
Edward R. Murrow
Photoplayd Industry Rating
Not enough rated films yet to compute a weighted score.
Roles are weighted by involvement: director 1.0, screenwriter 0.7, lead 0.8, supporting 0.4, crew 0.1.
Edward Roscoe Murrow (born Egbert Roscoe Murrow; April 25, 1908 – April 27, 1965) was an American broadcast journalist and war correspondent. He first gained prominence during World War II with a series of live radio broadcasts from Europe for the news division of CBS. During the war he recruited and worked closely with a team of war correspondents who came to be known as the Murrow Boys.
Known for
Credits

Around the World in 80 Days (1956)
as Prologue Narrator

Sink the Bismarck! (1960)
as Himself - Edward R. Murrow

The Movie Orgy (1968)
as Self (archive footage)

Brando (2007)
as Self (archive footage)

Maria by Callas (2017)
as Self (archive footage)

Tennessee Williams: Orpheus of the American Stage (1994)
as Self (archive footage)
Television: The First Fifty Years (1999)
as Self (archive footage)

Mike Wallace Is Here (2019)
as Self (archive footage)
Remembering Marilyn (1988)
as Self (archive footage)

The Night America Trembled (1957)
as Presenter

McCarthy (2020)
as Self - (archive footage)

Ethel (2012)
as Self (archive footage)

Backstory: 'How Green Was My Valley' (2000)
as Self (archive footage)

The Soul of America (2020)
as Self (archive footage)

Thomas Hart Benton (1989)
as Himself (archive footage)

CBS Reports: Harvest of Shame (1960)
as Himself
Is Everybody Listening? (1947)
as Newscaster

This Is England (1941)
as Narrator

Small World: Vivien Leigh (1958)
as Self- moderator

Deconstructing Dad: The Music, Machines and Mystery of Raymond Scott (2010)
as Self
The Challenge of Ideas (1961)
as Self- Narrator

Satchmo the Great (1957)
Actor

The Eighty Days (1944)
as Self (commentator)

One Plane, One Bomb (1953)
as Self - Narrator
Dover (1942)
as Himself - Commentator

Edward R. Murrow - The Best Of Person To Person (2006)
as Host
The Lost Class of '59 (1959)
as Self

Survival Under Atomic Attack (1951)
as Narrator (voice)





