Mobley made history in 1959 when the
Biloxi-born brunette was crowned Miss America. From there she hit the stage and
the screen starring opposite another star from the Magnolia State: Elvis
Presley.
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Mary Ann Mobley, who was the first Mississippian to be crowned Miss
America and who then parlayed that achievement into a successful movie career,
has died. She was 77 and had been battling breast cancer.
In 1965, she snagged a New Star of the Year
Golden Globe.
She continued acting, appearing on the TV
shows "Diff'rent Strokes" and "Falcon Crest," two of more
than a hundred such gigs, according to a statement from the Miss America
Organization.
And Mobley's charitable endeavors didn't
begin and end with her crown. Instead she stayed active with many
organizations, including March of Dimes and the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer
Foundation. She also served on the National Council on Disability.
A statement from the Miss America
organization says Mobley "was most proud of The Mary Ann Mobley Pediatric
Wing at the Rankin General Hospital in her hometown of Brandon.'
Her home state shared the love.
In 2002, she was inducted into the
Mississippi Musicians Hall of Fame and she became the first woman to be voted
into the University of Mississippi Hall of Fame, according to a statement from
her family. "The group included her friend from her years at Ole Miss,
William Faulkner," the statement reads.
Mobley's passions extended beyond her home
state and country. She worked as a filmmaker, according to the Warner Brothers
release, spending years "documenting the young victims of war and
starvation in places like Cambodia, Ethiopia, Somalia and the Sudan."
Sam Haskell, chairman of Miss America, was
friends with Mobley for decades. Of her death he said, "She challenged me,
she loved me, and she made me laugh! I shall miss her!"
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