Irish actress
Maureen Toal |
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Born | (1930-09-07)7 September 1930
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Died | 24 August 2012(2012-08-24) (aged 81)
Dublin, Ireland |
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Occupation | Actress |
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Maureen Toal (7 September 1930 – 24 August 2012) was an Irish stage and television actress whose professional career lasted for more than sixty years.[1][2]
She was born in 1930 and was originally from Fairview, Dublin.[2] Toal began performing at the Abbey Theatre in Dublin in 1946, when she was just sixteen years old.[1] She became a fixture at the theatre, portraying Bessie Burgess in The Plough and the Stars and the Widow Quinn in The Playboy of the Western World.[1] She also appeared in several one woman shows, including Baglady, which was written by Irish playwright Frank McGuinness.[1]
Another playwright, John B. Keane, wrote the role of Mame Fadden in his play, The Change in Mame Fadden, specifically for Toal. Hugh Leonard also penned characters in his plays A life and Great Big Blonde with the intention of casting Toal in the parts.[1] Toal was best known to Irish television audiences for her role as Teasy McDaid on RTÉ One's Glenroe during the 1990s.[1]
Honours
The University College Dublin awarded Toal an honorary doctorate in literature in 2010.[citation needed]
Personal life
In 1952, she married fellow Irish actor Milo O'Shea; they divorced in 1974 [3]
Death
Maureen Toal died in her sleep at her home in Sandycove, Dublin, on 24 August 2012, two weeks before her 82nd birthday.[1] She was survived by her son, Colm O'Shea; two sisters, one brother, and three grandchildren.[2]
Filmography
Year
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Title
|
Role
|
Notes
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1958 |
Rooney |
Kathleen O'Flynn |
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1961 |
Only the Wind |
Mrs. Collins |
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1962 |
A Guy Called Caesar |
Lena |
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1963 |
Maigret (TV series) |
The Log of the Cap Fagnet - Adele Noirhomme |
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1967 |
Ulysses |
Zoe Higgins |
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1969 |
Otley |
Landlady |
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1970 |
Paddy |
Clair Kearney |
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1978 |
On a Paving Stone Mounted |
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1984 |
Summer Lightning |
Dolly St.Leger |
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1996 |
Snakes and Ladders |
Rose |
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Partial playography
- Bláithín agus an Mac Rí (1953)
- A Slipper for the Moon (1954)
- A Flea in Her Ear (1979)
- A Life (1979)
- Baglady (1985)
- Yerma (1987)[4]
References
External links
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