] a film producer, production assistant and occasional scriptwriter whose best known work is the first of Margaret Rutherford's 1960s Miss Marple mysteries, Murder She Said. The marriage was annulled in 1941. Later that year, O'Hara married American film director Will Price (dialog director in The Hunchback of Notre Dame), but the union ended in 1953, reportedly as a result of his alcohol abuse. They had one child in 1944, a daughter named Bronwyn FitzSimons Price.

She married her third husband, Charles F. Blair, Jr.., in 1968. Blair was a pioneer of transatlantic aviation, a former Brigadier General of the U.S. Air Force, and a former Chief Pilot at Pan Am. A few years after her marriage to Blair, O'Hara for the most part retired from acting. Blair died in 1978 when the engine of a Grumman Goose he was flying from St. Croix to St. Thomas exploded. She was elected CEO and President of Antilles Airboats with the added distinction of being the first woman president of a scheduled airline in the U.S. Later she sold the airline with the permission of the shareholders.

O'Hara remained retired from acting until 1991, when she starred in the film Only the Lonely. She played Rose Muldoon, the domineering mother of a Chicago cop played by John Candy. Now officially retired, she divides her time among homes in Glengarriff, County Cork, Ireland, Arizona and the Virgin Islands.

Achievements

O'Hara was named Irish America magazine's "Irish American of the Year" in 2005, with festivities held at the Plaza Hotel in New York.

She was given the Heritage Award by the Ireland-American Fund in 1991.

For her contributions to the motion picture industry, O'Hara has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 7004 Hollywood Blvd. In 1993, she was inducted into the Western Performers Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. She was also awarded the Golden Boot Award.

She wrote the foreword for the cookbook At Home in Ireland. In March 1999, O'Hara was selected to be Grand Marshal of New York City's St. Patrick's Day Parade. In 2007, she wrote the foreword for the biography of her dear friend, actress Anna Lee.

In 2004, O'Hara released her autobiography 'Tis Herself, published by Simon & Schuster. In the same year, she was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Irish Film and Television Academy in her native Dublin.

In 2006, O'Hara attended the Grand Reopening and Expansion of the Flying Boats Museum in Foynes, Limerick, Ireland, as a patron of the museum. A significant portion of the museum is dedicated to her late husband Charles.

O'Hara donated her late husband's seaplane (a Sikorsky VS-44A) "The Queen of the Skies" to the New England Air Museum. The restoration of the plane took 8 years and time was donated by former pilots and mechanics in honour of Charles Blair. It's the only example of this planetype surviving. O'Hara is

Filmography

FilmYearFilmRoleNotes1938Kicking the Moon AroundSecretaryMy Irish MollyEileen O'Shea1939Jamaica InnMary YellenThe Hunchback of Notre DameEsmeraldaDance, Girl, DanceJudy O'Brien1941They Met in ArgentinaLolita O'SheaHow Green Was My ValleyAngharad1942To the Shores of TripoliMary CarterTen Gentlemen from West PointCarolyn BainbridgeThe Black SwanLady Margaret Denby1943Immortal SergeantValentine LeeThis Land Is MineLouise MartinThe Fallen SparrowToni Donne1944Buffalo BillLouisa Frederici Cody1945The Spanish MainContessa Francesca1946Sentimental JourneyJulie Beck / WeatherlyDo You Love MeKatherine "Kitten" Hilliard1947Sinbad the SailorShireenThe HomestretchLeslie HaleMiracle on 34th StreetDoris WalkerThe Foxes of HarrowOdalie "Lilli" D'Arceneaux1948Sitting PrettyTacey King1949A Woman's SecretMarian WashburnThe Affairs of AdelaideAdelaide "Addie" CulverAlternative title: Britannia MewsFather was a FullbackElizabeth CooperBagdadPrincess Marjan1950Comanche TerritoryKatie HowardTripoliCountess D'ArneauRio GrandeMrs. Kathleen Yorke1951Flame of ArabyPrincess Tanya1952At Sword's PointClaireKangarooDell McGuireThe Quiet ManMary Kate DanaherAgainst All FlagsPrudence "Spitfire" Stevens1953The Redhead from WyomingKate MaxwellWar ArrowElaine Corwin1954MalagaJoanna Dana1955The Long Gray LineMary O'DonnellThe Magnificent MatadorKaren HarrisonLady Godiva of CoventryLady Godiva1956LisbonSylvia MerrillEverything But the TruthJoan Madison1957The Wings of EaglesMin Wead1959Our Man in HavanaBeatrice Severn1961The Deadly CompanionsKit TildenThe Parent TrapMargaret "Maggie" McKendrick1962Mr. Hobbs Takes a VacationPeggy Hobbs1963Spencer's MountainOlivia SpencerMcLintock!!Katherine Gilhooley McLintock1965The Battle of the Villa FioritaMoira1966The Rare BreedMartha Price1970How Do I Love Thee?Elsie Waltz1971Big JakeMartha McCandles1991Only the LonelyRose Muldoon1994A Century of CinemaHerselfTelevisionYearTitleRoleNotes1960Mrs. MiniverMrs. MiniverTelevision movieDuPont Show of the MonthLady Marguerite Blakeney1 episodeThe Bell Telephone HourHostess1 episode1963Hallmark Hall of FameSusanna Cibber1 episode1966The Garry Moore ShowSara Longstreet1 episode1973The Red PonyRuth TiflinTelevision movie1995The Christmas BoxMary ParkinTelevision movie1998Cab to CanadaKatherine EureTelevision movie2000The Last DanceHelen ParkerTelevision movie

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