Obituary
Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- Marie Maples, a longtime resident and an active
volunteer, died of ovarian cancer Sunday. She was 78.
Mrs. Maples moved to California from Tennessee in the 1950s and moved
to Costa Mesa in 1962. She served as a Costa Mesa Senior Center board
member for 12 years, an advisory board member for the Fairview
Developmental Center’s Foster Grandparent-Senior Companion Program for
more than 14 years and the College Park Homeowners Assn. for more than 12
years.
She served on numerous committees, volunteered for the Costa Mesa
Police Department, and received the Woman of the Year Award from the
Chamber of Commerce and the Mayor’s Award from former Mayor Gary Monahan.
“She gave a lot of time as a volunteer,” said Helen Redding, also a
former senior center board member. “She was dedicated to being a
volunteer. I don’t know how long it had been since she had done any work
she was paid for.”
Friends and family members said they will remember her giving spirit
and consideration for others.
“It seemed like if anyone asked her to do something, regardless of
what she had on her plate, she would always find time to do it,” said
Barbara Panian, a neighbor and a good friend. “She was really a people
person. You would see her scooting all around in her little red car. If
she heard someone was sick, she would pop in to see them without a qualm.
Even toward the end, she always had two or three people visiting her. I
knew her a long time, and she was always very caring and very
appreciative of anything others did for her.”
Hank Panian, Barbara Panian’s husband, said Maples’ face always
lighted up when they brought her flowers from their yard and added that
Mrs. Maples had extreme graciousness and poise, even when she was
debating a hot issue.
“When she was president of the association, she got caught up in all
sorts of debates, but I’ve never seen her lose her cool,” he said. “She
was a grand lady. When her family left home, I think she adopted Costa
Mesa as her family because she became active in so many ways. And her
charm and manners were always pleasant. I think if she hit her finger
with a hammer, she would say, ‘Oh! Look what I did!’ whereas I would come
out with other words that my grandchildren would shudder at.”
Examples of how she supported others stretch past her death, said Mike
Maples, Mrs. Maples’ son.
When he was searching for her will, he said he found a letter from her
addressed to everybody she knows.
“It made me break up,” he said. “It said not to worry about her and so
forth. She was always more concerned about others than herself, even to
the last second. She knew she was dying, and yet she was concerned about
our health and how we were going to weather her death. I had to try to
convince her I would survive this, even though it would be tough, and
that she didn’t have to stay here and suffer to take care of me. And I’m
55. I couldn’t ask for a better mother or a better friend.”
Copies of the letter will be distributed at her memorial, scheduled
from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday at her home.
The surviving family, made up of Mike Maples, wife Susan Maples, and
their son Michael Russell Maples, asked that Mrs. Maples’ address not be
printed.
“If they don’t know her address, they don’t belong here,” he said.
“Everyone she knew was that close to her. I don’t know anybody who didn’t
love her. I learned from her that, in order to make friends, you have to
be genuinely interested in that other person -- in being their friend, in
knowing about them and caring about things they care about. She had a
tremendous talent for that. I don’t care if you were a drunk lying in a
gutter. She would go out there, see if you were all right and make
friends with you.”
The family requests that any flowers or donations be sent to the Costa
Mesa Senior Center, 695 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa.
For more information, call (949) 645-2356.
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