Fredrick Martin MacMurray

Fredrick Martin MacMurray

Fredrick Martin MacMurray’s net worth is $2 Million. Also know about Fredrick Martin MacMurray bio, salary, height, age weight, relationship, and more …

Fredrick Martin MacMurray Wiki Biography

  • Fred Martin “Fred” MacMurray was born in Kankakee, Illinois, USA, on 30 August 1908, and died in Santa Monica, California, USA, on 5 November 1991. 
  • He was an actor, consistently recognized by appearances in more than 100 TV series and film titles, including “Double Indemnity” (1944) and “My Three Sons” (1960-1972). 
  • From 1929 to 1978, he had an active professional acting career. 
  • According to reports, it was reported that Fred’s total net worth was equivalent to $2 million, with his successful career as a professional actor being the main source of his fortune. 
  • Born to Frederick MacMurray and his wife Maleta, Fred MacMurray is a cousin of the actress Fay Holderness. 
  • His family moved to Beaver Dam, Wisconsin, at the age of two, so he was raised there. 
  • He attended school in Quincy, Illinois, and eventually enrolled at Carroll College (now Carroll University), but he did not graduate, according to college sources. 
  • Fred’s career started in the 1930s, first appearing in Three’s a Crowd (1930-31) and Roberta’s Broadway productions (1933-1934). 
  • His career progressed little by little, and he had more than 20 positions to his name by the end of the 1930s, which definitely contributed to his net worth. 
  • ” “That ” (1967). 
  • He retired in 1978, and before that he starred with Donna Mills in the films ‘Charley and the Angel’ (1973) andBeyond The Bermuda Triangle’ (1975). 
  • His last appearance was in the movie “The Swarm” by Mayor Clarence (1978). 
  • Thanks to his talents, Fred received several prestigious nominations and awards for his work on “The Absent-Minded Professor,” including the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in Comedy or Musical, and for his success as an actor, he received a star on the Hollywood Walk Of Fame in 1960. 
  • Fred MacMurray was married twice with respect to his personal life, firstly to Lillian Lamont (1936-1953), with whom he adopted two children. 
  • He married the actress June Haver in 1954, after Lillian’s death, and they remained together until 1991. 
  • He also adopted two children in June. 
  • He worked at his own MacMurray Ranch in the Russian River Valley in Northern California during his free time, where he lived until his death. 
  • Fred died at the age of 83 due to pneumonia. 
  • IMDB Wikipedia’Standing Room Only ‘(1944) $2 million 1908 1908-8-30 1991 1991-11-05 6′ 3 ‘(1.91 m) A Spot in the Sun (film) Abu Dhabi Actor Alfred Hitchcock American American American Broadcasting Company André Borschberg Animal Husbandry Art Institute of Chicago Asteroid Belt Atlanta August 30 Bright Star (1952-1953) Disney Legend of California (1987) Double Indemnity (1944) 

Fredrick Martin MacMurray Quick Info

Full Name Fred MacMurray
Net Worth $2 Million
Date Of Birth August 30, 1908, Kankakee, Illinois, United States
Died November 5, 1991, Santa Monica, California, United States
Place Of Birth Kankakee, Illinois, U.S.
Height 6′ 3″ (1.91 m)
Profession Actor, Soundtrack, Producer
Education Carroll College (now Carroll University)
Nationality American
Spouse June Haver (m. 1954–1991), Lillian Lamont (m. 1936–1953)
Children Katherine Macmurray, Laurie MacMurray, Robert MacMurray, Susan MacMurray
Parents Maleta Martin, Frederick MacMurray
IMDB http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0534045
Awards Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy (1961)
Nominations Disney Legend (1987), Hollywood Walk Of Fame (1960)
Movies Double Indemnity (1944),“Standing Room Only” (1944), “The Absent Minded Professor” (1961), My Three Sons (1960-1972), “The Swarm” (1978)
TV Shows Summer Playhouse(1964), The Chadwick Family (1974), The Martin and Lewis Show(1953), Bright Star (1952-1953)

Fredrick Martin MacMurray Trademarks

  1. Wholesome, kind-hearted characters
  2. Disney movies
  3. Deadpan delivery

Fredrick Martin MacMurray Quotes

  • [on Barbara Stanwyck] I was lucky enough to make four pictures with Barbara. In the first I turned her in, in the second I killed her, in the third I left her for another woman and in the fourth I pushed her over a waterfall. The one thing all these pictures had in common was that I fell in love with Barbara Stanwyck — and I did, too.
  • [on working with director Preston Sturges] At the end of this shoot, he said, “It’s been a pleasure working with you” and I said, “I wish I could say the same about you.” I don’t like to be that way, but he was terrible, very cruel.
  • The two films I did with Billy Wilder, Double Indemnity (1944) and the The Apartment (1960), are the only two parts I did in my entire career that required any acting.
  • Carole Lombard was a wonderful girl. Swore like a man. Other women try, but she really did.
  • I once asked Barbara Stanwyck the secret of acting. She said, “Just be truthful – and if you can fake that you’ve got it made”.

Fredrick Martin MacMurray Important Facts

  • In 1961 when he took his family to Disneyland, a woman came up to him and asked “Are you Fred MacMurray?”, and when he answered he was, she hit him with her purse and told him she had taken her children to see him in “The Apartment” and was furious because “That was not a Disney movie”, he responded, “No ma’am, it wasn’t.” He then turned to his wife and announced he was done playing bad guys in movies.
  • Was an expert leather craftsman. A 1936 entry in the Columbia Pictures “Screen Snapshots” series showed him assembling an ornate gun holster, which he had also decoratively engraved. The narrator stated that he also knew how to make saddles.
  • His feature film leading ladies: Claudette Colbert (7 films): The Gilded Lily (1935), _The Bride Comes Home (1935)’, Maid of Salem (1937), No Time for Love (1943), Practically Yours (1944), The Egg and I (1947), Family Honeymoon (1948). Madeleine Carroll (5 films): Honeymoon in Bali (1939), Cafe Society (1939), Virginia (1941), One Night in Lisbon (1941), An Innocent Affair (1948). Barbara Stanwyck (4 films): Remember the Night (1940), Double Indemnity (1944), The Moonlighter (1953), There’s Always Tomorrow (1955). Carole Lombard (4 films): Hands Across the Table (1935), The Princess Comes Across (1936), True Confession (1937), Swing High, Swing Low (1937). Paulette Goddard (4 films): The Forest Rangers (1942), Standing Room Only (1944), Suddenly It’s Spring (1947), On Our Merry Way (1948). Irene Dunne (2 films): Invitation to Happiness (1939), Never a Dull Moment (1950). Rosalind Russell (2 films): Take a Letter, Darling (1942), Flight for Freedom (1943). June Haver (married 1954): Where Do We Go from Here? (1945).
  • The appearance of the famous DC Comics character Captain Marvel is based on him.
  • Acting mentor of Stanley Livingston.
  • Was a Boy Scout.
  • The character design of the Fawcett Comics (later DC Comics) superhero Captain Marvel (now Shazam) was said to have been based on him.
  • MacMurray played the baritone saxophone in high school with the American Legion Band. After buying a saxophone with his own money he earned in a pea-canning factory, he created his own three piece orchestra called “Mac’s Melody Boys.” He performed in nightclubs, dance halls and vaudeville.
  • In the early 1930s, he was the vocalist for Gus Arnheim’s Coconut Grove Orchestra.
  • In 1951, RKO Radio Pictures tried to compose a film noir entitled “The Sins of Sarah Ferry”. The story was about a courthouse clerk in Binghamton, New York who finds herself falling in love with a beautiful liar whose accused of armed robbery as well as a hit run charge involving a death. The cast would have starred Laraine Day, Fred MacMurray, Yvonne De Carlo, Hugh Beaumont, Glenn Ford, Howard Duff, and Evelyn Keyes, with the studio wanting to shoot on location in Binghamton and neighboring Johnson City. This project never materialized because the plot was considered to close of a generic step-up of Double Indemnity (1944) and the studio never received a reply via phone call or standard mail from the Binghamton Courthouse or then Mayor Donald Kramer granting them permission to film on location in the area and negotiate a fair range of payment. Based on that neglect, the studio immediately canceled this project and moved on.
  • His physical likeness inspired the appearance of DC Comics’ character Captain Marvel.
  • According to daughter Kate, Fred and wife June Haver were introduced to each other by John Wayne.
  • Before he was a successful actor, he once worked in a department store, selling appliances, among everything that he did.
  • His father, Frederick MacMurray, died when he was only 5.
  • Second-only to Lucille Ball and John Ritter, MacMurray performed a lot of physical comedy on My Three Sons (1960).
  • At Carroll College (now Carroll University), he played a variety of local bands and nightclubs.
  • During Maleta’s pregnancy, she and Frederick Sr. both traveled to Kankakee, Illinois, where Frederick Jr. was born.
  • Graduated from Beaver Dam High School in Beaver Dam, Wisconsin, in 1926.
  • Had played both the violin and saxophone, just before he entered high school.
  • Was a conservative Republican.
  • His musical career eventually led him to Broadway.
  • He tried to get into the military service during World War II, but a fluctuated ear prevented him from attending, therefore, he stayed in Hollywood, continued making movies and did everything he could to help the war effort and afterwards, helped the Hollywood community did his part in the process of rebuilding.
  • Taught his future My Three Sons (1960) co-star, Beverly Garland, how to play golf.
  • He had 8 hobbies – camping, spending time with family, boxing, golfing, fishing, singing, traveling and dancing.
  • Remained good friends with Stanley Livingston, during and after My Three Sons (1960).
  • Was a lifelong heavy smoker that led to throat cancer and emphysema, which contributed to his death.
  • Before he was a successful actor, he was a member of the Gus Arnheim Orchestra from 1930-31 and sang the vocal refrain on the record “All I Want Is Just One”, recorded on March 30, 1930 and issued on Victor 22384.
  • Was raised in Beaver Dam, Wisconsin, where his mother had been born in 1880.
  • Began his career as a contract player for Paramount in 1934.
  • Was not the producer’s first choice for the role of Steve Douglas on My Three Sons (1960). He got the role only because Eddie Albert turned it down to focus on his movie career.
  • Suffered a number of health problems for 13 years before his death, from throat cancer to leukemia. He also suffered a stroke at Christmas 1988.
  • Best friends with William Demarest, from 1935 to his death in 1983.
  • His future My Three Sons (1960) co-star, Tim Considine, worked with him in the movie The Shaggy Dog (1959).
  • Friends with: Shirley Jones, Jane Wyman, Lucille Ball, Michael Landon, Buddy Ebsen, Brian Keith, Ernest Borgnine, Barbara Stanwyck, Beverly Garland, William Demarest, Anthony Quinn, Carol Channing, Bob Hope, Don Rickles, Jerry Lewis, Dean Martin, Bing Crosby, Dorothy Lamour, James Stewart, Billy Wilder, William Frawley, Carole Lombard, Ronald Reagan, Ray Milland, Porter Hall, Tommy Kirk and June Haver.
  • After his role on The Swarm (1978), he retired from acting at age 70.
  • Best remembered by the public for his starring role as Steve Douglas on My Three Sons (1960).
  • Was the only actor to appear in all 380 episodes of My Three Sons (1960) on both (ABC) and (CBS) networks.
  • Near the end of his acting career, he was a spokesperson for Greyhound Bus Lines in the 1970s.
  • His mother, Maleta Martin, died in 1965 aged 85.
  • Cartoonist C.C. Beck claimed that he modeled the 1940s superhero, Captain Marvel after Fred MacMurray.
  • Profiled in “American Classic Screen Interviews” (Scarecrow Press). [2010]
  • He never took an acting lesson.
  • Initially turned down his most famous movie role in Double Indemnity (1944) because he didn’t think his fans would want to see him playing a darker character.
  • Was in consideration for the role of Joe Gillis in Sunset Blvd. (1950) but William Holden, who received a Best Actor Oscar nomination for his performance, was cast instead.
  • Made his debut on stage playing the violin alongside his father, but the experience left him with a terrible case of stage fright. Later he overcame it and learned the piano, guitar and saxophone, which he played in his high school band.
  • Quite the high school athlete. He won ten letters for athletics and a scholarship to Carroll College in Wisconsin to play football. He played the saxophone for extra money while there.
  • Once studied art at the Chicago Art Institute.
  • One of his first jobs in Los Angeles was playing in a pit orchestra for an L.A. theater.
  • Played vaudeville with a stage band called “The California Collegians”. The group was cast in a Broadway revue called “Three’s a Crowd” in 1930 that showcased such star talent as Fred Allen, Clifton Webb and chanteuse Libby Holman. Holman sang the torch song “Something to Remember You By” to Fred in the show. The Collegians were also featured in the Broadway musical “Roberta”, in which Fred also understudied the lead.
  • Met first wife Lillian (“Lily”) Lamonte while performing on Broadway in “Roberta” in 1933. She was a dancer.
  • He and wife June Haver were once offered a husband-and-wife sitcom but Fred refused, afraid of putting his marriage in jeopardy by the pressures.
  • When offered the job as the dad on My Three Sons (1960), he was given a dream contract in which he only had to work 65 days a year on the series. The supporting cast, as a result, often had to shoot their scenes opposite a prop person off camera instead of Fred. The popular series ran 12 seasons.
  • Best remembered by the public for starring as father figures in Walt Disney movies.
  • He was a staunch supporter of the Republican Party who joined Bob Hope and James Stewart in campaigning for Richard Nixon in 1968.
  • His daughter Susan was born in 1942. His son Robert was born in 1945.
  • 1970s: He was most often seen doing commercials for a video teaching “Chisenbop,” a Korean method of doing math on your fingers.
  • 1987: First person to be named a Disney Legend.
  • Steve Douglas, MacMurray’s character on My Three Sons (1960), was ranked #7 in TV Guide’s list of the “50 Greatest TV Dads of All Time” [20 June 2004 issue].
  • Portrayed George Harvey, star reporter for the Hillsdale Morning Star, on NBC Radio’s “Bright Star” (1952-1953).
  • At his insistence, all episodes of My Three Sons (1960) were filmed out of sequence during the show’s entire run. He would do all of his scenes first, then leave until the next season. All kitchen scenes would be done together, then all scenes in the upstairs hallway would be filmed together, etc. This fact was well concealed until Dawn Lyn joined the cast as Dodie. Her upper front teeth grew in irregularly during the entire 1969-’70 season, from being barely visible in scenes with MacMurray to being plainly visible in scenes without him.
  • The Untouchables (1959). He was also the first choice to play the title role on TV’s Perry Mason (1957).
  • Adopted twin daughters, Kathryn and Laurie (b. 1956), with Haver.
  • Interred at Holy Cross Cemetery, Culver City, California, USA, in the Mausoleum, D1, Room 7.
  • Personal friends with Walt Disney.

Fredrick Martin MacMurray Filmography

Title Year Status Character Role
The Swarm 1978 Mayor Clarence Actor
Beyond the Bermuda Triangle 1975 TV Movie Harry Ballinger Actor
The Chadwick Family 1974 TV Movie Ned Chadwick Actor
Charley and the Angel 1973 Charley Appleby Actor
My Three Sons 1960-1972 TV Series Steve Douglas Actor
The Happiest Millionaire 1967 Father Actor
Follow Me, Boys! 1966 Lemuel Siddons Actor
Summer Playhouse 1964 TV Series Cameo Actor
Kisses for My President 1964 Thad McCloud Actor
Son of Flubber 1963 Prof. Ned Brainard Actor
Bon Voyage! 1962 Harry Willard Actor
The Absent-Minded Professor 1961 Prof. Ned Brainard Actor
The Apartment 1960 Jeff D. Sheldrake Actor
The United States Steel Hour 1960 TV Series Actor
The Oregon Trail 1959 Neal Harris Actor
Face of a Fugitive 1959 Jim Larsen aka Ray Kincaid Actor
The Shaggy Dog 1959 Wilson Daniels Actor
Good Day for a Hanging 1959 Marshal Ben Cutler Actor
Cimarron City 1958 TV Series Laird Garner Actor
General Electric Theater 1955-1958 TV Series Harry Wingate / Richard Elgin Actor
Day of the Badman 1958 Judge Jim Scott Actor
The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour 1958 TV Series Fred MacMurray Actor
Quantez 1957 Gentry / John Coventry Actor
Gun for a Coward 1957 Will Keough Actor
The 20th Century-Fox Hour 1957 TV Series Peterson Actor
Screen Directors Playhouse 1956 TV Series Peter Terrance Actor
There’s Always Tomorrow 1956 Clifford Groves Actor
At Gunpoint 1955 Jack Wright Actor
The Rains of Ranchipur 1955 Thomas “Tom” Ransome Actor
The Far Horizons 1955 Captain Meriwether Lewis Actor
The Jack Benny Program 1954 TV Series Fred Actor
Woman’s World 1954 Sid Burns Actor
Pushover 1954 Paul Sheridan Actor
The Caine Mutiny 1954 Lt. Tom Keefer (as Fred Mac Murray) Actor
The Moonlighter 1953 Wes Anderson Actor
Fair Wind to Java 1953 Capt. Boll Actor
Atomic Energy Can Be a Blessing 1952 Short Actor
Callaway Went Thataway 1951 Mike Frye Actor
A Millionaire for Christy 1951 Peter Ulysses Lockwood Actor
Never a Dull Moment 1950 Chris Actor
Borderline 1950 Johnny McEvoy, aka Johnny Macklin Actor
Father Was a Fullback 1949 George Cooper Actor
Family Honeymoon 1948 Grant Jordan Actor
An Innocent Affair 1948 Vincent Doane Actor
The Miracle of the Bells 1948 Bill Dunnigan Actor
On Our Merry Way 1948 Al Actor
Singapore 1947 Matt Gordon Actor
The Egg and I 1947 Bob MacDonald Actor
Suddenly It’s Spring 1947 Peter Morley Actor
Smoky 1946 Clint Barkley Actor
Pardon My Past 1945 Eddie York / Francis Pemberton Actor
Murder, He Says 1945 Pete Marshall Actor
Captain Eddie 1945 Captain Edward Rickenbacker Actor
Where Do We Go from Here? 1945 Bill Morgan Actor
Practically Yours 1944 Daniel Bellamy Actor
And the Angels Sing 1944 Happy Morgan Actor
Double Indemnity 1944 Walter Neff Actor
Standing Room Only 1944 Lee Stevens Actor
The Last Will and Testament of Tom Smith 1943 Short Narrator (uncredited) Actor
Above Suspicion 1943 Richard Myles Actor
Flight for Freedom 1943 Randy Britton Actor
No Time for Love 1943 Jim Ryan Actor
The Forest Rangers 1942 Don Stuart Actor
Take a Letter, Darling 1942 Tom Verney Actor
Star Spangled Rhythm 1942 Frank in Card-Playing Skit Actor
The Lady Is Willing 1942 Dr. Corey T. McBain Actor
New York Town 1941 Victor Ballard Actor
Dive Bomber 1941 Joe Blake Actor
One Night in Lisbon 1941 Dwight Houston Actor
Virginia 1941 Stonewall Elliott Actor
Rangers of Fortune 1940 Gil Farra Actor
Too Many Husbands 1940 Bill Cardew Actor
Little Old New York 1940 Charles Brownne Actor
Remember the Night 1940 John Sargent Actor
Honeymoon in Bali 1939 Bill ‘Willie’ Burnett Actor
Invitation to Happiness 1939 Albert ‘King’ Cole Actor
Cafe Society 1939 Crick O’Bannon Actor
Sing, You Sinners 1938 David Beebe Actor
Men with Wings 1938 Pat Falconer Actor
Cocoanut Grove 1938 Johnny Prentice Actor
True Confession 1937 Kenneth Bartlett Actor
Exclusive 1937 Ralph Houston Actor
Swing High, Swing Low 1937 Skid Johnson Actor
Maid of Salem 1937 Roger Coverman of Virginia Actor
Champagne Waltz 1937 Buzzy Bellew Actor
The Texas Rangers 1936 Jim Hawkins Actor
The Princess Comes Across 1936 King Mantell Actor
13 Hours by Air 1936 Jack Gordon Actor
The Trail of the Lonesome Pine 1936 Jack Hale Actor
The Bride Comes Home 1935 Cyrus Anderson Actor
Hands Across the Table 1935 Theodore Drew III Actor
Alice Adams 1935 Arthur Russell Actor
Men Without Names 1935 Richard Hood / Richard ‘Dick’ Grant Actor
Car 99 1935 Trooper Ross Martin Actor
The Gilded Lily 1935 Peter Dawes Actor
Grand Old Girl 1935 Sandy Actor
Tiger Rose 1929 Rancher (uncredited) Actor
Why Leave Home? 1929 uncredited Actor
Girls Gone Wild 1929 Extra (uncredited) Actor
The Happiest Millionaire 1967 performer: “What’s Wrong with That?”, “Strengthen the Dwelling”, “I’ll Always Be Irish”, “When a Man Has a Daughter/What’s Wrong with That Reprise”, “It Won’t be Long ‘Til Christmas”, “I Believe in this Country”, “Bella Figlia Dell’Amore-from Rigoletto” – uncredited Soundtrack
Follow Me, Boys! 1966 performer: “Follow Me, Boys!”, “Happy Birthday” uncredited Soundtrack
The Jack Benny Program 1954 TV Series performer – 1 episode Soundtrack
Where Do We Go from Here? 1945 performer: “If Love Remains” Soundtrack
Above Suspicion 1943 “Du, Du Liegst Mir im Herzen”, uncredited / performer: “The Last Rose of Summer” 1808, “A Bird in a Gilded Cage” 1900, “My Love Is Like a Red, Red Rose” 1791, “Untitled Oxford University Song”, “Who Is Sylvia?” 1826 – uncredited Soundtrack
The Forest Rangers 1942 performer: “TALL GROWS THE TIMBER” Soundtrack
Too Many Husbands 1940 performer: “Bridal Chorus Here Comes the Bride” 1850 – uncredited Soundtrack
Remember the Night 1940 performer: “Old Folks at Home Swanee River” 1851, “A Perfect Day” 1910 – uncredited Soundtrack
Sing, You Sinners 1938 “I’VE GOT A POCKETFUL OF DREAMS” / performer: “I’VE GOT A POCKETFUL OF DREAMS”, “LAUGH AND CALL IT LOVE”, “SMALL FRY” Soundtrack
Swing High, Swing Low 1937 performer: “I Hear a Call to Arms” 1937, “Bridal Chorus Here Comes the Bride” 1850 – uncredited Soundtrack
The Princess Comes Across 1936 performer: “My Concertina” 1936, “Flight of the Bumble Bee” 1900 – uncredited Soundtrack
The Trail of the Lonesome Pine 1936 performer: “Twilight on the Trail” Soundtrack
Hands Across the Table 1935 performer: “The Morning After” 1935 Soundtrack
Pardon My Past 1945 producer Producer
Mike Case in: The Big Kiss Off 2013 special thanks Thanks
The 32th Annual Thalians Ball 1987 TV Movie Himself – Honoree Self
The 11th Annual Women in Film Crystal Awards 1987 TV Special Himself Self
The Child Help Benefit Special 1987 TV Movie Himself Self
All-Star Party for Clint Eastwood 1986 TV Special Himself Self
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Billy Wilder 1986 TV Special documentary Himself Self
The 11th Annual People’s Choice Awards 1985 TV Special Himself – Presenter: All-Time Favourite Entertainer Self
All-Star Party for ‘Dutch’ Reagan 1985 TV Special Himself Self
Unrehearsed Antics of the Stars 1984 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
All-Star Party for Frank Sinatra 1983 TV Movie Himself Self
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Frank Capra 1982 TV Special documentary Himself Self
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to James Stewart 1980 TV Special documentary Himself / Speaker (uncredited) Self
The Mike Douglas Show 1978 TV Series Himself Self
NBC Salutes the 25th Anniversary of the Wonderful World of Disney 1978 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Happy Birthday, Bob 1978 TV Special Himself Self
The Road to Eltham 1978 TV Movie Himself Self
Bing Crosby: His Life and Legend 1978 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Henry Fonda 1978 TV Special documentary Himself Self
ABC’s Silver Anniversary Celebration 1978 TV Special Himself Self
A Thanksgiving Reunion with the Partridge Family and My Three Sons 1977 TV Movie Himself Self
Dinah! 1976 TV Series Himself Self
Joys 1976 TV Special Himself Self
Tony Orlando and Dawn 1975 TV Series Himself Self
The 1975 Annual Entertainment Hall of Fame Awards 1975 TV Special Himself Self
Herbie Day at Disneyland 1974 TV Short documentary Himself Self
Walt Disney: A Golden Anniversary Salute 1973 TV Special Himself Self
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to John Ford 1973 TV Special documentary Himself (uncredited) Self
Cavalcade of Champions 1973 TV Movie Himself – Presenter Self
Carol Channing’s Mad English Tea Party 1970 TV Special Himself Self
The 39th Annual Academy Awards 1967 TV Special Himself – Presenter: Best Special Visual Effects Self
The Andy Williams Show 1963-1964 TV Series Himself Self
The Hollywood Palace 1964 TV Series Himself – Host Self
The 36th Annual Academy Awards 1964 TV Special Himself – Co-Presenter: Best Art Direction-Set Decoration Self
The Bob Hope Show 1963 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
The Writers Guild Awards 1962 TV Special Himself – Performer Self
This Is Your Life 1954-1961 TV Series Himself Self
The Steve Allen Plymouth Show 1960 TV Series Himself Self
American Cowboy 1960 TV Movie Himself – Host Self
Gala Day at Disneyland 1960 Short Himself Self
Celebrity Golf 1960 TV Series Self
I’ve Got a Secret 1959 TV Series Mystery Guest Self
Disneyland ’59 1959 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
The Dinah Shore Chevy Show 1957-1959 TV Series Himself Self
The Jack Paar Tonight Show 1959 TV Series Himself Self
The Ed Sullivan Show 1959 TV Series Himself Self
What’s My Line? 1953-1959 TV Series Himself – Mystery Guest / Himself – Mystery Guest #2 / Himself Self
The George Gobel Show 1954-1958 TV Series Himself Self
December Bride 1958 TV Series Himself Self
Bing Crosby and His Friends 1958 TV Special Himself Self
Shower of Stars 1957 TV Series Himself Self
Hollywood Glamour on Ice 1957 Short Himself Self
Climax! 1956 TV Series Himself Self
Lux Video Theatre 1955 TV Series Himself (guest) Self
Walt Disney’s Wonderful World of Color 1955 TV Series Himself Self
The Colgate Comedy Hour 1952-1955 TV Series Himself – Actor / Himself Self
The $64,000 Question 1955 TV Series Substitute Host Self
The Christophers 1955 TV Series Himself Self
A Star Is Born World Premiere 1954 TV Short Himself Self
All Star Revue 1952-1953 TV Series Himself – Guest Actor (Sketch) / Himself Self
Olympic Fund Telethon 1952 TV Movie Himself Self
Screen Snapshots: Motion Picture Mothers, Inc. 1949 Short Himself Self
The Actor’s Society Benefit Gala 1949 TV Movie Himself – Performer Self
Show-Business at War 1943 Documentary short Himself (uncredited) Self
Popular Science 1941/IV Documentary short Himself (uncredited) Self
Hedda Hopper’s Hollywood No. 1 1941 Documentary short Himself (uncredited) Self
Screen Snapshots Series 19, No. 5: Art and Artists 1940 Short documentary Himself Self
A Personal Journey with Martin Scorsese Through American Movies 1995 TV Movie documentary actor ‘Double Indemnity’ Self
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Barbara Stanwyck 1987 TV Special documentary Himself Self
A Night at the Movies: Merry Christmas! 2011 TV Movie documentary Archive Footage
A Star Is Born: Special Features 2010 Video Archive Footage
The Age of Believing: The Disney Live Action Classics 2008 TV Movie documentary Various Roles Archive Footage
Billy Wilder Speaks 2006 TV Movie documentary Himself Archive Footage
Dive Bomber: Keep ‘Em in the Air 2005 Video short Joe Blake Archive Footage
Picture Again 2003 Short Archive Footage
I Love Lucy’s 50th Anniversary Special 2001 TV Movie documentary Archive Footage
Junket Whore 1998 Documentary Himself Archive Footage
Bob Hope: Hollywood’s Brightest Star 1996 Video documentary Himself Archive Footage
Kelsey Grammer Salutes Jack Benny 1995 TV Movie documentary Himself Archive Footage
50 Years of Funny Females 1995 TV Movie documentary Himself Archive Footage
Barbara Stanwyck: Fire and Desire 1991 TV Movie documentary Himself Archive Footage
Happy Birthday, Bob: 50 Stars Salute Your 50 Years with NBC 1988 TV Movie Himself Archive Footage
The Walt Disney Comedy and Magic Revue 1985 Video short Professor Ned Brainard Archive Footage
George Stevens: A Filmmaker’s Journey 1984 Documentary Himself Archive Footage
Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid 1982 Walter Neff Archive Footage
Walt Disney’s Wonderful World of Color 1970-1981 TV Series Harry Willard / Lemuel Siddons / Professor Ned Brainard / … Archive Footage
Fred Astaire Salutes the Fox Musicals 1974 TV Movie Himself Archive Footage
The Walt Disney Story 1973 Documentary short Professor Ned Brainard (‘The Absent-Minded Professor’) (uncredited) Archive Footage
Hollywood and the Stars 1964 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Hollywood Without Make-Up 1963 Documentary Himself Archive Footage
Breakdowns of 1942 1942 Short Archive Footage

Fredrick Martin MacMurray Awards

Year Award Ceremony Nomination Movie Category
1986 Golden Boot Golden Boot Awards Won
1960 Star on the Walk of Fame Walk of Fame Motion Picture On 8 February 1960. At 6421 Hollywood Blvd. Won
1945 Sour Apple Golden Apple Awards Least Cooperative Actor Won
1986 Golden Boot Golden Boot Awards Nominated
1960 Star on the Walk of Fame Walk of Fame Motion Picture On 8 February 1960. At 6421 Hollywood Blvd. Nominated
1945 Sour Apple Golden Apple Awards Least Cooperative Actor Nominated