Brian Murray, Broadway Veteran and Three-Time Tony Nominee, Dies at 80
He was not on the list.
The actor and director starred in 'Rosencrantz and
Guildenstern Are Dead,' 'The Crucible,' 'The Little Foxes' and 'Da.'
Brian Murray, the veteran Broadway actor and director known
for his performances in Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, The Crucible,
The Little Foxes and Da, has died. He was 80.
Murray died Monday night from natural causes in New York,
the publicity firm DKC O&M announced. He worked on and off Broadway for
more than 50 years.
Inducted into the American Theater Hall of Fame in 2004,
Murray was nominated for three Tony Awards, including twice for best featured
actor: in 1968 for Tom Stoppard's original Broadway production of Rosencrantz
and Guildenstern Are Dead (he played Rosencrantz) and, as Deputy-Governor
Danforth, in 2002 for Arthur Miller's The Crucible.
Murray received another Tony nom in 1997 for portraying the
brother Benjamin opposite Stockard Channing in the Lillian Hellman classic The
Little Foxes.
As a Broadway director, Murray guided Rosemary Harris in Hay
Fever; Geraldine Paige in Blithe Spirit; Eli Wallach and Anne Jackson in Waltz
of the Toreadors; Rex Harrison and Stewart Granger in The Circle; and Tony
Roberts, Jean Stapleton and Polly Holliday in Arsenic and Old Lace.
Born on Sept. 10, 1937, in Johannesburg, South Africa,
Murray relocated to England and then came to New York in 1964 with the Royal
Shakespeare Company's touring production of King Lear, starring Paul Scofield.
He made his Broadway debut the next year in All in Good Time.
In 1977 and 1978, Murray appeared in the highly acclaimed
MTC/Public Theater production of Ashes and co-starred in the celebrated
Broadway drama Da, starring Tony winner Barnard Hughes.
Murray also collected Drama Desk Awards for his work in
Noises Off in 1984 and The Little Foxes and received the Lucille Lortel Award
in 1998 for his body of work. He collaborated often with his good friend Marian
Seldes; in 2001, they were paired off-Broadway in Edward Albee's The Play About
the Baby.
On the big screen, Murray appeared in The League of
Gentlemen (1960), Bob Roberts (1992), City Hall (1996), as the voice of John
Silver in Disney’s Treasure Planet and Dream House (2011) and in guest-starring
TV stints on Kojak, The Good Wife and 30 Rock (as Alec Baldwin's father).
With Yuri Rasovsky's National Radio Theater of Chicago, he
performed in radio drama versions of A Tale of Two Cities, The Tempest and
Uncle Vanya.
Murray's final two Broadway appearances came in 2009 in Mary
Stuart with Janet McTeer and Harriet Walter and in 2011 in The Importance of
Being Earnest opposite Brian Bedford, another good friend. He was last seen on
stage in 2016 in an off-Broadway production of Simon Says.
Murray once said that the theater "has a way of saving
your life — when it's really good, it's like God is whispering in your
ear."
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