Fred MacMurray

Frederick Martin MacMurray (August 30, 1908 – November 5, 1991) was an American actor. He appeared in more than one hundred films and a successful television series, in a career that spanned nearly a half-century. His career as a major film leading man began in 1935, but his most renowned role was in Billy Wilder's film noir Double Indemnity. From 1959-1973, MacMurray appeared in numerous Disney films, including The Shaggy Dog, The Absent-Minded Professor, Follow Me, Boys!, and The Happiest Millionaire. He played Steve Douglas in the television series My Three Sons. After his success in films, he became a highly successful businessman.

Fred MacMurray
MacMurray in the 1930s
Born
Frederick Martin MacMurray

(1908-08-30)August 30, 1908
Kankakee, Illinois, U.S.
DiedNovember 5, 1991(1991-11-05) (aged 83)
OccupationActor
Years active1929–1978
Political partyRepublican
Spouses
    Lillian Lamont
    (m. 1936; died 1953)
      June Haver
      (m. 1954)
      Children4
      RelativesFay Holderness (aunt)

      Early life and education

      Frederick Martin MacMurray was born on August 30, 1908, in Kankakee, Illinois, the son of Maleta (née Martin) and concert violinist Frederick Talmadge MacMurray, both natives of Wisconsin.[1] His aunt, Fay Holderness, was a vaudeville performer and actress. When MacMurray was an infant, his family moved to Madison, Wisconsin, where his father taught music.[1] They relocated within the state to Beaver Dam, his mother's birthplace.[2] MacMurray attended school in Quincy, Illinois, before earning a full scholarship to Carroll College in Waukesha, Wisconsin. He played the saxophone in numerous local bands. He did not graduate from college.

      Career

      With Carole Lombard in Swing High, Swing Low (1937)

      A featured vocalist, MacMurray recorded with the Gus Arnheim Orchestra on "All I Want Is Just One Girl" on the Victor label in 1930,[3] and with George Olsen on "I'm In The Market For You" and "After a Million Dreams". Before signing with Paramount Pictures in 1934, he appeared on Broadway in Three's a Crowd (1930–31) and alongside Sydney Greenstreet and Bob Hope in Roberta (1933–34).[4]

      In the 1930s, MacMurray worked with film directors Billy Wilder and Preston Sturges, and actors Barbara Stanwyck, Henry Fonda, Humphrey Bogart, Marlene Dietrich, and in seven films, Claudette Colbert, beginning with The Gilded Lily. He co-starred with Katharine Hepburn in Alice Adams, with Joan Crawford in Above Suspicion, and with Carole Lombard in four productions: Hands Across the Table, The Princess Comes Across, Swing High, Swing Low and True Confession. Usually cast in light comedies as a decent, thoughtful character (The Trail of the Lonesome Pine), and in melodramas and musicals, MacMurray became one of the film industry's highest-paid actors of the period. In 1943, his annual salary had reached $420,000, making him the highest-paid actor in Hollywood and the fourth-highest-paid person in the nation.[5]

      Despite being typecast as a "nice guy", MacMurray often said his best roles were when he was cast against type, such as under the direction of Billy Wilder and Edward Dmytryk. Perhaps his best known "bad guy" performance was that of Walter Neff, an insurance salesman who plots with a greedy wife to kill her husband in the film noir classic Double Indemnity. In another turn in the "not so nice" category, MacMurray played the cynical, duplicitous Lieutenant Thomas Keefer in Dmytryk's film The Caine Mutiny.[6] Six years later, MacMurray played Jeff Sheldrake, a two-timing corporate executive in Wilder's Oscar-winning film The Apartment. In 1958, he guest-starred in the premiere episode of NBC's Cimarron City Western series, with George Montgomery and John Smith. MacMurray's career continued upward the following year, when he was cast as the father in the Disney film The Shaggy Dog.[6]

      From 1960 to 1972, he starred in My Three Sons, a long-running, highly rated TV series. Concurrently with it, MacMurray starred in other films, playing Professor Ned Brainard in The Absent-Minded Professor and its sequel Son of Flubber. Using his star-power clout, MacMurray had a provision in his My Three Sons contract that all of his scenes on that series were to be shot in two separate month-long production blocks and filmed first. That condensed performance schedule provided him more free time to pursue his work in films, maintain his ranch in Northern California, and enjoy his favorite leisure activity, golf.[7] Over the years, MacMurray became one of the wealthiest actors in the entertainment industry, primarily from wise real estate investments and from his "notorious frugality".[7] After his final film The Swarm, MacMurray appeared in commercials for the 1979 Greyhound Lines bus company. Towards the end of the decade, he appeared in a series of commercials for the Korean chisenbop math calculation program.

      Personal life

      Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6421 Hollywood Boulevard

      MacMurray was married twice. He married Lillian Lamont (legal name Lilian Wehmhoener MacMurray, born 1908) on June 20, 1936, and the couple adopted two children, Susan and Robert. After Lamont died of cancer on June 22, 1953, he married actress June Haver the following year. The couple subsequently adopted two more children—twins born in 1956—Katherine and Laurie. MacMurray and Haver's marriage lasted 37 years, until Fred's death.

      MacMurray was a businessman who became the fourth-highest-paid citizen in the United States.[8] In 1941, he purchased land in the Russian River Valley in Northern California and established MacMurray Ranch. At the 1,750-acre ranch he raised prize-winning Aberdeen Angus cattle, cultivated prunes, apples, alfalfa and other crops, and enjoyed watercolor painting, fly fishing, and skeet shooting.[9][10] MacMurray wanted the property's agricultural heritage preserved, so five years after his death, in 1996, it was sold to Gallo, which planted vineyards on it for wines that bear the MacMurray Ranch label.[11] Kate MacMurray, daughter of Haver and MacMurray, now lives on the property (in a cabin built by her father), and is "actively engaged in Sonoma's thriving wine community, carrying on her family's legacy and the heritage of MacMurray Ranch".[12][13] In 1944, he purchased the iconic Bryson Apartment Hotel in the Westlake, Los Angeles neighborhood and used it for about thirty years. Later in life, MacMurray insisted upon a percentage of gross of the films in which he starred.[8]

      Illness and death

      MacMurray and June Haver's grave at Holy Cross Cemetery, Culver City, California

      A lifelong heavy smoker, MacMurray had throat cancer in the late 1970s, and it recurred in 1987. He had a severe stroke in December 1988 that paralyzed his right side and affected his speech. With therapy he made a 90 percent recovery.[14] After suffering from leukemia for more than a decade, MacMurray died of pneumonia on November 5, 1991, in Santa Monica, California.[5]

      Awards and influence

      In 1939, artist C. C. Beck used MacMurray as the initial model for the superhero character who became Fawcett Comics' Captain Marvel.[15] MacMurray was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for The Absent-Minded Professor. He was the first person honored as a Disney Legend in 1987.[16]

      Archive

      The Academy Film Archive houses the Fred MacMurray-June Haver Collection. The film materials are complemented by papers at the Academy's Margaret Herrick Library.[17]

      Filmography

      Film

      Year Title Role Notes
      1929 Girls Gone Wild Extra Film debut
      Uncredited
      1929 Why Leave Home? Uncredited
      1929 Tiger Rose Rancher Uncredited
      1934 Friends of Mr. Sweeney Walk-on part Uncredited
      1935 Grand Old Girl Sandy
      1935 The Gilded Lily Peter Dawes
      1935 Car 99 Trooper Ross Martin
      1935 Men Without Names Richard Hood / Richard 'Dick' Grant
      1935 Alice Adams Arthur Russell
      1935 Hands Across the Table Theodore Drew III
      1935 The Bride Comes Home Cyrus Anderson
      1936 The Trail of the Lonesome Pine Jack Hale
      1936 13 Hours by Air Jack Gordon
      1936 The Princess Comes Across Joe King Mantell
      1936 The Texas Rangers Jim Hawkins
      1937 Champagne Waltz Buzzy Bellew
      1937 Maid of Salem Roger Coverman of Virginia
      1937 Swing High, Swing Low Skid Johnson
      1937 Exclusive Ralph Houston
      1937 True Confession Kenneth Bartlett
      1938 Cocoanut Grove Johnny Prentice
      1938 Men with Wings Pat Falconer
      1938 Sing You Sinners David Beebe
      1939 Cafe Society Crick O'Bannon
      1939 Invitation to Happiness Albert 'King' Cole
      1939 Honeymoon in Bali Bill 'Willie' Burnett
      1940 Remember the Night John Sargent
      1940 Little Old New York Charles Brownne
      1940 Too Many Husbands Bill Cardew
      1940 Rangers of Fortune Gil Farra
      1941 Virginia Stonewall Elliott
      1941 One Night in Lisbon Dwight Houston
      1941 Dive Bomber Joe Blake
      1941 New York Town Victor Ballard
      1942 The Lady Is Willing Dr. Corey T. McBain
      1942 Star Spangled Rhythm Frank in Card-Playing Skit
      1942 Take a Letter, Darling Tom Verney
      1942 The Forest Rangers Don Stuart
      1943 No Time for Love Jim Ryan
      1943 Flight for Freedom Randy Britton
      1943 Above Suspicion Richard Myles
      1944 Standing Room Only Lee Stevens
      1944 And the Angels Sing Happy Morgan
      1944 Double Indemnity Walter Neff
      1944 Practically Yours Daniel Bellamy
      1945 Where Do We Go from Here? Bill Morgan
      1945 Captain Eddie Edward Rickenbacker
      1945 Murder, He Says Pete Marshall
      1945 Pardon My Past Eddie York / Francis Pemberton
      1946 Smoky Clint Barkley
      1947 Suddenly, It's Spring Peter Morely
      1947 The Egg and I Bob MacDonald
      1947 Singapore Matt Gordon
      1948 On Our Merry Way Al
      1948 The Miracle of the Bells Bill Dunnigan
      1948 An Innocent Affair Vincent Doane
      1949 Family Honeymoon Grant Jordan
      1949 Father Was a Fullback George Cooper
      1950 Borderline Johnny McEvoy – aka Johnny Macklin
      1950 Never a Dull Moment Chris
      1951 A Millionaire for Christy Peter Ulysses Lockwood
      1951 Callaway Went Thataway Mike Frye
      1953 Fair Wind to Java Captain Boll
      1953 The Moonlighter Wes Anderson
      1954 The Caine Mutiny Tom Keefer
      1954 Pushover Paul Sheridan
      1954 Woman's World Sid Burns
      1955 The Far Horizons Captain Meriwether Lewis
      1955 The Rains of Ranchipur Thomas "Tom" Ransome
      1955 At Gunpoint Jack Wright
      1956 There's Always Tomorrow Clifford Groves
      1957 Gun for a Coward Will Keough
      1957 Quantez Gentry / John Coventry
      1958 Day of the Badman Judge Jim Scott
      1959 Good Day for a Hanging Marshal Ben Cutler
      1959 The Shaggy Dog Wilson Daniels
      1959 Face of a Fugitive Jim Larsen aka Ray Kincaid
      1959 The Oregon Trail Neal Harris
      1960 The Apartment Jeff D. Sheldrake
      1961 The Absent-Minded Professor Professor Ned Brainard
      1962 Bon Voyage! Harry Willard
      1963 Son of Flubber Ned Brainard
      1964 Kisses for My President Thad McCloud
      1966 Follow Me, Boys! Lemuel Siddons
      1967 The Happiest Millionaire Antony Drexel-Biddle
      1973 Charley and the Angel Charley Appleby
      1978 The Swarm Mayor Clarence Tuttle Final film role

      Short subjects

      Year Title Role Notes
      1940 Screen Snapshots: Art and Artists Himself
      1941 Hedda Hopper's Hollywood No. 1 Himself Uncredited
      1941 Popular Science Himself Uncredited
      1943 Show Business at War Himself Uncredited
      1943 The Last Will and Testament of Tom Smith Narrator Uncredited
      1949 Screen Snapshots: Motion Picture Mothers, Inc. Himself

      Television

      Year Title Role Notes
      1954 The Jack Benny Program Himself Episode: "The Jam Session Show"
      1955; 1958 General Electric Theater Richard Elgin / Harry Wingate Episodes: "The Bachelor's Bride" and "One Is a Wanderer"
      1956 Screen Directors Playhouse Peter Terrance Episode: "It's a Most Unusual Day"
      1957 The 20th Century-Fox Hour Peterson Episode: "False Witness"
      1958 Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour Himself Episode: "Lucy Hunts Uranium"
      1958 Cimarron City Himself Episode: "I, the People"
      1960 The United States Steel Hour Himself Episode: "The American Cowboy"
      1960–1972 My Three Sons Steve Douglas 380 episodes
      1964 Summer Playhouse Himself Episode: "The Apartment House"
      1974 The Chadwick Family Ned Chadwick Television film
      1975 Beyond the Bermuda Triangle Harry Ballinger Television film

      Theater

      Year Title
      1930–31 Three's a Crowd
      1933–34 Roberta

      Radio

      • Lux Radio Theater – Pete Dawes ("The Gilded Lily") (1937), Victor Hallam ("Another Language") (1937), John Horace Mason ("Made for Each Other") (1940), Bill Dunnigan ("The Miracle of the Bells) (1948)[18]
      • The Screen Guild TheaterThe Philadelphia Story (1942)
      • Screen Directors PlayhouseTake a Letter, Darling (1951)[19]
      • Bright Star – George Harvey (1952–53)
      • Lux Summer TheatreThe Lady and the Tumblers (1953)[20]
      • The Martin and Lewis Show – Himself (1953)

      Further reading

      • Tranberg, Charles (2007). Fred MacMurray: A Biography. Albany, Ga.: BearManor Media. ISBN 978-1593930998. OCLC 154698936.
      • Arts & Entertainment December 17, 1996 video biography [21]

      References

      1. "Thirteenth Census of the United States, 1910", Madison, Dane County, Wisconsin; enumeration page dated April 18, 1910. Bureau of the Census, United States Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C. Digital image of original enumeration page available at FamilySearch, a free online genealogical database provided as a public service by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Salt Lake City, Utah. Retrieved June 2, 2017.
      2. "MacMurray Family Lived in Gladstone, Fred's Folks Friends of Mrs. S. Goldstein". The Escanaba Daily Press. September 26, 1935. p. 7. Retrieved December 19, 2014 via Newspapers.com.
      3. "All I Want is One", Fred MacMurray with Gus Arnheim's Coconut Grove Orchestra, YouTube. Retrieved February 23, 2013.
      4. The Broadway League. "IBDb". IBDb. Retrieved August 24, 2012.
      5. Flint, Peter B. (November 6, 1991). "Fred MacMurray Is Dead at 83; Versatile Film and Television Star". The New York Times.
      6. "TCM Movie Database". Tcmdb.com. Retrieved August 24, 2012.
      7. Gaita, Paul. "Fred MacMurray", biographical profile, Turner Classic Movies (TCM). Retrieved June 2, 2017.
      8. "How My Three Sons star Fred MacMurray became one of the wealthiest actors in the biz".
      9. Taylor, Dan (2013). "Healdsburg Museum exhibits memorabilia from actor Fred MacMurray's nearby ranch" Archived November 6, 2016, at the Wayback Machine. Press Democrat (Santa Rosa, California), May 31, 2013, arts section. Retrieved June 4, 2017.
      10. Murphy, Linda (2003). "Hollywood to vine / A film star's daughter returns home to a Pinot paradise". San Francisco Chronicle, March 6, 2003. Retrieved June 4, 2017.
      11. "Gallo Family to Buy MacMurray Ranch". San Francisco Chronicle. May 6, 1996. Retrieved August 24, 2012.
      12. "Kate MacMurray". MacMurray Ranch. February 25, 2008. Archived from the original on April 24, 2011. Retrieved August 24, 2012.
      13. Wright, Johnathan L. (July 26, 2017). "Inside the wine ranch once owned by a movie legend". Reno Gezette Journal. Retrieved April 25, 2020. Famed actor Fred MacMurray purchased the property in 1941. Today, his daughter Kate is the winery's guiding spirit.
      14. "Archives: Story". Filmsofthegoldenage.com. Archived from the original on January 23, 2013. Retrieved August 24, 2012.
      15. "The Marvel Family Web". Marvelfamily.com. Retrieved August 24, 2012.
      16. "Fred MacMurray: The First Disney Legend". Mouseplanet.com. August 26, 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2012.
      17. "Fred MacMurry-June Haver Collection". Academy Film Archive. September 4, 2014.
      18. "Those Were the Days". Nostalgia Digest. Vol. 35, no. 2. Spring 2009. pp. 32–39.
      19. "Radio's Golden Age". Nostalgia Digest. Vol. 40, no. 1. Winter 2014. pp. 40–41.
      20. Kirby, Walter (June 14, 1953). "Better Radio Programs for the Week". The Decatur Daily Review. p. 54. Retrieved July 1, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
      21. "Fred MacMurray biography video – Bing video".
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