Celebrity

In Loving Memory: The Beautiful And Legendary Miracle On 34th Street Actress Maureen O’Hara Laid To Rest In Arlington National Cemetery

The acting community has laid to rest one of their most distinguished ladies.  Maureen O’Hara passed away in late October and was buried right next to her spouse Lt. Col. Charles Blair, a decorated World War II veteran.  Maureen O’Hara prior to her death stated she’d like to be laid to rest next to her husband who was buried in Washington D.C.’s Arlington National Cemetery.  Maureen’s acting credits included movies like Rio Grand, The Hunchback of Notre Dame and an EarHustle411 favorite Miracle on 34th Street.

EarHustle411 and the writing staff sends our condolences to the surviving family members of Maureen O’Hara and her adoring fans.

Read more as reported by UPI:

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Irish-born screen icon Maureen O’Hara was buried with her late husband Monday in Virginia’s Arlington National Cemetery, following a funeral Mass at St. Charles Borromeo Catholic Church near Washington, D.C.

The Quiet Man and Miracle on 34th Street star died on Oct. 24 at her home in Boise, Idaho, where she had lived for many years. She was 95.

The Irish Times quoted Irish priest Father Gerald Weymes as praising O’Hara’s extraordinary talent and larger-than-life personality.

“Maureen was also witty, humorous, beautiful, compassionate, outgoing, strong-willed, courageous with fiery spirit of the Vikings and the untameable spirit of the Normans with a little smidgin or pinch of eros — all the qualities that one would expect in any Irish colleen,” Weymes told the crowd of about 200 mourners at O’Hara’s funeral. “Not even The Duke in McLintock! was able to tame our fiery heroine.”

maureen o'hara

photo credit: UPI

The Duke was the nickname of O’Hara’s frequent co-star and close friend John Wayne.

The beloved actress was laid to rest beside her late husband, U.S. Air Force officer and World War II hero, Lt. Col. Charles Blair, who was killed in a plane crash in the Caribbean in 1978. O’Hara reportedly said shortly before she died that she wanted to be buried with her husband.

Singer Catherine O’Connell sang “The Isle of Innisfree” from The Quiet Man at O’Hara’s graveside and the Shannon Rovers Pipe Band played several songs throughout the services.

Among O’Hara’s many film classics were Jamaica Inn, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, How Green Was My Valley, The Spanish Main, Rio Grande and Against All Flags.

The actress was presented with an honorary Oscar for her body of work in 2014. She served as the grand marshall of the St. Patrick’s Day Parade in New York City in 1999.

 

Source: UPI

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