Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

RUBY’S BLUES DAY

Plaque honour for Belfast singer Murray

- BY REBECCA BLACK

SINGING starlet Ruby Murray was honoured with a blue plaque just yards from where she grew up yesterday.

The Softly, Softly singer was one of the best-known stars in the British Isles in the 1950s.

However, she is perhaps better known by younger generation­s through the Cockney rhyming slang, “Going for a Ruby Murray” – meaning going for a curry.

Democratic Unionist leader Arlene Foster, South Belfast MP Emma Little-pengelly and MLA Christophe­r Stalford were among those who attended the unveiling.

Mrs Foster said it was great to see the plaque installed on a busy thoroughfa­re where scores of motorists and pedestrian­s will see it every day.

Murray’s son Tim and his sister Julie travelled from England to unveil an Ulster History Circle blue plaque in memory of their mother on Belfast’s Donegall Road, close to where she was born on Moltke Street.

Murray’s distinctiv­e husky voice brought her from humble beginnings to one of the most successful stars in the history of popular music.

She was first noticed at the age of 11 when she won a talent competitio­n in a local newspaper. A year later Murray made her profession­al debut on Irish television and sang profession­ally on Saturday nights in various venues outside Belfast, with her mother as her chaperone.

Her big break came when producer Richard Afton spotted her in a stage show in London and signed her for the television show Quite Contrary.

This led to a recording contract with Columbia and an extraordin­ary career.

On March 18, 1955 Murray set a pop chart record by having five hit singles in the Top 20 at one time.

Tim revealed he was in his early 20s when he realised his mother had entered the London vernacular.

He said: “I was sat in a flat in London watching Only Fools And Horses and of course Del Boy dropped the line in and my jaw hit the floor – that was the first time I ever heard it.

“But now it’s almost a cultural reference, so for the generation who don’t remember my mum as a singer, if I mention the phrase,

‘Going out for a Ruby’ is about my mum, they are just as excited as if they remembered her for her singing.

“She loved it, probably more than anything else, she had awards on the cabinet but that was one that really made her chuckle.”

Tim said the family was delighted by the plaque, adding: “Over the years, she has slipped through the cracks, not forgotten but perhaps underappre­ciated for the achievemen­ts she had, so it’s nice to see that coming back.”

Murray’s life was recently chronicled by local writer Michael Cameron in a play called Ruby which is currently being performed at Belfast’s Lyric Theatre.

He was also behind the nomination to install a plaque in her honour.

He said: “While writing the play I made contact with Ruby’s first husband Bernie Burgess and their children Tim and Julie, they mentioned Ruby had not really been celebrated in Belfast and wouldn’t it be great if there was a plaque?

“So I dropped off an email to Ulster History Circle and a few years later we have got the play and the plaque happening in the same week.”

Murray died in 1996, aged 61.

 ??  ?? ICON Ruby in her heyday DELIGHTED Tim and Julie Murray in Belfast yesterday
ICON Ruby in her heyday DELIGHTED Tim and Julie Murray in Belfast yesterday
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 ??  ?? LEGEND Ruby Murray
LEGEND Ruby Murray

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