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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsModel For Rockwell's 'Rosie The Riveter' Painting Dies At 92
HARTFORD Mary Doyle Keefe, the model for Norman Rockwell's iconic 1943 "Rosie the Riveter" painting that symbolized the millions of American women who went to work on the home front during World War II, has died. She was 92.
Keefe died Tuesday in Simsbury after a brief illness, said her daughter, Mary Ellen Keefe. She had lived for the past eight years at The McLean Village Community in Simsbury.
Keefe grew up in Arlington, Vt., where she met Rockwell who lived in West Arlington and posed for his painting when she was a 19-year-old telephone operator. The painting was on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post on May 29, 1943.
"I was a telephone operator, 19 years old, and we were neighbors. And [Rockwell] often used neighbors for his paintings," Keefe said in a 2012 interview with The Courant. "He liked to paint from photos, so his photographer took pictures of me, just posing me different ways and telling me to look this way or that. I don't remember the photographer telling me to have any kind of attitude on my face, but I'm 90 and don't remember.
Although Keefe was petite, Rockwell's "Rosie the Riveter" had large arms, hands and shoulders. The painting shows the red-haired Rosie in blue jean work overalls sitting down, with a sandwich in her left hand, her right arm atop a lunch box with the name "Rosie" on it, a rivet gun on her lap and her feet resting on a copy of Adolf Hitler's manifesto, "Mein Kampf." The entire background is a waving American flag.
http://www.courant.com/news/connecticut/hc-rosie-the-riveter-mary-keefe-20150422-story.html
Keefe died Tuesday in Simsbury after a brief illness, said her daughter, Mary Ellen Keefe. She had lived for the past eight years at The McLean Village Community in Simsbury.
Keefe grew up in Arlington, Vt., where she met Rockwell who lived in West Arlington and posed for his painting when she was a 19-year-old telephone operator. The painting was on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post on May 29, 1943.
"I was a telephone operator, 19 years old, and we were neighbors. And [Rockwell] often used neighbors for his paintings," Keefe said in a 2012 interview with The Courant. "He liked to paint from photos, so his photographer took pictures of me, just posing me different ways and telling me to look this way or that. I don't remember the photographer telling me to have any kind of attitude on my face, but I'm 90 and don't remember.
Although Keefe was petite, Rockwell's "Rosie the Riveter" had large arms, hands and shoulders. The painting shows the red-haired Rosie in blue jean work overalls sitting down, with a sandwich in her left hand, her right arm atop a lunch box with the name "Rosie" on it, a rivet gun on her lap and her feet resting on a copy of Adolf Hitler's manifesto, "Mein Kampf." The entire background is a waving American flag.
http://www.courant.com/news/connecticut/hc-rosie-the-riveter-mary-keefe-20150422-story.html
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Model For Rockwell's 'Rosie The Riveter' Painting Dies At 92 (Original Post)
one_voice
Apr 2015
OP
sufrommich
(22,871 posts)1. Here's a picture of her with her famous print:
RIP Rosie.
one_voice
(20,043 posts)2. Thank you!
that's awesome.
sufrommich
(22,871 posts)3. She still looked like she had a lot of spunk,didn't she?
That's probably what Rockwell saw in her too. Rosie is one of my all time favorite prints. What an icon.
one_voice
(20,043 posts)5. Yes she did...
She is indeed an icon.
I really like the picture of her holding her famous print.
niyad
(113,627 posts)4. rest in peace mary.