The Jewish Chronicle

Braham Murray OBE

Artistic director who launched his long career with a censored revue

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HAVING IMPROVISED a show about capital punishment at the Oxford Playhouse, Braham Murray,then an English undergradu­ate student, encountere­d the full weight of censorship. Both the death penalty and censorship were still in force in 1964, and Murray’s script came back with blue pencil marks over most of it.

Murray, who has died aged 75, pleaded with the Lord Chamberlai­n to allow his play, Hang Down Your Head, about the execution of US scientists Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, but in vain. The Rosenbergs had been executed after being convicted of sending nuclear state secrets to Soviet Russia in 1931. The Lord Chamberlai­n finally consented to an eyewitness account to be read out, but not acted.

Murray presented the revue at Oxford’s Experiment­al Theatre Company, of which he was artistic director, using circus imagery, with three clowns facing an empty chair. But the graphic descriptio­ns of the three jolts of electricit­y, used to kill the couple was so intense that some members of the audience could not take it and walked out. Despite the Lord Chamberlai­n’s curbs on Murray’s freedom of expression, the play, featuring the putative stars, the Pythons, proved a phenomenal success. It transferre­d to the West End and New York, winning Murray third place in the Director of the Year awards, hot on the heels of Laurence Olivier and Konstantin Stanislavs­ky.

Braham Murray was born in N.W. London, the son of Gertrude née Prevezer and Sam Goldstein. His father left home when he was four, and after their divorce his mother married Philip Murray, who owned a clothes shop, and whose name he assumed. After prep school he attended the Jewish house at Clifton College, Bristol, where he described the housemaste­r Phil Polak as “one of the biggest influences in my life,” adding that the house was run on progressiv­e, cultural and constructi­ve lines. He was made “captain of drama – with a badge to prove it.

“I wanted to be an actor,” he recalled in a JC interview with Jenni Frazer in 2003. “I was in Wolf Mankowitz’s The Bespoke Overcoat. I played Anthony in Anthony and Cleopatra.”

Clifton was followed by University College, Oxford – which he described as a hotbed of people wanting to act or direct. He read English because it “had something of a theatrical reputation.” The fact that Murray was an aspiring actor was enough to get him through the entrance exam.

But the success of Hang Down Your Head led Murray to abandon his degree and he went on to direct A Winter’s Tale for the Birmingham Rep. He became the youngest artistic director in the country at 22 when he took over the running of the Century Theatre in the North of England. In 1969 he joined directors Casper Wrede, Michael Elliott and James Maxwell and designer Richard Negri to form the 69 Theatre Company in Manchester. He transforme­d the “filthy, decaying, cold, superb Royal Exchange building” in the heart of Manchester into the city’s flagship playhouse, opened by Laurence Olivier in 1976 as the Royal Exchange, Manchester. He recalled walking into the building for the first time on a winter’s afternoon – “and there was a tingle. We said yes.We’ll build the theatre here.”

Braham Murray: born February 24, 1943. Died July 25, 2018

 ?? PHOTO: THE ROYAL THEATRE EXCHANGE/MIA ROSE ??
PHOTO: THE ROYAL THEATRE EXCHANGE/MIA ROSE

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