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Brian Doyle-Murray

Brian Doyle-Murray

Brian Doyle-Murray was born simply Brian Murray in Chicago, IL and was one of nine children. Six of the Murray brood were boys and Doyle-Murray was the second eldest. The brothers all spent their summers working as caddies at a local golf course, which instilled in them a deep love of a sport that would become more than just a leisure activity for them in years to come. After attending Loyola Academy and St. Mary's College of California, Doyle-Murray was the first member of the Murray family to break into show business by joining the Chicago Second City comedy troupe. Encouraged by his example, Bill Murray also made his entree into the business via Second City. The elder Murray was also gaining experience as a writer and performer on the "National Lampoon Radio Hour" for two years. Doyle-Murray earned his first movie credit with an appearance in the police comedy "Fuzz" (1972), adding his grandmother's maiden name to Murray in order to avoid confusion with another actor named Brian Murray. Before the late night comedy juggernaut "Saturday Night Live" (NBC, 1975-), there was another show called "Saturday Night Live with Howard Cosell" (ABC, 1975-76), a disastrous primetime attempt at establishing a second career for the uncharismatic sports anchor. Doyle-Murray and Bill Murray were among the cast and writers on the program, which was put out of its misery after 18 widely panned weeks.No doubt happy to be out of that obligation, Doyle-Murray joined fellow Chicago Second City alumni Harold Ramis as a writer on the comedy troupe's TV sketch show SCTV (syndicated/NBC/Cinemax, 1976-1984). A year after Bill Murray was signed to the cast of Lorne Michaels' successful "Saturday Night" to replace departing cast member Chevy Chase, Doyle-Murray followed suit and worked predominantly on the show as a writer. He stayed on in that capacity from 1978 to 1982 and also made occasional appearances in sketches and as a Weekend Update anchor. He also joined his brother and fellow "Saturday Night Live" cast member John Belushi on the American voice track of "Shame of the Jungle" (1979), a quasi-pornographic animated parody of Tarzan. The script of the 1975 Belgian production was thrown out and replaced with new gags penned by "SNL" writers Michael O'Donoghue and Anne Beatts, and some of the raunchier elements were toned down to avoid an X rating. Few saw the finished film and it was soon forgotten. The surprise success of "Meatballs" (1979) cemented Bill Murray's fame, but Doyle-Murray was also in demand for supporting parts in a variety of comedies. He had one of his best roles as the belligerent caddy chief Lou Loomis (whom he based on an equally caustic golf course employee he knew growing up) in "Caddyshack" (1980), which he co-authored with Harold Ramis and Douglas Kenney, and also garnered laughs in the Chevy Chase vehicles "Modern Problems" (1981) and "National Lampoon's Vacation" (1983), and the John Hughes hit "Sixteen Candles" (1984). Doyle-Murray was given a chance to display dramatic credentials in his brother's ill-advised remake of "The Razor's Edge" (1984), but by that point, he was well established in comic roles as loud-mouthed or otherwise bad-tempered characters, so he soon returned to familiar terrain in the likes of "Head Office" (1985) "Legal Eagles" (1986), and "Club Paradise" (1986). The latter was also co-written with Ramis, but failed to duplicate the success of the pair's previous collaboration on "Caddyshack." In between roles in "Scrooged" (1988), "How I Got into College" (1989), "Ghostbusters II" (1989) and the like, Doyle-Murray also began to amass a long list of television credits. He was a regular on Chris Elliott's aggressively odd "Get a Life" (Fox, 1990-92) and the short-lived Farrah Fawcett/Ryan O'Neal comedy "Good Sports" (CBS, 1991), but mostly worked as a guest on such programs as "Seinfeld" (NBC, 1990-98), "Wings" (NBC, 1990-97) and "Married With Children" (Fox, 1987-1997). Oliver Stone also gave him another dramatic outing by casting Doyle-Murray as infamous killer Jack Ruby in "JFK" (1991), but the actor mostly displayed his abilities in hit comedies like "Wayne's World" (1992), "Groundhog Day" (1993), "Multiplicity" (1996) and "As Good As It Gets" (1997). In 2000, Doyle-Murray married assistant director Christina Stauffer, and the six Murray brothers became restaurateurs a year later with a Caddyshack restaurant near St. Augustine, FL. The venture was a profitable one and spawned three other that did not share its success and subsequently went out of business. Four of the Murray brothers (Brian, Bill, Joel and John) also appeared together as themselves in the five-episode Comedy Central show "The Sweet Spot" (2002), which featured the siblings making jokes and playing golf in various countries. The new century found Doyle-Murray in consistent demand, with most of his assignments coming on television, including recurring parts on "The Middle" (ABC, 2009-) and "The Bill Engvall Show" (TBS, 2007-09), but also occasional movie detours like the drama "Nearing Grace" (2005), "Daddy Day Camp" (2007), "17 Again" (2009), the ill-advised fantasy-drama "Passion Play" (2010), and the Farrelly Brothers' new incarnation of "The Three Stooges" (2012). That trademark gravelly voice also earned Doyle-Murray a number of voice artist assignments on the animated programs "SpongeBob SquarePants" (Nickelodeon, 1999-), "The Marvelous Misadventures of Flapjack" (Cartoon Network, 2008-2010), and "The Goode Family" (ABC, 2009), along with such made-for-video children's features as "Casper: A Spirited Beginning" (1997) and "The Jungle Book: Mowgli's Story" (1998). He also had several video game voice gigs to his credit, including several SpongeBob SquarePants releases, a Ghostbusters game and Nicktoons MLB.By John Charles
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