Alma Murray

A Run of Luck at Drury Theatre photo by Herbert Rose Barraud 1886 back row E.W. Gardiner, William Rignold, Alma Murray, J.G. Grahame. In front:Harry Nicholls and Sophie Etre

Alma Murray (1854–1945) was an English actress.

Life

She was born in London into a theatrical family, the daughter of actors Leigh Murray and his wife Sarah Mannering.[1] Her father's real surname was Wilson. His brother was Gaston Murray (real name Gaston Parker Wilson) whose daughters often used the double-barreled stage-name 'Gaston-Murray' and were well-known performers with the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company.

Murray's first appearance was at the Olympic in 1870 as Sacharissa in The Princess. She played at the Lyceum with Irving in 1879 and at different West End theatres from 1882 to 1897, and took a prominent part in the few attempts to produce the dramas of Shelley and Browning, playing Beatrice in The Cenci (1886) and Mildred in A Blot in the 'Scutcheon (1888). She played Helena in John Todhunter's Helena in Troas (1886). In 1884 at the Comedy Theatre, London, she played in The New Woman, with Fred Terry and Cyril Maude, in 1885 A Leader of Men with Marion Terry and H.B.Irving, and in 1890 A Modern Marriage, opposite Ellaline Terriss and Lewis Waller. Alma Murray married[2] the poet Alfred William Forman (1840-1925), the first translator of Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen.[1] She played Mrs. Maylie in Oliver Twist (1905), (1912), the Queen in Pelleas and Melisande (1911), Lady Dedmond in Galsworthy's Fugitive (1913), and Mrs. Eynsford-Hill in Shaw's Pygmalion (1914).

A collection of letters between Murray and George Bernard Shaw was privately published in Edinburgh in 1927.[3]

gollark: Why not deploy worry mirror technology?
gollark: The only *acceptable* way to describe colors is as a list of tuples of (inbound light frequency, photon count).
gollark: If you look at a color space diagram you might just go "wow, those are just undifferentiated cyans, why would I care about those", but this is merely due to your monitor bad.
gollark: Interestingly, your monitor cannot display a *worrying* quantity of cyans.
gollark: Solution: field programmable FPGA gate array.

References

  1. Eric Salmon, ‘Murray, Alma (1854–1945)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 16 Oct 2016
  2. "MURRAY, Alma". Who's Who. Vol. 59. 1907. p. 1278.
  3. Letters from George Bernard Shaw to Miss Alma Murray (Mrs. Alfred Forman). Edinburgh : Printed for private circulation, 1927. [32] p. 1 illus. 20 cm. Library of Congress PR5366 .A465 (Copy held by Rare Book/Special Collections Reading Room).


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