Born in South Berwick, Maine,[2] on February 17, 1891,[1] "Hal" Murray served in the Merchant Marine during World War I.[3] As a boy, he studied voice in Boston and sang in theaters and in churches. He moved to New York and worked for a music publishing company for two years.[2]
Career
Murray began performing in vaudeville in 1918 and continued there for two years.[2] He made his debut on the musical theatre stage as J. Harold Murray in out-of-town productions of Arthur Hammerstein's Always You and Frank Tinney's Sometime, both in 1920.
Returning to New York City, Murray starred in the Moss Hart-Irving Berlin musical Face the Music, Oscar Hammerstein II's East Wind, Thumbs Up, and Venus in Silk. The last was a Laurence Schwab operetta that closed out-of-town (Pittsburgh and Washington, D.C.) before reaching Broadway.
Murray retired from the Broadway stage in 1935. He sang on a Hartford, Connecticut radio show weekly for three years. He also was active in business, and summer stock (The Only Girl, 1938; Knickerbocker Holiday, 1939, at The Player's Theatre, Clinton, Connecticut). He performed in several musical film shorts for Universal Pictures (Nite in a Night Club, 1934; The Singing Bandit, 1937; Somewhere in Paris, 1938; Wild and Bully, 1939), RKO (Phony Boy, 1937; Under a Gypsy Moon, 1938) and Vitaphone (Who Was That Girl, 1934; The Flame Song, 1934).
Modern theater musicals emerged from vaudeville and operettas, and J. Harold Murray played an important role in their early development. His acting and strong baritone performances of songs such as "Rio Rita", "The Ranger’s Song", "Let’s Have Another Cup of Coffee", "Soft Lights and Sweet Music", and "New York in Autumn" were notable then. His introducing them on the Broadway stage contributed to their withstanding the test of time into the 21st century.
Later years
After Murray left show business, he became part owner of New England Brewery in Hartford, Connecticut, and commuted daily from his 200-acre farm to work at the brewery. He was defeated in a 1938 election when he ran for a seat in the Connecticut State Senate.[2]
Personal life and death
Murray was married to the former Dolly Hackett. He had one son, William Joseph Rulten Murray, from a previous marriage.[4]
J. Harold Murray developed nephritis in the spring of 1940. He died of the disease on December 11 at the age of 49.