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Maureen O'Hara from The Black Swan (1942) Maureen O’Hara from Photoplay magazine (1942) Lobby poster from Miracle on 34th Street – Maureen O'Hara and John Payne in the foreground, Natalie Wood and Edmund Gwenn in background (1947) Fred MacMurray and Maureen O'Hara in Father Was a Fullback (1949) John Wayne and Maureen O'Hara in The Quiet Man (1952) Lobby poster from The Redhead from ...
O'Hara read the script and loved it. She was reported to have replied to Fitzsimons, "This I do!". However, she would not commit until she met co-star John Candy. Co-star Jim Belushi recounted this story: On the set of Only the Lonely, the producers stuck Maureen O’Hara in a tiny trailer. When John Candy complained on her behalf, he was told ...
Maureen O'Hara (née FitzSimons; 17 August 1920 – 24 October 2015) was an Irish-born naturalized American actress who became successful in Hollywood from the 1940s through to the 1960s. [1]
Big Jake is a 1971 American Technicolor Western film starring John Wayne, Richard Boone and Maureen O'Hara.The picture was the final film for George Sherman in a directing career of more than 30 years, and Maureen O'Hara's last film with John Wayne and her last before her twenty-year retirement.
It stars Charles Laughton and Maureen O'Hara in her first major screen role. It is the last film Hitchcock made in the United Kingdom before he moved to the United States. [1] The film is a period piece set in Cornwall in 1820, in the real Jamaica Inn (which still exists) on the edge of Bodmin Moor.
This was the last film for Delmer Daves who, two years earlier, wrote, produced and directed another film in which Maureen O'Hara played the female lead, Spencer's Mountain. This is the first film for Argentina -born English actress Olivia Hussey who, three years later, played Juliet in Franco Zeffirelli 's Romeo and Juliet .
O’Hara’s insecure histrionics play like a slow-motion car wreck in the movie, giving it one of its brighter spots. Moira Rose in ‘Schitt’s Creek’ Catherine O'Hara in Season 6 of "Schitt ...
Bagdad is a 1949 Technicolor American adventure film directed by Charles Lamont starring Maureen O'Hara, Paul Hubschmid (billed as "Paul Christian"), and Vincent Price.O'Hara called it "a 'tits and sand' picture...one of the films that I point to as part of my decorative years but audiences love them."