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Mary Therese McCarthy (June 21 1912 – October 25 1989) was an American author and critic. She was politically active for many years.
Mary O'Neil McCarthy (born 1944) is a former United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) employee who last worked in the Office of the Inspector General. In her career, she was an intelligence analyst and National Intelligence Officer for Warning. She was dismissed on April 21 2006 after, according to the CIA, an individual admitted "unauthorized contacts with the media and discussion of classified information" following a polygraph examination. New York Daily News, Secret Prison Leaker at CIA Gets Canned, April 22 2006, by Kenneth Bazinet. Her lawyer has confirmed the termination of employment but denied his client leaked classified information. The CIA has since reiterated its statements but has not yet officially confirmed news reports that McCarthy is the dismissed employee.
Mary Eunice McCarthy was an American screenwriter.
She wrote or co-wrote the screenplays, or developed the stories for Slightly Married (1932), Woman Unafraid (1934), Life Returns (1935), Theodora Goes Wild (1936), Irish Luck (1939), Chasing Trouble (1940), Sister Kenny (1946), Curley (1947), and The Petty Girl (1950).
Mary Eunice McCarthy, the screenwriter, is commonly conflated with critic and novelist Mary Therese McCarthy (1912-1989). In the 1930s, the former was the better known of the two, but was quickly eclipsed by the novelist. The screenwriter's work is now commonly credited to the novelist, an error that would have dismayed both.
Mary McCarthy (1951-) is an Irish novelist from Glasnevin in Dublin.
She has written four novels Remember Me, And No Bird Sang, Crescendo, Shame the Devil with Poolbeg Press which have sold in total almost 100,000 copies have been collectively translated in to over 5 languages including French and German.
She was part of the growth in contemporary women's Irish fiction which emerged in the 1990s including Patricia Scanlan, Maeve Binchy and Cathy Kelly. Her books were regarded as 'thinking fiction' within the industry, against the grain of holiday novels written by contemporaries. Perhaps as a result, despite receiving favourable reviews from television programmes and book reviews in The Irish Star Newspaper, The Irish Times and The Irish Independent, her novels did not sell in similar numbers. She appeared on TV3 in Ireland as well as other mainstream Irish radio stations/
She is the mother of dance music artist Dara McCarthy also known as aspect musical group.






