Maureen O’Hara, Irish-Born Actress Known as Queen of Technicolor, Dies at 95 [View all]
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Maureen OHara, the spirited Irish-born actress who played strong-willed, tempestuous beauties opposite all manner of adventurers in escapist movies of the 1940s and 50s, died on Saturday at her home in Boise, Idaho. She was 95.
Johnny Nicoletti, her longtime manager, confirmed her death.
Ms. OHara was called the Queen of Technicolor, because when that film process first came into use, nothing seemed to show off its splendor better than her rich red hair, bright green eyes and flawless peaches-and-cream complexion. One critic praised her in an otherwise negative review of the 1950 film Comanche Territory with the sentiment Framed in Technicolor, Miss OHara somehow seems more significant than a setting sun. Even the creators of the process claimed her as its best advertisement.
Yet many of the films that made the young Ms. OHara a star were in black and white. They included her first Hollywood movie, The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1939), in which she played the haunted Gypsy girl Esmeralda to Charles Laughtons Quasimodo; the Oscar-winning How Green Was My Valley (1941), in which she was memorable as a Welsh mining familys beautiful daughter who marries the wrong man; This Land Is Mine (1943), a war drama in which she was directed by Jean Renoir; and Miracle on 34th Street (1947), the holiday classic in which she played a cynical, modern Macys executive who tries to prevent her daughter from believing in Santa Claus......Although Ms. OHara took on dual citizenship, she was intensely proud of her Irishness. She served as the grand marshal of New Yorks St. Patricks Day parade in 1999. When a journalist asked her in 2004 how she remained so beautiful, she explained: I was Irish. I remain Irish. And Irish women dont let themselves go.
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