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Maureen McCormick says she developed a strong bond with Ann B. Davis while on the ready of "The Brady Agglomeration."

Davis, the comic actress best known for playing devoted housekeeper Alice Nelson on the hit '70s serial, died in 2014 at age 88 after suffering a fall in her San Antonio home.

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"Gosh, we were so close," McCormick, who famously played Marcia Brady in the series, recently told Closer Weekly.

"We used to fly to Texas and we would hang out and go out to dinner and nosotros really spent a lot of fourth dimension together — you lot know years after the show, and just admire her," McCormick connected.

McCormick told the outlet she also shared a loving human relationship with her TV mom Florence Henderson.

"Florence of course, we got very, very close, and spent actually amazing moments together at the end," said McCormick. "I'm really grateful because they all taught me a lot and they'll always exist with me."

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Left to right: Ann B. Davis, Florence Henderson and Maureen McCormick (Photo by Lester Cohen/WireImage)

Left to right: Ann B. Davis, Florence Henderson and Maureen McCormick (Photo by Lester Cohen/WireImage)

At the time of Davis' death, McCormick said in a statement that the comic "made me a meliorate person. How blessed I am to accept had her in my life. She will be forever missed."

Davis originally fabricated her mark as the razor-tongued secretary on "The Bob Cummings Bear witness," which earned her ii Emmys. She appeared on that sitcom from 1955 until 1959. She went on to appear on "The Brady Bunch" from 1969 until 1974.

"I know at least a couple hundred glamour gals who are starving in this fourth dimension," Davis told the Los Angeles Times in 1955. "I'd rather exist myself and eating."

Davis said she told NBC photographers not to retouch their pictures of her, only they ignored her request and "gave me eyebrows."

Ann B. Davis portrayed slightly odd but kindly housekeeper, Alice. She often solved family conflicts on the series and served as the children's confidant. In the last season, Alice's character became engaged to longtime boyfriend and neighborhood butcher, Sam.

Ann B. Davis portrayed slightly odd but kindly housekeeper, Alice. She often solved family conflicts on the series and served as the children's confidant. In the last season, Alice's character became engaged to longtime young man and neighborhood butcher, Sam. (Getty)

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In her maid's uniform, Davis' character in "The Brady Bunch" was constantly cleaning upward messes big and small, and she was a mainstay of stability for her family.

"I call back I'thousand lovable," Davis told The Associated Printing in 1993. "I don't do annihilation to exist lovable. I take no control."

According to The Associated Printing, Davis lived a quiet religious life long after "The Brady Bunch" came to an end.

The Alice character never truly left the heart of Ann B. Davis. The actress reprised the role in several Brady reunions and even appeared in several disposable mop commercials. She lived in Texas and kept busy with her involvement in her local church up until her death in 2014 at the age of 88.

The Alice character never truly left the heart of Ann B. Davis. The actress reprised the part in several Brady reunions and even appeared in several disposable mop commercials. She lived in Texas and kept busy with her interest in her local church building up until her death in 2014 at the age of 88. (Getty)

"I was born over again," she told the outlet in 1993. "It happens to Episcopalians. Sometimes it doesn't hit you till you're 47 years old. Information technology inverse my whole life for the better... I spent a lot of time giving Christian witness all over the country to church building groups and stuff."

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Davis never married, proverb she never plant a man who was more interesting than her career.

"By the time I started to get interested (in finding someone), all the good ones were taken," she told the Chicago Sun-Times.

Like Davis, Henderson left an undeniable impression on McCormick.

Back in 2017, McCormick was one of 19 celebrities who participated in The American Heart Association'south (AHA) Go Red For Women Red Dress Drove fashion show, which was presented past Macy'south at New York Metropolis'southward Hammerstein Ballroom.

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The annual show was created to raise sensation of eye illness amongst women. According to AHA, cardiovascular diseases cause one in iii deaths among women each yr — more than all cancers combined.

Good heart health was also an important cause to Henderson, who participated in the event in 2016. Equally Carol Brady, the Hollywood veteran could solve any problem that arose in the Brady household, but in real life, she battled heart problems from a very immature age — and they weren't as simple to resolve.

Maureen McCormick attends the "Go Red for Women" fashion show during Fall 2017 New York Fashion Week at Hammerstein Ballroom on February 9, 2017, in New York City. (Photo by Taylor Hill/FilmMagic)

Maureen McCormick attends the "Become Red for Women" fashion show during Fall 2017 New York Fashion Week at Hammerstein Ballroom on Feb 9, 2017, in New York City. (Photograph by Taylor Colina/FilmMagic)

Henderson passed abroad in 2016 at age 82 from congestive center failure.

"Florence had a middle disease event from the time that she was a child," McCormick told Play tricks News in 2017. "She had a center murmur and about a decade ago, she had something really frightening happened to her. She went into Cedars-Sinai in LA and they discovered a mitral valve leakage. And fortunately, they were able to revive her and repair her valve, instead of replacing it."

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Just three days earlier her death, Henderson attended a taping of ABC'south "Dancing with the Stars" to cheer on McCormick, who was participating in the dance competition series.

Florence Henderson (L) and Maureen McCormick arrive at the Television Academy's 70th Anniversary Gala on June 2, 2016, in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Gabriel Olsen/FilmMagic)

Florence Henderson (50) and Maureen McCormick get in at the Telly Academy'southward 70th Anniversary Gala on June two, 2016, in Los Angeles, California. (Photo past Gabriel Olsen/FilmMagic)

"[Florence was] a person who wanted to spread love and laughter," said McCormick nigh her friend. "She loved people, she loved life. She's born on Valentine'southward Twenty-four hours, how perfect, right? [She was] just a slap-up woman. Someone I really admired."

McCormick was also grateful to accept Henderson by her side during the grueling dance competition.

"I've ever admired people that can trip the light fantastic and move their bodies," said McCormick on her interest with "Dancing with the Stars." "Information technology's something I've always thought, 'Oh, if only I can practice that, wouldn't that exist bully?' Simply it's something I always thought I could not do. I was afraid to practise information technology in public because I was afraid to look bad doing information technology. I was just afraid to be that vulnerable."

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Maureen McCormick, who played Marcia Brady, said she developed a lasting bond with her on-screen family.

Maureen McCormick, who played Marcia Brady, said she developed a lasting bond with her on-screen family. (Getty)

McCormick had a message for women everywhere — one that the ever-doting Henderson would have canonical.

"Just be conscientious, women," said McCormick. "This is the number one killer of women. Heart disease. Enquire questions, go talk to your doctor, get all the tests and check-ups that we're supposed to do for cholesterol, and blood pressure, and blood sugar. Exercise a adept corporeality. And eat right. And take care of yourself. Life is short, y'all know."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.