Maureen O'Sullivan Movies
Educated in London and Paris, the breathtakingly beautiful
Maureen O'Sullivan was discovered for films by director
Frank Borzage while both were attending a horse show in Dublin. She made her screen debut in 1930 opposite Irish tenor
John McCormick in Song O' My Heart, which earned her a contract with Fox studios. After appearing in such Fox blockbusters as
Just Imagine (1930) and
A Connecticut Yankee (1931), she moved to MGM, where her first assignment was the role of Jane Parker in
Tarzan the Ape Man (1932). She repeated this characterization in
Tarzan and His Mate (1934), causing a minor sensation with her bikini-like costume and a nude swimming scene. Somewhat more modestly garbed, she went on to co-star in four more Tarzan pictures over the next eight years. Though MGM kept her busy in a variety of films, ranging from such costume dramas as
The Barretts of Wimpole Street (1934) and
David Copperfield (1935) to the Marx Brothers'
A Day at the Races (1937), she is best remembered for her appearances as Jane, a fact that has been a source of both pride and irritation for the actress (she liked her co-star
Johnny Weissmuller but despised
Cheeta the chimpanzee, who bit her more than once). She retired from films in 1942 to devote her time to her husband, director
John Farrow, and her many children, two of whom grew up to be actresses
Mia Farrow and Tisa Farrow. She returned to the screen in 1948, averaging a film every two years until 1958. An early arrival on TV, she hosted a local children's program in New York and the syndicated series Irish Heritage, and in 1964 was hired by NBC to co-anchor The Today Show (her replacement the following year was
Barbara Walters). In 1964 she starred with
Paul Ford in the Broadway production Never Too Late, playing a fortysomething suburbanite who suddenly finds herself pregnant; the following year she and Ford repeated their roles in the screen version. Widowed in 1963, she remarried 20 years later, sporadically reviving her screen activities in such films as
Hannah and Her Sisters (1985), in which she and
Lloyd Nolan played the combative parents of her real-life daughter
Mia Farrow. As regally beautiful as ever,
Maureen O'Sullivan showed up again on TV in the mid-'90s as one of the interviewees in a Tarzan retrospective. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide