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‘Quiet Man’ actress Maureen O’Hara seen as a feminist icon - VIDEO

Irish film academic says screen legend is remembered for her feisty nature


Still of John Wayne and Maureen O'Hara from "The Quiet Man"
Still of John Wayne and Maureen O'Hara from "The Quiet Man"
Photo by GoneMovie.com

One of the leading voices in Irish cinema has described ‘Quiet Man’ star Maureen O’Hara as a feminist icon.

Ruth Barton, Head of the film studies department at Trinity College Dublin, argues that the Hollywood screen legend’s beauty may have prevented her from being labeled as a feminist.

“There have been actresses like Bette Davis who, because of the strong characters they played, were considered feminist icons. But Maureen O’Hara never was, possibly because she seemed so glamorous,” Barton told the Montreal Gazette.

“She played tough characters, sometimes cross-dressing. In one, she is a pirate queen, the captain of a ship; she is a fighter. Yet she is still quite elegant and stunning.”

Barton, who is a visiting scholar at Concordia’s School of Canadian Irish Studies for this fall semester, said that O’Hara will be remembered for her feisty nature.

“I think most people of a certain age remember O’Hara as the feisty Irish colleen in The Quiet Man, but in her day her big films were really that whole slew of swashbucklers (The Black Swan, Sinbad the Sailor et al.) that she did. Those films were what her reputation was based on,”

Barton has wrote several  bestselling books on the topic of Irish film, including her latest “Hedy Lamarr, The Most Beautiful Woman in Film”.

Maureen O'Hara In "The Quiet Man"


Nster.com


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Nicely said Zorro986
American audiences have known Maureen O'Hara was a feminine icon for decades; and it wasn't just her swashbucklers (big box office in those days) that projected that persona. She had the ability to bring an equality to her male costars that is unsurpassed in film history. She could engage in fisticuffs and even challenge champion Cornell Wilde in fencing, never for one moment losing her femininity. Prof. Barton is correct about her beauty being uniquely tempered with her athletic prowess and fiery personality which she brought to every role she played. Although Maureen is fiercely proud of her Irish heritage, she was after all, a Hollywood movie star in Hollywood films. She endured the "studio days" and beyond and has emerged as more than just a "feminist icon." She is a beloved, multli-talented beautiful human being whose legacy of timeless classic films are there for all of us...and future generations. It doesn't get much better than that.
I'll always remember the Cork dinner dance of early March, 1985, when Maureen O'Hara sat at the dais with other dignitories, including officials of the Irish consulaste. When it came her turn to speak, she read a poem by Pádraig Pearse titled "The Mothr". By doing so, she probably made the representatives of the Pasrtitionist government a little uncomfortable at a time when Notiionalists in the Northern region of their homland were stronly resisting Britih rule. But those of us who truly love the whole Irish nation were thrilled at this public didplay of patriotism by the famous actress.
 




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