Irish America


Those We Lost


Rue McClanahan, beloved actress who passed away this year.

Keefe lived in Los Angeles for most of his life and was a frequent traveler. Among his favorite destinations was Ireland where he often stayed for weeks at a time. Keefe started out as a producer on a live martial arts television series, a show he hosted alongside Chuck Norris. He was 57 when he succumbed to cancer and is survived by his four siblings, and his mother, Anne, of St. Louis.                   – Tara Dougherty
 

Rue McClanahan
1934-2010

Actress Rue McClanahan, famous for her role as Blanche Devereaux in The Golden Girls, died June 3 at age 76. She died at New York Presbyterian hospital of a brain hemorrhage.

Born Eddi-Rue McClanahan (a composite of her parents’ names: Rheua-Nell and William Edwin) in Healdton, Oklahoma, she was of Choctaw and Irish heritage. Her paternal grandparents, Zebbin and Fannie McClanahan, said that Rue had her grandmother’s “Copeland eyes,” referring to the Copeland islands in the Irish Sea, north of Co. Down.

McClanahan graduated with honors from the University of Tulsa, having majored in drama, and moved to New York to study acting and ballet. She performed onstage in Pennsylvania, California and New York, where her Broadway debut was in Jimmy Shine, starring Dustin Hoffman. She got some experience in TV work on All in the Family in 1972 and Maude, then was cast as the youngest member of the Golden Girls, which hit the number one spot during its pilot episode in 1985. It remained in the top 10 for six seasons, and McClanahan won an Emmy for outstanding lead actress in a comedy series in 1987. The show ended in 1992, after which McClanahan appeared in movies and on Broadway. McClanahan’s autobiography, My First Five Husbands…and the Ones Who Got Away, was published in 2007.         – Kara Rota

Harold W. McGraw Jr.
1918-2010

Harold W. McGraw Jr., president and CEO of McGraw-Hill during the 1970s and ’80s, died on March 24 at his home in Darien, Connecticut. He was 92.

Born in Brooklyn on January 10, 1918, McGraw grew up hearing about his family’s company from his father and grandfather, James H. McGraw, who entered the publishing business in the 1880s. McGraw Jr. graduated from Princeton University in 1940 and was a captain in the Army Air Force during World War II. After working in advertising and book retailing, he joined the family business in 1947 as a sales representative. McGraw worked his way through the ranks and became chief executive in 1975, leading McGraw-Hill through a period of expansion during his eight years in the post. Under his guidance, company revenues reached over $1 billion in 1980 for the first time.


Nster.com


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