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James Murray (American actor)

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Occupation
  
Actor

Siblings
  
Harry Murray

Role
  
Movie actor

Name
  
James Murray

Years active
  
1924-1936


James Murray (American actor) classiccinemagoldcomwpcontentuploads201302J

Born
  
February 9, 1901 (
1901-02-09
)
The Bronx, New York City, New York, U.S.

Died
  
July 11, 1936, New York City, New York, United States

Spouse
  
Marion Sayers (m. 1932–1936)

Books
  
Secret History of the Cherokees: A Novel

Movies and TV shows
  
The Crowd, Primeval, The Shakedown, Rose‑Marie, Air Hostess

Similar People
  
King Vidor, Alfred E Green, Odd Nosdam, William Wyler, John Ford

James murray on improvising lines for crime drama suspects lorraine


James Murray (February 9, 1901 – July 11, 1936) was an American film actor best known for starring in the 1928 film The Crowd.

Contents

James Murray (American actor) 1936 in film James Murray American actor died July 11 at the

James murray in cutting it 2005


Career

Born in The Bronx, Murray went to Hollywood in the 1920s to try to succeed as an actor. After several years of work, mostly as an extra, with little hope of a starring role, he was "discovered" by director King Vidor, who saw Murray walking by on the MGM lot. Vidor was about to begin work on a new film and thought Murray might look right for the lead. Murray, however, failed to show up for the meeting he arranged with Vidor, apparently thinking it to be a joke. Vidor subsequently tracked him down, and Murray's performance in The Crowd was lauded by both the critics and the public. Before his work in The Crowd, Murray had starred alongside Joan Crawford in Rose-Marie in 1928.

Despite appearances in subsequent MGM films such as Lon Chaney's The Big City and Thunder, Murray's career began to decline due to his excessive drinking. In August 1930, he was sentenced to six months in jail after appearing in court drunk on a previous drunk driving charge. After serving four months of hard labor, Murray was released and attempted to make a comeback. He stopped drinking for a time and, in February 1933, was signed to a seven-year contract with Warner Bros.-First National Pictures. That same year, he married "Miss Florida" Marion Sayers. The marriage and Murray's sobriety proved to short lived; Sayers was granted a divorced in November 1933 on the grounds that Murray drank excessively and forced Sayers to work to support him. Sayers and Murray later reconciled and remarried, but they separated again as Murray's decline continued.

By 1934, Murray was out of work and panhandling on the street. Around that time, director King Vidor was casting his upcoming film, Our Daily Bread. He immediately thought of Murray and set out to find him. Upon discovering a much heavier and unkempt Murray begging for money on the street, Vidor bought Murray a drink and offered him the lead role in Our Daily Bread, provided he pull himself together. Murray turned Vidor down stating, "Just because I stop you on the street and try to borrow a buck you think you can tell me what to do. As far as I am concerned, you know what you can do with your lousy part."

In all, Murray appeared in 36 films. In most of his post silent era films, particularly those made during the last few years of his career, he was cast in uncredited bit parts or as an extra.

Death

On July 11, 1936, Murray drowned after falling from the North River pier. The medical examiner determined that the cause was "asphyxia by submersion," without ruling on whether his death was an accident or suicide. He was interred at the Calvary Cemetery in Woodside, Queens, New York.

Decades later, Vidor was still so haunted by Murray's decline that he wrote an unrealized screenplay about his life entitled, The Actor.

Filmography

Actor
1936
San Francisco as
Earthquake Survivor (uncredited)
1936
Rose-Marie as
Bit Part (uncredited)
1935
Skull and Crown as
Matt - Henchman
1935
Ship Cafe as
Gerald (uncredited)
1935
The Informer as
Bit (uncredited)
1935
The Drunkard as
Edward Middleton
1935
Twenty Dollars a Week as
Peter Douglas
1934
Now I'll Tell as
Henchman with Curtis (uncredited)
1933
Havana Widows as
Bank Teller (uncredited)
1933
Baby Face as
Brakeman (uncredited)
1933
Heroes for Sale as
Blind Soldier
1933
Central Airport as
Eddie Hughes
1933
High Gear as
Mark 'High Gear' Sherrod
1933
Air Hostess as
Ted Hunter
1932
Frisco Jenny as
Dan McAllister
1932
Bachelor Mother as
Joe Bigelow
1932
The Hollywood Handicap (Short) as
Character
1932
Alaska Love (Short) as
Freddie Watson
1932
The Reckoning as
Terry
1931
In Line of Duty as
Cpl. Sherwood
1931
Trapped (Short) as
Jimmy Dare
1931
Hold 'er Sheriff (Short) as
Jimmy Dalton
1931
Kick In as
Benny LaMarr
1930
Bright Lights as
Connie Lamont
1930
Hide-Out as
Jimmy Dorgan
1930
The Rampant Age as
Sandy Benton
1929
Shanghai Lady as
'Badlands' McKinney
1929
Thunder as
Tommy Anderson
1929
The Shakedown as
Dave Roberts
1928
The Little Wildcat as
Conrad Burton
1928
The Big City as
Curly
1928
The Crowd as
John Sims
1928
Rose-Marie as
Jim Kenyon
1927
The Lovelorn as
Charlie
1927
In Old Kentucky as
Jimmy Brierly
1927
Tillie the Toiler as
One of Tillie's Admirers in Restaurant (uncredited)
1924
The Pilgrims (Short) as
John Alden
Self
1933
Transatlantic Bridge Tricks (Short) as
Self - Bridge Player
Archive Footage
2023
Compression (TV Series documentary)
- Compression the Crowd de King Vidor (2023)
2011
These Amazing Shadows (Documentary) as
Brakeman (clip from Baby Face (1933)) (uncredited)
1995
Century of Cinema (TV Series documentary) as
John Sims, 'The Crowd'
- A Personal Journey with Martin Scorsese Through American Movies (1995) - John Sims, 'The Crowd' (uncredited)
1990
Hollywood Mavericks (Documentary) as
John Sims (uncredited)

References

James Murray (American actor) Wikipedia