Los Angeles Times

Teeing up, Murray-style

Actor and comedy legend Bill Murray has earned an off-screen reputation for being nearly everywhere and nowhere all at once. An enthusiast­ic photo-bomber of engagement pictures, crasher of bachelor parties and impromptu guest bartender, he seems to operat

- adam.tschorn@latimes.com BY ADAM TSCHORN

So I wasn’t holding out much hope that the Murricane would touch down in a Playa Vista conference room last month to review spring 2018 designs for the collection that bears his name. (“Bill is notoriousl­y unreliable and lives by his own schedule,” a media representa­tive for the label had already warned me via email. “There’s a chance, but you never can be 100%.”)

Launched online in September in partnershi­p with humor and entertainm­ent website theChive.com and the six golf-loving Murray brothers — Brian, Ed, Bill, Andy, John and Joel — William Murray Golf is a celebrity clothing line. But it’s a celebrity clothing line the way Bill Murray is a celebrity: it doesn’t take itself too seriously, it has heart and whimsy and performanc­e where it counts, and it’s full of random, unexpected delights.

The Murray in the mix this first Monday in April is Joel — the Los Angeles-based writer-director-actor, youngest of nine Murrays and the chief executive of Murray Bros. LLC. He’s here to review proposed design ideas, which he’ll then disseminat­e to his five brothers for comments, suggestion­s and tweaks.

Along the way, he and label executives, including William Murray Golf co-founder and CEO Kerry Michaels, walk me through designs, explaining the subtle (and sometimes not so subtle) references to the family, the Murray brothers’ love of golf and their most famous sibling.

Now here’s a look (right) at some William Murray Golf designs and the young brand’s future.

Plaid men

One element that ties the collection together is the green, navy blue and red Murray family tartan, a plaid pattern that appears on every garment. Some pieces, like the long-sleeve button-front shirt with four-way stretch or shorts with extra roomy pockets (“So your golf balls don’t fall out when you sit in the golf cart,” says Joel), are completely tarted up in the tartan. On others, the pops of plaid are barely noticeable accents — edging a single sleeve on a short-sleeve polo or the coin/ball-marker pockets of boldly patterned shorts.

Knocking a few over (not back)

Michaels says the polo shirt bearing the “Old Fashioned” highball glass design — it was originally inspired by the fictional “Suntory” ad campaign in Sofia Coppola’s 2003 film “Lost in Translatio­n” — was the bestseller of William Murray Golf ’s debut collection.

Joel points to it as a good example of how brother Bill helps the creative process. “We all liked the design when we first saw it,” he recounts. “But [Bill] was the one going: ‘Yeah, yeah, but drinks spill, so why don’t you have every eighth one spilled? Why don’t you knock a couple of them over?’ ”

Rakish wrought iron

“I wear this one a lot,” Joel says, as he held aloft a polo shirt with a bold, repeating pattern called “Sandy Tiles.” He points to the circle in the center of a tile. “These are golf balls,” he says before pointing to the edge of the tile. “And these are the ends of sand rakes.

“It sort of started out being a design that came from wrought iron,” he explains. “We were talking about a certain city that was an inspiratio­n to us. We decided we weren’t going to mention the city where Billy lives. But let’s just say we were looking at all this wrought iron in Charleston, and that’s how it came about.” (Bill is part-owner of the Charleston, S.C., RiverDogs minor league baseball team and widely reported to be a part-time resident of that city.)

(Exploding) mums the word

This popular pattern from the debut fall 2016 collection might look like polka dots or starbursts from afar, but a closer look reveals a floral design with the occasional exploding spray of petals. Called “Cinderella Story,” it was inspired by a scene from the 1980 comedy “Caddyshack,” in which Bill Murray’s Carl Spackler tees off on a row of clubhouse mums with a serrated grass whip to great comic effect.

“We’ve evolved [the mum design] from our first season,” Michaels says, “and made it look a little more springy and summery — more of a Hawaiian print — but with mums so it still ties back to the movie.”

The new design, “Tropical Mums,” can be seen in a recently released spring 2017 polo shirt as well as a short-sleeve button-front shirt coming later in the season.

Getting into characters

Kind of like an all-Bill-Murray-movie-character version of “Where’s Waldo?,” the “Playing Around” pattern, one of the new spring 2017 patterns that dropped April 25, rounds up riffs on some of Bill’s most memorable characters and drops them on the golf course.

The many mini-Murrays include Spackler (“Caddyshack”), Steve Zissou (from Wes Anderson’s 2004 film “The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou,” he’s in the red knit cap) and “Ghostbuste­rs’ ” Peter Venkman (proton pack still strapped to his back).

Martini meets mower

“Rakes, martini glasses, whatever,” Joel says of this pattern. “The idea behind it was a rake and a mower — it was one of the groundskee­per-and-his-tools inspiratio­n stories — but people said they saw martini glasses so that adds an unexpected element of fun to it, I suppose.”

Quirky camo

“It’s your regular [camouflage pattern] except we put pin flags in it, and now it’s golf-themed,” Joel says of the spring 2017 design. “And if we put a couple of rakes in there, it becomes a sand trap. It’s basic camo but with some fun going on.”

Michaels says Bill Murray gave her some input about tweaking the design for future seasons. “He loved it,” she says, “but he really wants us to try and incorporat­e some animal into the design. We suggested deer, but he thinks that’s a little bit too expected. So what about foxes? Or alligators?”

Joel counters by suggesting “two [mating] otters,” explaining that it was a joke involving Bill’s observatio­n of otters while playing at Pebble Beach in California.

Lake turtles, seahorses and more

In late November 2016, the brothers convened at the brand’s headquarte­rs in Austin, Texas, for a design meeting (“Shockingly, even Billy got there,” says Joel), and the conversati­on turned to memories of lakeside vacations.

“I was one of the youngest ones and I wasn’t old enough to drink when a lot of them went out to the bars in Wisconsin,” Joel explains. “So when the nieces and nephews woke up at the crack of dawn, it was my job — and sometimes Johnny’s — to keep them quiet so everybody else could be hungover and stay in bed. We’d take them out in a rowboat to go ‘turtle fishing,’ and the rule was that they couldn’t make any noise or they’d scare the turtles.… It was basically to see how long they could stay quiet.”

That story is reflected in a proposed spring 2018 design called “Turtle Hunt” that has the brand’s “faceless man” logo sitting in a rowboat alongside his golf clubs, with a turtle not far away.

Another design under considerat­ion is a zebra-print pattern inspired by a wallpaper in “Lost in Translatio­n.” (“Like the camo print, it’s something we can put our own spin on in an authentic way,” Michaels says.)

Another is an all-over print of seahorses, some of them sporting red knit caps like the ones worn by the crew of the Belafonte in “The Life Aquatic.” (“Can we maybe throw a submarine in there somewhere?” asks Joel Murray.)

Murray-made manifest

Currently the apparel offerings are available online only through williammur­raygolf.com and consist of polos (retailing at $70 and $75), short- and long-sleeve button-front shirts ($80 and $90, respective­ly) and shorts ($70), but a performanc­e blazer is in the works for fall 2017 and a Murray-appropriat­e vest is on the drawing board for spring 2018.

“One of the things we noticed when Bill was at the World Series was that he was wearing this kind of fishing vest that had all these pockets in it,” Michaels says, “one for his sunglasses, one for his keys, one for his wallet.… We liked that concept and designed a vest that’s a little different. It has a small front pocket, and inside there’s a special spot for a cellphone or a pencil and a scorecard. And there will be a rear pocket for some golf balls.”

By the time Michaels finishes talking about the vest, the realizatio­n has sunken in: Even though Bill Murray the man hadn’t darkened the doorstep of the conference room in the flesh, Bill Murray the living pop-culture meme was most assuredly as palpably present in the room as anyone at the table.

 ?? Adam Tschorn Los Angeles Times ?? DESIGNS from William Murray Golf fill a room at the Playa Vista offices of theChive.com, a partner with the Murray brothers on the celebrity clothing line.
Adam Tschorn Los Angeles Times DESIGNS from William Murray Golf fill a room at the Playa Vista offices of theChive.com, a partner with the Murray brothers on the celebrity clothing line.
 ?? Eric Risberg Associated Press ?? BILL MURRAY is shown in custom overalls that showcase the Murray family tartan.
Eric Risberg Associated Press BILL MURRAY is shown in custom overalls that showcase the Murray family tartan.
 ?? William Murray Golf ?? THE LINE’S designs nod to Murray’s films, such as highballs (“Lost in Translatio­n”), left, and his love of golf, including a “Sandy Tiles” pattern, center, and a martini-and mower motif, right.
William Murray Golf THE LINE’S designs nod to Murray’s films, such as highballs (“Lost in Translatio­n”), left, and his love of golf, including a “Sandy Tiles” pattern, center, and a martini-and mower motif, right.
 ?? William Murray Golf ??
William Murray Golf
 ?? William Murray Golf ??
William Murray Golf

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