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Murray Hamilton in Les Dents de la mer (1975)

Biography

Murray Hamilton

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Overview

  • Born
    March 24, 1923 · Washington, North Carolina, USA
  • Died
    September 1, 1986 · Washington, North Carolina, USA (respiratory arrest/lung cancer)
  • Birth name
    George Murray Hamilton
  • Height
    1.74 m

Biography

    • 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, he had 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 La police fédérale enquête (1959)), or without (pompous mayor Larry Vaughn in Les Dents de la mer (1975)). He was particularly good as Irving Blanchard in the comedy Deux farfelus au régiment (1958), giving an excellent drunk impersonation; as obtuse barkeeper Al Paquette in Autopsie d'un meurtre (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 L'Arnaqueur (1961); and Anne Bancroft's complacent, cuckolded husband, Mr. Robinson, in Le lauréat (1967), a role for which Marlon Brando was at one time considered. Of Murray's performance in the iconic 1960s film, Bosley Crowther posited that "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 La quatrième dimension (1959), who is seemingly sweet-talked by salesman Lew Bookman (Ed Wynn) to remain on earth just long enough to make his big "pitch to the angels". As Lewis Dunn in the episode 'The Condemned' of Les envahisseurs (1967), he was a very different type of visitor to earth, a sinister alien. 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, Hamilton was not a part of the established Hollywood set, preferring to spend his life in his native 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 Les derniers jours de Patton (1986).

      Murray Hamilton died, aged 63, in September 1986 in his native North Carolina.
      - IMDb mini biography by: I.S.Mowis

Family

  • Spouse
      Terri DeMarco(June 10, 1953 - September 1, 1986) (his death, 1 child)
  • Children
      David Honeycutt Hamilton
  • Parents
      George La Fayette Hamilton
      Minnie Cordelia Honeycutt
  • Relatives
      James LaFayette Hamilton(Sibling)
      Mary Lou Hamilton(Sibling)
      Mavis Hamilton(Sibling)
      Stephen Pisani(Niece or Nephew)
      Rocky DeMarco(Niece or Nephew)

Trademarks

  • Slimy, untrustworthy characters that were somehow compelling
  • Gray hair and gray looks
  • Characters of questionable masculinity.

Trivia

  • Appeared in four films that were nominated for the Best Picture Oscar: Autopsie d'un meurtre (1959), L'Arnaqueur (1961), Le lauréat (1967) and Les Dents de la mer (1975).
  • He has appeared in five films that have been selected for the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically or aesthetically" significant: Autopsie d'un meurtre (1959), L'Arnaqueur (1961), L'opération diabolique (1966), Le lauréat (1967) and Les Dents de la mer (1975).
  • Played Blanche Devereaux's father, Big Daddy, in the first season of The Golden Girls in 1986. He passed away before the second season and was replaced by David Wayne.
  • Despite playing Blanche Deveraux's dad on the first season of The Golden Girls (1985) in real life he was only 11 years older than Rue Mcclanahan the actress who played Blanche.
  • Replaced Lou Antonio in the original Broadway production of Ira Levin's play "Critic's Choice" and Gene Hackman in the 1967 film "The Graduate".

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