Maureen O'Sullivan, born on May seventeenth, nineteen eleven, in Boyle, County Roscommon, Ireland, was a celebrated Irish-American actress renowned for her captivating performances in stage, film, and television. After receiving her education in Dublin, England, and France, she ventured to Hollywood, where she began her illustrious career with Fox Film Corporation in the 1930s. O'Sullivan quickly became a prominent figure in the film industry, eventually securing a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
Best known for her iconic role as Jane Parker in six Tarzan films alongside Johnny Weissmuller from nineteen thirty-two to nineteen forty-two, O'Sullivan's filmography boasts a remarkable array of collaborations with legendary stars such as Laurence Olivier, Greta Garbo, and the Marx Brothers. Her notable works include classics like The Thin Man, Anna Karenina, and Pride and Prejudice, showcasing her versatility and talent.
After taking a hiatus from acting to focus on her family, O'Sullivan returned to the screen in films directed by her husband, John Farrow. She continued to grace both film and theatre stages throughout her life, with memorable appearances in Woody Allen's Hannah and Her Sisters and Francis Ford Coppola's Peggy Sue Got Married. Her contributions to the arts were recognized with the George Eastman Award in nineteen eighty-two.
O'Sullivan's personal life was marked by two marriages, first to John Farrow, with whom she had seven children, including actress Mia Farrow, and later to businessman James Cushing. A U.S. citizen since nineteen forty-seven and a registered Democrat, she passed away in nineteen ninety-eight at the age of eighty-seven. Her legacy endures, highlighted by a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and her ranking as one of Ireland's greatest film actors by The Irish Times in twenty twenty.