Hollywood actors Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio have given cash to help pay the nursing home fees of the last survivor of the Titanic.
Reading’s famous Oscar winner Winslet, 33, and DiCaprio, 34, who made their international names in the 1997 film about the sinking of the liner were approached by a charity to help 97-year-old Millvina Dean.
The film’s director James Cameron has also made a donation.
Miss Dean from the New Forest, Hampshire, was just nine weeks old when the liner sank with the loss of more than 1,500 lives in April 1912.
Now frail, she has been living at a nursing home for a few years and last month she auctioned personal belongings and memorabilia associated with the disaster to help pay for the £3,000-a-month cost of her care.
The campaign called the Millvina Fund was launched in Belfast today, where the liner was built, and it will help secure the future of Miss Dean.
It was launched in the former Harland & Wolff drawing offices in the Titanic Quarter of the city.
Irish author Don Mullan, a friend of Miss Dean, approached the stars to lend their support. He’s also produced a limited edition photograph depicting Millvina signing a card for an autograph collector, which are selling for 500 euro (£440) with all proceeds going towards the Millvina Fund.
It is believed that the Titanic trio of DiCaprio, Reading’s Winslet and Cameron have donated 30,000 US dollars (£22,000). Mr Mullan said: “I laid down the challenge to the Titanic actors and directors to support the Millvina Fund and I was delighted with the generosity they have shown.
“To date 30 copies of the print have been sold and I am confident that the support of stars such as Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio will help boost interest in the prints and ensure they will sell.”
Miss Dean was the Titanic’s youngest passenger. Her father, Bertram Dean, died in the 1912 tragedy after saving the lives of his wife and two children. Miss Dean’s mother returned from New York with her children to Southampton, where she has spent most of her life.
Una Reilly of the Belfast Titanic Society, which helped set up the fund, added: “As the last living survivor from the most famous ship in the world, Millvina Dean has a very special place in the annals of Northern Ireland’s history and, indeed, across the globe.”
Reading’s famous Oscar winner Winslet, 33, and DiCaprio, 34, who made their international names in the 1997 film about the sinking of the liner were approached by a charity to help 97-year-old Millvina Dean.
The film’s director James Cameron has also made a donation.
Miss Dean from the New Forest, Hampshire, was just nine weeks old when the liner sank with the loss of more than 1,500 lives in April 1912.
Now frail, she has been living at a nursing home for a few years and last month she auctioned personal belongings and memorabilia associated with the disaster to help pay for the £3,000-a-month cost of her care.
The campaign called the Millvina Fund was launched in Belfast today, where the liner was built, and it will help secure the future of Miss Dean.
It was launched in the former Harland & Wolff drawing offices in the Titanic Quarter of the city.
Irish author Don Mullan, a friend of Miss Dean, approached the stars to lend their support. He’s also produced a limited edition photograph depicting Millvina signing a card for an autograph collector, which are selling for 500 euro (£440) with all proceeds going towards the Millvina Fund.
It is believed that the Titanic trio of DiCaprio, Reading’s Winslet and Cameron have donated 30,000 US dollars (£22,000). Mr Mullan said: “I laid down the challenge to the Titanic actors and directors to support the Millvina Fund and I was delighted with the generosity they have shown.
“To date 30 copies of the print have been sold and I am confident that the support of stars such as Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio will help boost interest in the prints and ensure they will sell.”
Miss Dean was the Titanic’s youngest passenger. Her father, Bertram Dean, died in the 1912 tragedy after saving the lives of his wife and two children. Miss Dean’s mother returned from New York with her children to Southampton, where she has spent most of her life.
Una Reilly of the Belfast Titanic Society, which helped set up the fund, added: “As the last living survivor from the most famous ship in the world, Millvina Dean has a very special place in the annals of Northern Ireland’s history and, indeed, across the globe.”