"Willie," a documentary on O'Ree's life, debuted in April at the Hot Docs International Documentary Festival, the largest documentary festival in North America.
"I've been blessed over the years with some of the things that have happened to me," O'Ree told Stabenow.
O'Ree made history when he made his NHL debut with the Boston Bruins on Jan. 18, 1958, against the Montreal Canadiens at the Forum. He played 45 NHL games during two seasons (1957-58, 1960-61), all with the Bruins.
But O'Ree had a lengthy pro career, mostly in the Western Hockey League, despite being blind in his right eye, the result of an injury sustained while playing junior hockey.
"Blind in one eye, you had a 24-year career in professional hockey, which I think it would be quite difficult to play the game with 20/20 [vision] from both eyes," Scott said.
Scott, the Senate's lone black Republican, noted that O'Ree is the descendent of an escaped slave from South Carolina, a detail discovered during research for the "Willie" documentary.
"As this country continues to evolve in the right direction, that in a time and day when there's so much incivility, so much division and polarization, the one thing that you represent today, that you represented in 1958, that in this country, all things are still possible."