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Murphy Dunne

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Name
  
Murphy Dunne

Children
  
Veronica Dunne

Parents
  
George Dunne


Spouse
  
Kristine Dunne

Role
  
Actor

Murphy Dunne iamediaimdbcomimagesMMV5BMzYyMzY1OTQ3MV5BMl5

Born
  
June 22, 1942
Chicago, Illinois

Movies
  
The Blues Brothers, Blues Brothers 2000, The Mothman Prophecies, The Big Bus, Glengarry Glen Ross

Similar People
  
Dan Aykroyd, John Landis, David Shire, Victor Schertzinger, Johnny Mercer

Grandparents
  
John Dunne, Ellen Dunne

Murphy Dunne - Actor


Murphy Dunne (born June 22, 1942) is an American actor and musician. He is best known for being the keyboardist/pianist for the Blues Brothers in the 1980 film The Blues Brothers, a role he reprised in the sequel, Blues Brothers 2000.

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Dunne won the role in The Blues Brothers after their original pianist, Paul Shaffer, could not accept the part due to his contractual obligations with Saturday Night Live, as well as his choice to take part in Gilda Live. Dunne played himself in both of the two Blues Brothers films, with a fictional storyline: Murphy "Murph" Dunne was an original member of the Blues Brothers until "Joliet" Jake went to prison in the 1970s. He then started his own band called "Murph and the MagicTones" along with four other ex-Blues Brothers Band members; Donald "Duck" Dunn, Steve "The Colonel" Cropper, Willie "Too Big" Hall and Tom "Bones" Malone. While performing a regular set at the Armada Room in a Chicago area Holiday Inn, Jake and Elwood Blues again approached the band to reform the Blues Brothers band. After a brief tour, Murph was sent to prison with the rest of the Blues Brothers Band. When the Blues Brothers toured in 1980 to promote the film, Dunne performed live with the band along with Shaffer. His work can be heard on their 1980 album, Made in America.

Murphy Dunne Murphy Dunne Profile BioData Updates and Latest Pictures

Dunne also appeared in Chesty Anderson, USN (1976), the disaster spoof The Big Bus (1976), Mel Brooks's High Anxiety (1977), three commercial parody films; Tunnel Vision (1976), American Raspberry (1977) and Loose Shoes (1980), and the teen comedy Bad Manners (aka: Growing Pains) (1984). He played a court stenographer in the movie Oh, God! (1977). Later films include The Main Event (1979), The Last Married Couple in America (1980), Honky Tonk Freeway (1981), Perfect (1985), Hero and the Terror (1988), Phoenix (1998) and The Mothman Prophecies (2002). He has also acted in numerous television shows including Night Court as well as working as a voice actor, and can be heard in Cowboy Bebop: The Movie, Ghost in the Shell: Standalone Complex and in the game, Star Trek: Klingon Academy.

Murphy Dunne Murphy Dunne Biography and Filmography

Discography

Murphy Dunne Pictures of Murphy Dunne Pictures Of Celebrities

  • 1992: Nevertheless
  • 2011: Pavlov Rang My Bell

  • Murphy Dunne Pictures of Murphy Dunne Picture 203221 Pictures Of Celebrities

    Murphy Dunne Pictures of Murphy Dunne Picture 203226 Pictures Of Celebrities

    References

    Murphy Dunne Wikipedia