Bill Murray

AKA William James Murray

Born: 21-Sep-1950

Birthplace: Wilmette, IL



Gender: Male

Religion: Roman Catholic

Race or Ethnicity: White

Sexual orientation: Straight

Occupation: Actor, Comic

Nationality: United States

Executive summary: Meatballs, SNL alumnus

Bill Murray is a comedic actor, and an unlikely movie star -- his face plain and pock-marked -- his characters are usually smart, often lonely. In his best films, Murray somehow achieves equilibrium between "ironically insincere" and "good-hearted good guy."

As a child, Murray was never an angel, always a smartass. He was in the Boy Scouts, until they kicked him out, and he played Little League baseball until they kicked him out. As a young man, Murray caddied at the community golf course in Evanston, Illinois, and attended a Jesuit high school. He was expelled from Regis College in Denver, after an arrest for marijuana possession. Unsure what to do with his life, Murray joined his older brother Brian Doyle-Murray at Chicago's Second City improvisational comedy troupe. After that, he wrote and performed for The National Lampoon Radio Hour, alongside Dan Aykroyd, John Belushi, and Gilda Radner.

Those three left the Lampoon to join a new TV show called Saturday Night Live, while Murray went to work for a very different show with a very similar name, Saturday Night Live with Howard Cosell -- an almost unwatchable prime time variety show starring the wooden sportscaster. It was quickly cancelled, leaving Murray unemployed.

He joined SNL in the 11th episode of its second season, with an impossible task -- replacing Chevy Chase, the most popular face on the program. For several weeks on the show, Murray was a disappointment, especially to himself. He was this weird-looking interloper who, week after week, was not funny. The audience was growing impatient, and so was Murray -- he actually apologized on the air for not being funny. Eventually characters such as 'Todd the nerd' and 'Nick the sleazy lounge singer' got him the funny he needed.

In 1979 Meatballs made him a movie star, and in 1980 Murray (and the rest of the "Not Ready for Prime Time Players") left Saturday Night Live. Since then, Murray has made his career with an uncanny knack for finding scripts that will work well with his persona, even as his hair has grayed and his persona has evolved. As a leading man, his better films include Stripes, Ghostbusters, Scrooged, Quick Change, What About Bob?, Groundhog Day, The Man Who Knew Too Little, Lost in Translation, The Life Aquatic, and Broken Flowers. In supporting roles, Murray shined in Caddyshack, Little Shop of Horrors, Tootsie, Ed Wood, Kingpin, With Friends Like These, Rushmore, Cradle Will Rock, Ethan Hawke's Hamlet, The Royal Tenenbaums, and Coffee & Cigarettes.

After Ghostbusters made Murray an enormous star, nobody in show business was surprised when he agreed to do a sequel. But Hollywood scratched its collective head when he insisted that first he would produce and write and star in a film based on W. Somerset Maugham's The Razor's Edge. Somerset's novel is not funny -- not even a little bit. And neither was Murray's fairly faithful adaptation. Thus there was no audience for the film, but Murray showed that he could perform drama and do it well. After The Razor's Edge, he took a few years off, moving to Paris to study philosophy -- particularly Gurdjieff -- and history at the Sorbonne.

With only occasional exceptions, Murray's films are always worth the price of admission. There is something going on, or if there isn't, you can at least sense that they were trying to make something worthwhile happen. Even as the voice of Garfield, Murray brought a spark to the otherwise dull proceedings. But Groundhog Day is probably Murray's best film. It is the story of a bored, cynical TV weatherman forced to re-live the same day over and over again, until he gets it right. The concept seems almost routine and not too promising; it is unavoidably going to involve showing you the same scenes repetedly, and how could that not be boring? Thanks to an inventive script and a spot-on Murray, it's divine.

Murray is a huge baseball fan, and is co-owner of two minor league teams. He is also an avid golfer and a fan favorite at the otherwise stuffy annual Pebble Beach Pro-Am Tournament. He is the author of Cinderella Story: My Life in Golf, and dislikes discussing his personal life with the media.

Father: Edward Murray (lumberyard worker)

Mother: Lucille Collins

Brother: Brian Doyle-Murray (actor, b. 31-Oct-1945)

Brother: Edward Murray Jr.

Brother: Andrew Murray

Brother: John Murray (producer, b. 23-May-1958)

Brother: Joel Murray (actor, b. 17-April-1963)

Sister: Nancy Murray (nun)

Wife: Margaret Kelly (m. 24-Jan-1980, div. 1996)

Son: Homer Murray (b. 1982)

Son: Luke Murray (b. 1985)

Wife: Jennifer Butler (m. Jul-1997, div. 13-Jun-2008)

Son: Jackson Murray

Son: Cooper Murray



High School: Loyola Academy, Wilmette IL (1968)

University: Pre-Med, Regis College (expelled for marijuana use)

University: Sorbonne



Little Caesar's Evanston, IL (1971)

Second City

Expelled from School

Drug Possession: Marijuana

Wedding: Eddie Murphy and Nicole Mitchell (1993)

Funeral: Hunter S. Thompson (2005)

Risk Factors: Marijuana, Skydiving



TELEVISION

Saturday Night Live



FILMOGRAPHY AS DIRECTOR

Quick Change (13-Jul-1990)



FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR

The Dead Don't Die (14-May-2019)

Isle of Dogs (15-Feb-2018) [VOICE]

Ghostbusters (9-Jul-2016)

The Jungle Book (4-Apr-2016) [VOICE]

Rock the Kasbah (22-Oct-2015)

Aloha (28-May-2015)

Dumb and Dumber To (7-Nov-2014)

St. Vincent (5-Sep-2014)

Olive Kitteridge (1-Sep-2014)

The Grand Budapest Hotel (6-Feb-2014)

The Monuments Men (5-Feb-2014)

A Glimpse Inside the Mind of Charles Swan III (15-Nov-2012)

Hyde Park on Hudson (31-Aug-2012)

Moonrise Kingdom (16-May-2012) · Mr. Bishop

Passion Play (10-Sep-2010)

Fantastic Mr. Fox (14-Oct-2009) · Badger [VOICE]

Zombieland (25-Sep-2009) · Himself

Get Low (12-Sep-2009) · Frank Quinn

The Limits of Control (1-May-2009) · American

City of Ember (25-Sep-2008)

Get Smart (18-Jun-2008)

The Darjeeling Limited (3-Sep-2007) · The Businessman

Garfield: A Tail of Two Kitties (15-Jun-2006) [VOICE]

The Lost City (3-Sep-2005)

Broken Flowers (17-May-2005) · Don Johnston

The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (20-Nov-2004)

Garfield (11-Jun-2004) · Voice of Garfield [VOICE]

Coffee and Cigarettes (7-Sep-2003) · Bill Murray

Lost in Translation (29-Aug-2003) · Bob Harris

The Royal Tenenbaums (5-Oct-2001)

Osmosis Jones (7-Aug-2001) · Frank

Speaking of Sex (2001)

Charlie's Angels (22-Oct-2000) · Bosley

Hamlet (24-Jan-2000) · Polonius

Cradle Will Rock (18-May-1999)

Rushmore (17-Sep-1998) · Mr. Blume

With Friends Like These... (10-Sep-1998)

Wild Things (20-Mar-1998) · Ken Bowden

The Man Who Knew Too Little (14-Nov-1997) · Wallace Ritchie

Space Jam (15-Nov-1996) · Himself

Larger Than Life (26-Jul-1996) · Jack Corcoran

Kingpin (4-Jul-1996) · Ernie McCracken

Ed Wood (28-Sep-1994) · Bunny Breckinridge

Mad Dog and Glory (5-Mar-1993) · Frank

Groundhog Day (12-Feb-1993) · Phil

What About Bob? (17-May-1991) · Bob Wiley

Quick Change (13-Jul-1990) · Grimm

Ghostbusters II (16-Jun-1989) · Dr. Peter Venkman

Scrooged (23-Nov-1988) · Frank Cross

Little Shop of Horrors (19-Dec-1986) · Arthur Denton

The Razor's Edge (19-Oct-1984)

Nothing Lasts Forever (Sep-1984)

Ghostbusters (8-Jun-1984) · Dr. Peter Venkman

Tootsie (17-Dec-1982) · Jeff

Stripes (26-Jun-1981) · John

Caddyshack (25-Jul-1980) · Carl Spackler

Where the Buffalo Roam (25-Apr-1980) · Hunter S. Thompson

Loose Shoes (1980)

Meatballs (28-Jun-1979)

Mr. Mike's Mondo Video (1979)

The Rutles (22-Mar-1978)



Author of books:

Cinderella Story: My Life in Golf ( 1999 )







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