Mary Murphy
Known for: Acting
Born: January 25, 1931 in Washington, District of Columbia, USA - Died: May 3, 2011
Mary Murphy (January 26, 1931 – May 4, 2011) was an American film actress of the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s. She was born in Washington, D.C., before moving to Los Angeles. Shortly out of high school she was signed to appear in films for Paramount Pictures in the late 1940s. Murphy first gained attention in 1953, when she played a good-hearted girl who tries to reform Marlon Brando in The Wild One. The following year, she appeared opposite Tony Curtis in Beachhead, and the year after that as Fredric March's daughter in the thriller The Desperate Hours, which also starred Humphrey Bogart. She co-starred with actor-director Ray Milland in his Western A Man Alone, and appeared in dozens of television series including Perry Mason, I Spy and Ironside. She was long absent from the big screen before acting in 1972 with Steve McQueen in the Sam Peckinpah film Junior Bonner. She had retired from acting by the 1980s. Murphy died from heart disease complications on May 4, 2011; she was 80 years old. Description above from the Wikipedia article Mary Murphy (actress), licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Known for
Showing 24 of 55 titles
Born Innocent
Miss Murphy
Harlow
Sally Doane
The Lemon Drop Kid
Girl (uncredited)
The Mad Magician
Karen Lee
The Wild One
Kathie Bleeker
The Turning Point
Secretary (uncredited)
Beachhead
Nina Bouchard
Hell's Island
Janet Martin
Crime and Punishment USA
Sally Marmon
The Desperate Hours
Cynthia 'Cindy' Hilliard
Westward the Women
Pioneer Woman (uncredited)
Make Haste to Live
Randy Benson
The Intimate Stranger
Evelyn Stewart
Sitting Bull
Kathy Howell
Live Fast, Die Young
Kim Winters / Narrator
Escapement
Ruth Vance
The Maverick Queen
Lucy Lee
Main Street to Broadway
Mary Craig
Katherine
Miss Collins
A Man Alone
Nadine Corrigan
40 Pounds of Trouble
Liz McCluskey
Carrie
Jessica Hurstwood
Darling, How Could You!
Sylvia
Junior Bonner
Ruth Bonner