
Ken Murray
Acting • Born 1903-07-14 – Died 1988-10-12
Biography
Ken Murray (born Kenneth Abner Doncourt, July 14, 1903 – October 12, 1988) was an American comedian, actor, radio and television personality and author. After finding success on the vaudeville stage, Murray moved to Hollywood and made his film debut in the 1929 romantic drama Half Marriage, followed by a role in Leathernecking in 1930. Murray was the host of a weekly radio variety show (The Ken Murray Show) on NBC 1932-33 and on CBS 1936–37. He later was the original host (1945-57) of Queen for a Day, on the Mutual Broadcasting System radio show, which was simulcast on KTSL (now KCBS-TV), Channel 2 in Los Angeles. During World War II, Murray was one of the many celebrities to volunteer at the Hollywood Canteen. In 1947, he produced Bill and Coo, a feature film using trained birds and other animals as actors. Bill and Coo won a special Academy Award for "novel and entertaining use of the medium of motion picture" and "artistry and patience" . He was also the host of The Ken Murray Show, a weekly music and comedy show on CBS Television that ran from 1950 to 1953. The show was the first to win a Freedom Foundation Award. Murray also guest starred on several television series, including The Ford Show, Starring Tennessee Ernie Ford and The Bing Crosby Show. Murray produced and co-starred as "Smiling Billy Murray" in a 1953 film, The Marshal's Daughter, a western that featured his protege Laurie Anders in the title role, her sole film performance. In 1962, Murray portrayed the top hat wearing, cigar chewing, drunken Doc Willoughby in John Ford's The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance starring John Wayne and James Stewart, arguably his most memorable screen role. Paired off for most of the picture with Edmond O'Brien as an alcoholic newspaper editor, he drunkenly rolls over the gunshot corpse of villain Liberty Valance (Lee Marvin) with his boot, looks around off-handedly, and says "Dead" to the surrounding crowd of euphoric Mexicans. In 1964, Murray played Whipsaw, the operator of a stagecoach depot in the episode "Little Cayuse" of the television series Death Valley Days, hosted by Stanley Andrews. He and his partner take in a Cayuse orphan (Larry Domasin), who demonstrates his loyalty to the men during an Indian attack. In 1965, Murray played a THRUSH financier and owner of a caribbean casino in The Man from U.N.C.L.E.. In 1966, Murray was cast as Melody Murphy in the Walt Disney film Follow Me, Boys! starring Fred MacMurray, Vera Miles and Kurt Russell.
Filmography
37 credits
The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance
Movie • 1962
Doc Willoughby

Red Light
Movie • 1949
Ken Murray

Follow Me, Boys!
Movie • 1966
Melody Murphy

The Power
Movie • 1968
Grover

Bill and Coo
Movie • 1948
Ken Murray

Screen Snapshots Series 21 No. 1
Movie • 1941
Self

Crooner
Movie • 1932
Peter Sturgis

Half Marriage
Movie • 1929
Charles Turner

Ladies of the Jury
Movie • 1932
Spencer B. Dazy

Hollywood Without Make-Up
Movie • 1963
Self - Host

Disgraced!
Movie • 1933
Jim McGuire

A Night at Earl Carroll's
Movie • 1940
Barney Nelson

A Preferred List
Movie • 1933

You're a Sweetheart
Movie • 1937
Don King

Swing It Soldier
Movie • 1941
Jerry Traynor

Hollywood My Home Town
Movie • 1965
Self

The Marshal's Daughter
Movie • 1953
'Smiling Billy' Murray

Swing, Sister, Swing
Movie • 1938
Nap Sisler

Son of Flubber
Movie • 1963
Mr. Hurley

From Headquarters
Movie • 1933
Mac

Leathernecking
Movie • 1930
Frank

Juke Box Jenny
Movie • 1942
Malcolm Hammond

Peeks at Hollywood
Movie • 1946

Frank Capra's American Dream
Movie • 1997
Self (archive footage)

Won Ton Ton: The Dog Who Saved Hollywood
Movie • 1976
Souvenir Salesman

Burke's Law
TV • 1963
Charles P. Banner

The Ed Sullivan Show
TV • 1948
Self

The Greatest Show on Earth
TV • 1963

The Hollywood Palace
TV • 1964
Self

This Is Your Life
TV • 1952
Self

Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre
TV • 1963

The Bing Crosby Show
TV • 1964

The Ken Murray Show
TV • 1950

The Judy Garland Show
TV • 1963
Self

The Lux Show
TV • 1957
Self

What's My Line?
TV • 1950
Self

The Man from U.N.C.L.E.
TV • 1964
Anton Korbel