Maureen
O’Sullivan (May 17, 1911 – June 23, 1998)
was an Irish actress.
She was born Maureen Paula O'Sullivan
in Boyle, County Roscommon, Ireland, the daughter
of Charles Joseph O'Sullivan and Mary Frazer.
She attended a convent school in Dublin,
then the Convent of the Sacred Heart at Roehampton
in London. One of her classmates there was Vivien
Leigh. After attending finishing school in France,
O'Sullivan returned to Dublin and began working with
the poor.
She then met the motion picture director
Frank Borzage, who was doing location filming on Song
o' My Heart for 20th Century Fox. He suggested she
take a screen test. She did and won a part in the
movie, which starred Irish tenor John McCormack. She
then traveled to the United States with her mother
to complete the movie in Hollywood.
O'Sullivan appeared in six movies
at Fox, then made three more at other movie studios.
In 1932, she signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
After several roles there and at other movie studios,
she was chosen by Irving Thalberg to appear as "Jane
Parker" in Tarzan the Ape Man opposite co-star
Johnny Weissmuller.
Besides playing Jane, she was one
of the more popular ingenues at MGM throughout the
1930s and appeared in a number of other productions
with various stars.
O'Sullivan was first married to Australian-born
writer, later award-winning director, and Catholic
convert John Farrow (September 12, 1936-1963 his death).
She was a widow for twenty years, then married James
Cushing (August 22, 1983-1998 her death).
She and Farrow were the parents of
seven children: Michael Farrow, Patrick Farrow, Maria
Farrow (actress Mia Farrow), John Farrow, Prudence
Farrow, Theresa "Tisa" Farrow and Stephanie
Farrow.
In all, O'Sullivan played Jane, mate
of Tarzan, in six features between (1932) and (1942).
She did not mind doing the first two jungle movies,
but feared being typecast and grew increasingly tired
of the role.
She also starred with William Powell
and Myrna Loy in The Thin Man (1934) and played Kitty
in Anna Karenina (1935) with Greta Garbo and Basil
Rathbone. She appeared as Molly Beaumont in A Yank
at Oxford (1938), which was written partly by F. Scott
Fitzgerald. At her request, he rewrote her part to
give it substance and novelty. She played another
Jane in Pride and Prejudice (1940) with Laurence Olivier
and Greer Garson, and supported Ann Sothern in Maisie
Was a Lady (1941).
After appearing in Tarzan's New York
Adventure (1942), O'Sullivan asked MGM to release
her from her contract so she could care for her husband
who had just left the Navy with typhoid. She then
retired from show business, devoting her time to being
a wife and mother.
In (1948), she re-appeared on the
screen in The Big Clock for Paramount Studios, which
was directed by her husband. She continued to appear
occasionally in her husband's movies and on television.
By 1960, she believed she had permanently retired.
Then fellow Irish thespian Pat O'Brien encouraged
her to take a part in summer stock. The play, A Roomful
of Roses, opened in 1961. That led to another play,
Never Too Late, in which she co-starred with Paul
Ford in what was her Broadway debut. Shortly after
it opened on Broadway, John Farrow died of a heart
attack.
Sadly, O'Sullivan also had to endure
being predeceased by her eldest son, Michael, who
died in a car crash in California.
O'Sullivan stuck with acting after
the death of her husband. She was the Today Girl for
NBC for a while, then she made the movie version of
Never Too Late (1965) for Warner Bros.. She was also
an executive director of a bridal consulting service,
Wediquette International.
When her daughter, Mia Farrow, became
involved with Woody Allen both professionally and
romantically, O'Sullivan appeared in a couple of his
movies playing Farrow's mother. She had important
roles in Peggy Sue Got Married (1986), starring Kathleen
Turner and Nicolas Cage, and the sci-fi oddity Stranded
(1987).
In (1994), she appeared with Robert
Wagner and Stephanie Powers in Hart to Hart: Home
Is Where the Hart Is, a feature-length made for TV
movie with the wealthy husband-and-wife team from
the popular weekly detective series.
Maureen O'Sullivan died in Scottsdale,
Arizona aged 87, of complications from heart surgery.
She is buried in the Most Holy Redeemer Cemetery at
Schenectady, New York.
She has a star on the Hollywood Walk
of Fame at 6541 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood.
Filmography
Song o' My Heart (1930) (20th Century Fox) ... Eileen
O'Brien
Just Imagine (1930) (20th Century Fox) ... LN-18
So This Is London (1930) (20th Century Fox) ... Elinor
Worthing
Princess and the Plumber (1930) (20th Century Fox)
... Princess Louise
A Connecticut Yankee (1931) (20th Century Fox) ...
Alisande
Skyline (1931) (20th Century Fox) ... Kathleen Kearny
The Big Shot (1931) (RKO Pathe) ... Doris
Okay, America! (1932) (Universal) ... Sheila Barton
The Silver Lining (1932) (United Artists) ... Joyce
Moore
Skyscraper Souls (1932) (MGM) ... Lynn Harding
Strange Interlude (1932) (MGM) ... Madeline Arnold
Fast Companions (1932) (Universal) ... Sally
Tarzan the Ape Man (1932) (MGM) ... Jane Parker
Payment Deferred (1932) (MGM) ... Winnie Marble
Robbers' Roost (1933) (20th Century Fox) ... Helen
Herrick
The Cohens and Kellys in Trouble (1933) (Universal)
... Molly Kelly
Stage Mother (1933) (MGM) ... Shirley Lorraine
Tugboat Annie (1933) (MGM) ... Patricia "Pat"
Severn
The Bishop Misbehaves (1933) (MGM) ... Hester Grantham
The Thin Man (1934) (MGM) ... Dorothy Wynant
The Barretts of Wimpole Street (1934) (MGM) ... Henrietta
Barrett
Hide-Out (1934) (MGM) ... Pauline Miller
Tarzan and His Mate (1934) (MGM) ... Jane Parker
Woman Wanted (1935) (MGM) ... Ann Gray
Cardinal Richelieu (1935) (United Artists) ... Lenore
West Point of the Air (1935) (MGM) ... "Skip"
Carter
Anna Karenina (1935) (MGM) ... Kitty
The Flame Within (1935) (MGM) ... Linda Belton
David Copperfield (1935) (MGM) ... Dora
The Voice of Bugle Ann (1936) (MGM) ... Camden Terry
The Devil-Doll (1936) (MGM) ... Lorraine Lavond
Tarzan Escapes (1936) (MGM) ... Jane
My Dear Miss Aldrich (1937) (MGM) ... Martha Aldrich
A Day at the Races (1937) (MGM) ... Judy Standish
The Emperor's Candlesticks (1937) (MGM) ... Maria
Orlich
Between Two Women (1937) (MGM) ... Claire Donahue
Spring Madness (1938) (MGM) ... Alexandra Benson
Port of Seven Seas (1938) (MGM) ... Madelon
Hold That Kiss (1938) ... June "Junie" Evans
The Crowd Roars (1938) (MGM) ... Sheila Carson
A Yank at Oxford (1938) (MGM) ... Molly Beaumont
Let Us Live! (1939) (Columbia) ... Mary Roberts
Tarzan Finds a Son! (1939) (MGM) ... Jane
Sporting Blood (1940) (MGM) ... Linda Lockwood
Pride and Prejudice (1940) (MGM) ... Jane Bennet
Tarzan's Secret Treasure (1941) (MGM) ... Jane
Maisie Was a Lady (1941) (MGM) ... Abigail "Abby"
Rawlston
Tarzan's New York Adventure (1942) (MGM) ... Jane
The Big Clock (1948) (Paramount) ... Georgette Stroud
Where Danger Lives (1950) (RKO) ... Julie Dawn
No Resting Place (1951) (Classic, Associated British)
... Nan Kyle
Bonzo Goes to College (1952) (Universal) ... Marion
Drew
All I Desire (1953) (Universal) ... Sara Harper
Mission Over Korea (1953) (Columbia) ... Nancy Slocum
Duffy of San Quentin (1954) (Warner Bros.) ... Gladys
Duffy
The Steel Cage (1954) (United Artists) ... Gladys
Duffy
The Tall T (1957) (Columbia) ... Doretta Mims
Wild Heritage (1958) (Universal) ... Emma Breslin
Never Too Late (1965) (Warner Bros.) ... Edith Lambert
The Phynx (1970) (Warner Bros.) ... Cameo
Mandy's Grandmother (1978) (Film Short) (Andrew Sugarman)
... Grandmother
Too Scared to Scream (1985) (Movie Store, Doorman)
... Inez Hardwick
Hannah and Her Sisters (1986) (MGM) ... Norma
Peggy Sue Got Married (1986) (Tri-Star) ... Elizabeth
Alvorg
Stranded (1987) (New Line) ... Grace Clark
[edit]
Notable television appearances
Today (1952) (TV series) ... Herself - Today Girl
(1963-1964)
The Crooked Hearts (1972) (TV) ... Lillian Stanton
The Great Houdini (1976) (Made for TV) ... Lady Conan
Doyle
All My Children (1970) (TV soap opera) ... Olive Whelan
(1981)
Good Ole Boy: A Delta Boyhood (1988) (Made for TV)
... Aunt Sue
With Murder in Mind (1992) (TV) ... Aunt Mildred
The Habitation of Dragons (1992) (Made for TV) ...
Helen Taylor
Hart to Hart: Home Is Where the Hart Is (1994) (Made
for TV) ... Eleanor Biddlecomb
source from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki
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