Veteran actress Maureen O'Hara dies at 95
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Fiery-haired and feisty, Maureen O'Hara could handle anything the world and Hollywood threw at her. Director John Ford punched her in the jaw at a party and John Wayne dragged her through sheep dung — real sheep dung — in "The Quiet Man." In "Miracle on 34th Street" she learned to believe in Santa Claus.
But first and foremost, she always believed in herself.
"I do like to get my own way," she said in a 1991 interview with The Associated Press. "There have been crushing disappointments. But when that happens, I say, 'Find another hill to climb.'"
The Irish-born beauty was 95 when she died today in her sleep at her home in Boise, Idaho, said Johnny Nicoletti, her longtime manager.
In her heyday, O'Hara was known as the Queen of Technicolor because of the camera's love affair with her vivid hair, bright green eyes and pale complexion.
But she also had talent.
"I proved there was a bloody good actress in me," she told the British newspaper The Telegraph last year. "It wasn't just my face. I gave bloody good performances."
Never nominated for an Oscar (although she received an honorary Academy Award last year), O'Hara nonetheless starred in some of the best-known and beloved movies of Hollywood's Golden Age.
Whether playing a rancher's wife, a pirate queen, or a mother, her characters were strong-willed women — a characteristic she practiced in real life as well and attributed to her Irish roots.