08/30/1908
Kankakee, Illinois, USA:
Frederick „Fred“ Martin MacMurray (* 30. August 1908 in Kankakee, Illinois; † 5. November 1991 in Santa Monica, Kalifornien) war ein US-amerikanischer Schauspieler. Bekannt wurde er mit Rollen in Liebeskomödien – unter anderem neben Claudette Colbert – sowie in Familienfilmen, Ende der 1930er Jahre hatte er seinen Durchbruch. MacMurray schlüpfte aber auch in dramatische Rollen, so zum Beispiel in Billy Wilders Filmklassiker Frau ohne Gewissen (1944). 1934 unterschrieb er einen Vertrag bei Paramount. 1935 hatte er an der Seite von Claudette Colbert in The Gilded Lily seinen Durchbruch. Sein Talent für leichte Komödien machte ihn zum idealen Partner von Colbert, und die beiden waren bis 1949 in insgesamt sieben Filmen ein populäres Leinwandpaar, meist in romantischen Komödien. MacMurray spielte aber auch neben anderen Stars wie Irene Dunne, Carole Lombard und Marlene Dietrich. Seine gelegentlichen Ausflüge ins dramatische Fach wie in Maid of Salem, der MacMurray und Colbert als Kämpfer gegen den Hexenwahn der Puritaner in Salem zeigte, fielen indes an der Kinokasse durch. Mit Madeleine Carroll drehte er, beginnend mit Café Society, zwischen 1939 und 1942 insgesamt vier Filme unter der Regie von Edward H. Griffith. In den 1940er Jahren wurde der populäre Darsteller außerdem reales „Gesichtsvorbild“ für den Superhelden Captain Marvel. Gegen Mitte der 1940er wechselte der Schauspieler zunehmend in gehaltvollere Rollen. 1944 gelang ihm an der Seite von Barbara Stanwyck unter der Regie von Billy Wilder in dem Film-Noir-Klassiker Frau ohne Gewissen eine überzeugende dramatische Darstellung. Er spielte darin einen Durchschnittsbürger, einen Versicherungsagenten, der aus Liebe zu einer rücksichtslosen Frau zum Mordkomplizen wird. Allerdings blieb er auch nach Frau ohne Gewissen weiterhin vor allem dem Komödien- und Familiengenre verpflichtet. Mit seiner Darstellung eines zur Meuterei aufrufenden Schriftstellers in Die Caine war ihr Schicksal (1954) neben Humphrey Bogart schaffte er den Sprung ins Charakterfach. In den folgenden Jahren war MacMurray meist als freundlicher Held in familienfreundlichen Abenteuern zu sehen, mit Ausnahme von Billy Wilders Tragikomödie Das Appartement, in der er mit seinen Seitensprüngen Shirley MacLaine und Jack Lemmon Unglück bringt. Im amerikanischen Fernsehen hatte er zwischen 1960 und 1972 großen Erfolg als alleinerziehender Vater in der Familienserie Meine drei Söhne, von der insgesamt 380 Folgen gedreht wurden. Parallel zu der Serie drehte er bei Walt Disneys Filmstudio in den 1960er-Jahren einige Komödienerfolge wie Der fliegende Pauker und dessen Fortsetzung Der Pauker kann’s nicht lassen. In Der glücklichste Millionär war MacMurray neben Tommy Steele und Greer Garson in einer seiner wenigen Musical-Rollen zu sehen. Nachdem er rund 30 Jahre als Leading Men in Hollywood erfolgreich war, ließ MacMurray seine Schauspielkarriere in den 1970er-Jahren langsam ausklingen. Seine letzte Rolle spielte er in dem starbesetzten, aber von Kritikern zerrissenen Katastrophenfilm Der tödliche Schwarm. 1987 wurde Fred MacMurray zur Disney-Legende erklärt. Er war der erste lebende Künstler, dem diese Ehre zuteil wurde.
|
This Is Bob Hope... (2017) as Self (archive footage) |
|
Inside 'The Apartment' (2008) as Self (archive footage) |
|
The Shaggy Dog Kids (2006) as Self (archive footage) |
|
Fred MacMurray: With Fondness (2006) as Self (archive footage) |
|
Los Angeles Plays Itself (2004) as Walter Neff in Double Indemnity (archive footage) |
|
Fred MacMurray: The Guy Next Door (1996) as Self (archive footage) |
|
Barbara Stanwyck: Fire and Desire (1991) as Self (archive footage) |
|
Anthony Quinn: An Original (1990) as Self (archive footage) |
|
Happy Birthday, Bob: 50 Stars Salute Your 50 Years with NBC (1988) as Self (archive footage) |
|
All Star Party for Clint Eastwood (1986) as Self |
|
Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid (1982) as (in "Double Indemnity") (archive footage) |
|
NBC Salutes the 25th Anniversary of the Wonderful World of Disney (1978) as Self |
|
The Swarm (1978) as Maj. Clarance Tuttle |
|
Inside 'the Swarm' (1978) as Self |
|
A Thanksgiving Reunion with the Partridge Family and My Three Sons (1977) as |
|
Bob Hope's World of Comedy (1976) as Self (archive footage) |
|
Joys (1976) as Self |
|
Beyond the Bermuda Triangle (1975) as Harry Ballinger |
|
The Chadwick Family (1974) as Ned Chadwick |
|
Charley and the Angel (1973) as Charley Appleby |
|
The Movie Orgy (1968) as Self (archive footage) |
|
The Happiest Millionaire (1967) as Anthony J. Drexel Biddle |
|
Follow Me, Boys! (1966) as Lemuel Siddons |
|
Kisses for My President (1964) as Thad McCloud |
|
Son of Flubber (1963) as Ned Brainard |
|
Bon Voyage! (1962) as Harry Willard |
|
The Absent-Minded Professor (1961) as Ned Brainard |
|
The Apartment (1960) as Jeff D. Sheldrake |
|
Gala Day at Disneyland (1960) as Self |
|
The Oregon Trail (1959) as Neal Harris |
|
Disneyland '59 (1959) as Self |
|
Face of a Fugitive (1959) as Jim Larsen (aka Ray Kincaid) |
|
The Shaggy Dog (1959) as Wilson Daniels |
|
Good Day for a Hanging (1959) as Marshal Ben Cutler |
|
Day of the Badman (1958) as Judge Jim Scott |
|
Quantez (1957) as Gentry |
|
Gun for a Coward (1956) as Will Keough |
|
There's Always Tomorrow (1956) as Clifford Groves |
|
At Gunpoint (1955) as Jack Wright |
|
The Rains of Ranchipur (1955) as Thomas "Tom" Ransome |
|
The Far Horizons (1955) as Cpt. Meriwether Lewis |
|
Woman's World (1954) as Sid Burns |
|
A Star Is Born World Premiere (1954) as Self |
|
Pushover (1954) as Paul Sheridan |
|
The Caine Mutiny (1954) as Lt. Thomas 'Tom' Keefer |
|
The Moonlighter (1953) as Wes Anderson |
|
Fair Wind to Java (1953) as Captain Boll |
|
Atomic Energy Can Be A Blessing (1952) as Self - Presenter |
|
Callaway Went Thataway (1951) as Mike Frye |
|
A Millionaire for Christy (1951) as Peter Ulysses Lockwood |
|
Never a Dull Moment (1950) as Chris Hayward |
|
Borderline (1950) as Johnny McEvoy, aka Johnny Macklin |
|
Father Was a Fullback (1949) as George Cooper |
|
Family Honeymoon (1948) as Grant Jordan |
|
An Innocent Affair (1948) as Vincent Doane |
|
The Miracle of the Bells (1948) as William 'Bill' Dunnigan |
|
On Our Merry Way (1948) as Al |
|
Singapore (1947) as Matt Gordon |
|
The Egg and I (1947) as Bob MacDonald |
|
Suddenly It's Spring (1947) as Peter Morely |
|
Smoky (1946) as Clint Barkley |
|
Pardon My Past (1945) as Eddie York / Francis Pemberton |
|
Murder, He Says (1945) as Pete Marshall |
|
Captain Eddie (1945) as Eddie Rickenbacker |
|
Where Do We Go from Here? (1945) as Bill Morgan |
|
Practically Yours (1944) as Daniel Bellamy |
|
Double Indemnity (1944) as Walter Neff |
|
And the Angels Sing (1944) as Happy Morgan |
|
Standing Room Only (1944) as Lee Stevens |
|
The Last Will and Testament of Tom Smith (1943) as Narrator Prolog (uncredited) |
|
Above Suspicion (1943) as Richard Myles |
|
Show-Business at War (1943) as Self |
|
Flight for Freedom (1943) as Randy Britton |
|
No Time for Love (1943) as Jim Ryan |
|
Breakdowns of 1942 (1942) as Self |
|
The Forest Rangers (1942) as Don Stuart |
|
Take a Letter, Darling (1942) as Tom Verney |
|
Star Spangled Rhythm (1942) as Frank |
|
The Lady Is Willing (1942) as Corey McBain |
|
New York Town (1941) as Victor Ballard |
|
Hedda Hopper's Hollywood No. 1 (1941) as Self (uncredited) |
|
Dive Bomber (1941) as Joe Blake |
|
One Night In Lisbon (1941) as Dwight Houston |
|
Virginia (1941) as Stonewall Elliott |
|
Rangers of Fortune (1940) as Gil Farra |
|
Too Many Husbands (1940) as Bill Cardew |
|
Little Old New York (1940) as Charles Brownne |
|
Remember the Night (1940) as Jack Sargent |
|
Honeymoon in Bali (1939) as Bill Burnett |
|
Invitation to Happiness (1939) as Albert 'King' Cole |
|
Cafe Society (1939) as Crick O'Bannon |
|
Sing, You Sinners (1938) as David Beebe |
|
Men with Wings (1938) as Pat Falconer |
|
Cocoanut Grove (1938) as Johnny Prentice |
|
True Confession (1937) as Kenneth Bartlett |
|
Exclusive (1937) as Ralph Houston |
|
Swing High, Swing Low (1937) as Skid Johnson |
|
Maid of Salem (1937) as Roger Coverman |
|
Champagne Waltz (1937) as Buzzy Bellew |
|
Screen Snapshots (Series 16, No. 1) (1936) as Self |
|
The Texas Rangers (1936) as Jim Hawkins |
|
The Princess Comes Across (1936) as King Mantell |
|
13 Hours by Air (1936) as Jack Gordon |
|
The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1936) as Jack Hale |
|
The Bride Comes Home (1935) as Cyrus Anderson |
|
Hands Across the Table (1935) as Theodore Drew III |
|
Alice Adams (1935) as Arthur Russell |
|
Men Without Names (1935) as Agent Dick Grant, alias Richard Hood |
|
Car 99 (1935) as Trooper Ross Martin |
|
The Gilded Lily (1935) as Peter Dawes |
|
Grand Old Girl (1935) as Sandy |
|
Tiger Rose (1929) as Rancher |
|
Girls Gone Wild (1929) as Extra (uncredited) |
|
Pardon My Past (1945) Producer |