- She was a descendant of American Revolutionary War hero Paul Revere.
- A dyed-in-the-wool Yankee, she always maintained that the photocopy of her alleged Communist Party registration card produced by HUAC as "proof" of her "subversive activities," which bore no signature, was a "plant".
- Revere's Oscar statuette sold for $89,625 on November 7, 2009, when it was auctioned by Heritage Auctions.
- Was considered for the part of Ma Bailey in It's a Wonderful Life (1946), but Beulah Bondi was cast instead.
- Won Broadway's 1960 Tony Award as Best Supporting or Featured Actress (Dramatic) for Lillian Hellman's "Toys in the Attic".
- Was once treasurer of the Screen Actors Guild.
- Was the 25th actress to receive an Academy Award; she won the Best Supporting Actress Oscar for National Velvet (1944) at The 18th Academy Awards on March 7, 1946.
- She was blacklisted in 1951.
- The widow of actor/writer/director Samuel Rosen, who directed her on Broadway in a production of "As You Like It."
- Along with her Oscar statuette, Revere's Tony award for Toys in the Attic was also sold by Heritage Auctions for $2,987.50 (November 7, 2009).
- Was in three Oscar Best Picture nominees: The Song of Bernadette (1943), Gentleman's Agreement (1947) and A Place in the Sun (1951), with Gentleman's Agreement the only winner.
- Brought back to movies by Otto Preminger, who had a long record of helping victims of the blacklist.
- Biography in "Actresses of a Certain Character: Forty Familiar Hollywood Faces from the Thirties to the Fifties" by Axel Nissen.
- Played the mother of Gregory Peck and John Garfield in their 1947 Best Actor Oscar-nominated performances; in Gentleman's Agreement (1947) and Body and Soul (1947). Both actors lost the award to Ronald Colman for A Double Life (1947).
- Mentioned in She-Wolf in Hollywood: The Story of Maria Ouspenskaya as one of Ouspenskaya's acting students.
- She has appeared in three films that have been selected for the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically or aesthetically" significant: National Velvet (1944), Gentleman's Agreement (1947) and A Place in the Sun (1951).
- Is one of 22 Oscar-winning actresses to have been born in the state of New York. The others are Alice Brady, Teresa Wright, Celeste Holm, Claire Trevor, Judy Holliday, Shirley Booth, Susan Hayward, Patty Duke, Anne Bancroft, Barbra Streisand, Jane Fonda, Lee Grant, Beatrice Straight, Whoopi Goldberg, Mercedes Ruehl, Marisa Tomei, Mira Sorvino, Susan Sarandon, Jennifer Connelly, Melissa Leo and Anne Hathaway.
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