Murray Dowsett is an actor, known for Hidden Light (2018), The Circuit (2007) and I Met a Girl (2020).
Murray Farnell is known for Wynonna Earp (2016), Fuyuchakado badifaito (2014) and A Gentleman (2018).
Murray Fischer is an actor, known for In God's Time (2015), Cineastes (2014) and Casey and the Death Pool (2015).
Murray Fraser is an actor, known for Glow & Darkness, The Loch (2017) and Victoria (2016).
Born in North Bay, Ontario, Canada, Murray Furrow began his acting career upon graduating from Ryerson University's Theatre School. He originally began acting for the stage, appearing in numerous plays across the country. Gradually Murray began to make his mark in the film and television industry, playing recurring characters in numerous television shows and appearing in an array of films. Murray is also an accomplished voice over actor, as well as a playwright. He lives in Toronto Canada with his actress wife Vickie Papavs and their one son.
Murray Gershenz was born on May 12, 1922 in The Bronx, New York City, New York, USA. He was an actor, known for I Love You, Man (2009), The Hangover (2009) and The Incredible Burt Wonderstone (2013). He was married to Bobette Cohen. He died on August 28, 2013 in Los Angeles, California, USA.
Murray Gray is originally from Texas. Growing up she was an all star athlete, and received her black belt in Tae Kwon Doe. She attended UCLA's Theater Film and Television Program for a Bachelor of Arts in Acting. Murray has trained with Margie Haber and the Upright Citizens Brigade in Los Angeles, earning her appearances in Netflix's G.L.O.W., ABC's Splitting Up Together and CBS' The Unicorn. She can be found starring in the film Unsullied and working with Loretta Devine in the Rosa Park's film Behind the Movement.
Murray Gronwall is known for Nikita (1990), Valmont (1989) and Mortelle randonnée (1983).
Murray Hamilton was one of those character actors whose face would be familiar to most movie buffs at an instant, yet his name may not. That's a shame, because Hamilton was one of the most versatile and prolific of performers who was never anything less than completely convincing in any role he took on, from priests to gangsters, soldiers to politicians, ordinary men to aliens. His characters would rarely fail to evoke emotion, whether that be sympathy or dislike. He particularly excelled at hard-edged, street-wise tough guys on either side of the law. His own dictum was to be always 'true to the part as it is written'. Born and schooled in Washington, North Carolina, Murray originally studied graphic design but had an early yearning for the acting profession. Barely out of his teens, he took a bus to Los Angeles, eventually arriving in Hollywood with just $50 to his name. He gained a foothold at Warner Brothers (his favorite studio) through the back door, as a messenger boy, earning $22 a week. He soon found work as an extra in films, but by 1945, returned to New York making his debut on Broadway as 'a mill hand' in 'Strange Fruit', directed by 'Jose Ferrer (I)'. His breakthrough came three years later, when he appeared with Henry Fonda in the long-running play 'Mister Roberts' (1948-51), first playing the role of a shore patrol officer, later taking over from David Wayne in the key part of Ensign Pulver. Over the years, Murray became quite comfortable with playing more comedic roles on stage and made good impressions as the over-zealous director Dion Kapakos in 'Critic's Choice' (1960-61) and as Otis Clifton in his Tony Award-nominated performance in 'Absence of a Cello' (1964-65), co-starring with Fred Clark and Charles Grodin. Of his enactment as Robert E. Lee Prewitt in the short-lived military drama 'Stockade' (1954), critic Brooks Atkinson remarked: "Modest of manner, pleasant of voice, he has a steel-like spirit that brings Prewitt honestly to life" (New York Times,September 17 1986). Murray began in films properly as a credited screen actor from 1951, alternating with guest starring roles on television (by the end of his life he had appeared in more than 100 TV shows). His expressive face and gravelly voice became an adaptable combination for playing surly gangsters (Perry Mason (1957)), authority figures with integrity (James Stewart's ill-fated colleague in The FBI Story (1959)), or without (pompous mayor Larry Vaughn in Jaws (1975). He was particularly good as Irving Blanchard in the comedy No Time for Sergeants (1958), giving an excellent drunk impersonation; as obtuse barkeeper Al Paquette in Anatomy of a Murder (1959), the key witness to the crime who keeps mum out of misguided loyalty; cocky Kentuckian millionaire Findley who thinks he can take Fast Eddie in The Hustler (1961); and Anne Bancroft's husband, Mr.Robinson, in The Graduate (1967), a role for which Marlon Brando was at one time considered. Of Murray's performance as Robinson, Bosley Crowther wrote "Murray Hamilton is piercing...a seemingly self-indulgent type who is sharply revealed as bewildered and wounded in one fine, funny scene" (New York Times,December 22 1967). On the small screen, he was memorable as Mr.Death in the 'One for the Angels' episode of Rod Serling's The Twilight Zone (1959), who is sweet-talked by salesman Lew Bookman (Ed Wynn) to remain on earth just long enough to make his big pitch. As Lewis Dunn in the episode 'The Condemned', he essayed one of the more sinister alien individuals among The Invaders (1967). In addition to numerous portrayals of harassed or cynical cops, he is also remembered for his recurring TV role, Captain Rutherford T. Grant, in B.J. and the Bear (1978). Unlike other busy actors, Murray Hamilton was not a part of the established Hollywood set, preferring to spend his life in his home state, North Carolina, and in Manhattan. He counted George C. Scott, Jason Robards and Walter Matthau among his close friends. When the actor was suffering from the effects of cancer and found film roles harder to come by, Scott helped out by getting him a part in the made-for-television movie The Last Days of Patton (1986). Murray Hamilton died too soon, aged 63, in September 1986.
Murray Harman is an actor, known for Footy Legends (2006), Housos (2011) and Fat Pizza (2003).