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Alexander Scourby

Alexander Scourby (/ˈskɔːrbi/; November 13, 1913 – February 22, 1985) was an American film, television, and voice actor and narrator known for his deep and resonant voice and Mid-Atlantic accent.[1] He is best known for his film role as the ruthless mob boss Mike Lagana in Fritz Lang's The Big Heat (1953), and is also particularly well-remembered in the English-speaking world for his landmark recordings of the entire King James Version audio Bible, which have been released in numerous editions. He later recorded the entire Revised Standard Version of the Bible.[2] Scourby was an accomplished narrator, including for 18 episodes of National Geographic Specials from 1966 to 1985 (almost twice as many as any of its other narrators).[3] Scourby recorded 422 audiobooks for the blind, which he considered his most important work.[1]

Alexander Scourby
Born(1913-11-13)November 13, 1913
DiedFebruary 22, 1985(1985-02-22) (aged 71)
Occupation(s)Actor, voice actor
Years active1950–1985
Spouse
(m. 1943)
Children1

Early life

Alexander Scourby was born in Brooklyn, New York, on November 13, 1913, to Constantine Nicholas Scourby, a successful restaurateur, wholesale baker and sometime investor in independent motion-pictures, and Betsy Patsakos, a homemaker, both immigrants from Greece.

Reared in Brooklyn, Scourby was a member of a Boy Scout troop and later became a cadet with the 101st National Guard Cavalry Regiment. He attended public and private schools in Brooklyn, spending summer vacations in New Jersey, Upstate New York, and at a cousin's home in Massachusetts.

Dismissed from Polytechnic Prep School, he finished his secondary education at Brooklyn Manual Training High School which he described as "an ordinary high school that had an awful lot of shop." He was a co-editor of the school magazine and yearbook, and he envisioned a career in writing, though he later came to realize that writing was, for him, "absolutely the most painful thing in the world" and also that he "could never meet a deadline", whereas he found the reading aloud of plays easy and enjoyable. Encouraged by some of his teachers, he began to turn his attention to acting. He made his stage debut with the high school's dramatic society, as the juvenile in Augustin MacHugh's The Meanest Man in the World.

Early career

Upon graduation from high school in 1931, Scourby, not yet having abandoned the prospect of a writing career, entered West Virginia University at Morgantown to study journalism. During his first semester he joined the campus drama group and played a minor role in A.A. Milne's comedy Mr. Pim Passes By. In February 1932, as he was beginning his second semester, his father died, and he left the university to help run the family's pie bakery in Brooklyn.

A month after Scourby returned to Brooklyn, he was accepted as an apprentice at Eva Le Gallienne's Civic Repertory Theatre on 14th Street in downtown Manhattan. At the Civic Repertory he was taught dancing, speech, and make-up, and was given his first professional role, a walk-on in Liliom. In 1933, Scourby and other Civic Repertory apprentices joined together to form the Apprentice Theatre, which presented plays at the New School for Social Research in New York City during the 1933–34 season. His first role on Broadway was that of the player king in Leslie Howard's production of Hamlet, which opened at the Imperial Theatre on November 10, 1936, and went on tour after thirty-nine performances. Returning to New York—and unemployment—in the spring of 1937, Scourby was introduced to the American Foundation for the Blind's Talking Book program by Wesley Addy, a member of the Hamlet cast and Scourby's roommate on the tour, who was regularly recording plays for the foundation.

After a successful audition in the spring of 1937, Scourby was cast in a small part in a recording of Antony and Cleopatra. During the following summer he was, again, the player king in a production of Hamlet in Dennis, Massachusetts, that featured Eva Le Gallienne. When he returned to audition for the American Foundation for the Blind later in the year he was told that the company of actors was "filled" but that he might record a novel if he wished. "That was the beginning of it," he recalled years later, adding, "The recordings for the blind are perhaps my greatest achievement. Most of the things I look back at in the theater were either insignificant parts in great plays or good parts in terrible plays. So it really doesn't amount to anything. Whereas I have recorded some great books. The greatest one being the Bible."

Scourby is credited as Hamlet's father the King (as spirit) on the 19 September 1936 CBS radio program Columbia Workshop directed by Orson Welles, and by the early 1940s he was playing running parts in five of the serial melodramas, popularly known as soap operas, including Against the Storm, in which he replaced Arnold Moss for two years. He narrated Andre Kostelanetz' musical show for a year, using the pseudonym Alexander Scott. At the request of sponsors, his voice was heard on many dramatic shows, including NBC's Sunday program The Eternal Light (with which he was to remain, despite heavy commitments elsewhere, through the 1950s). On The Adventures of Superman, his was the voice of the title character's father Jor-El in the one program devoted to the character's origins.[4] During World War II, Scourby's broadcasts were beamed abroad in Greek and English for the Office of War Information. At the time, a writer in Variety (May 16, 1962) described the quality of Scourby's voice as "the kind of resonance closely associated by listeners with big time radio."[citation needed]

Theater and film work

Scourby kept his hand in the theater by doing summer stock and a wide variety of other seasonal productions. In Maurice Evans' production of Hamlet, which opened at the St. James Theatre in New York on October 12, 1938, and ran for ninety-six performances, Scourby played Rosencrantz. Later in the same season, he appeared with Evans in Henry IV, Part 1 as the Earl of Westmoreland. The following year, he toured with Evans in Richard II as one of the hirelings of the king. He returned to Broadway years later in late 1946, replacing Ruth Chatterton as the narrator in Ben Hecht's A Flag Is Born, a one-act, dramatic pageant in which Marlon Brando had one of his early stage roles. The play was produced by the American League for a Free Palestine, at the Alvin Theatre. On December 22, 1947, he opened with John Gielgud in Rodney Ackland's dramatization of Crime and Punishment at the National Theatre in New York. He was a co-founder of New Stages, a drama company that went into operation in a small theater on Bleecker Street in Greenwich Village during the 1947–48 season. During its two-year existence, the company presented works by such artists as Federico García Lorca (Blood Wedding), Edward Caulfield (Bruno and Sidney) and two plays by Jean-Paul Sartre.

In Sidney Kingsley's Detective Story, which opened at the Hudson Theatre on March 23, 1949, and ran for a year and eight months, Scourby played Tami Giacoppetti, the tough racketeer. Almost immediately after Detective Story closed, Scourby began rehearsing another Kingsley role on Broadway, that of Ivanoff, the old Bolshevik friend of Rubashov in Darkness at Noon, a dramatization of Arthur Koestler's novel. The play opened at the Alvin Theatre on January 13, 1951, with Claude Rains playing Rubashov, and ran for 163 performances. When the Theatre Guild revived George Bernard Shaw's Saint Joan later in the same year, with Uta Hagen in the title role, Scourby was cast as Peter Cauchon, the Bishop of Beauvais. The play was presented at the Cort Theatre from October 4, 1951, to February 2, 1952.

Scourby first appeared on screen opposite Glenn Ford in Affair in Trinidad (Columbia, 1952) and The Big Heat (Columbia, 1953). He appeared again with Glenn Ford in Ransom! (MGM, 1956), later to be remade with Mel Gibson and Gary Sinise. Scourby played Dr. Mikhail Andrassy in The Shaggy Dog (1959). "None of the pictures I've done have been really important or very good", Scourby later said, "with the exception—and it is debatable—of Giant (Warner Brothers, 1956)". In the film version of Edna Ferber's novel Scourby played Polo, the old Mexican ranch foreman. He later had roles in The Big Fisherman (Buena Vista, 1959), Seven Thieves (1960), Man on a String (1960), The Devil at 4 O'Clock (1961) and The Executioner (1970). During these extremely busy years, Scourby, who had been living with his wife and child in an apartment near Columbia University in New York City, bought a home in Beverly Hills, California. Calls for Scourby to work in New York, however, soon made the Beverly Hills residence as much a commutation point as a home.

Back on the New York stage, Scourby played Rakitin in Emlyn Williams' adaptation of Turgenev's A Month in the Country and Peter Cauchon in Siobhán McKenna's interpretation of Saint Joan, both presented at the Off-Broadway Phoenix Theatre in 1956. Again at the Phoenix, he played King Claudius in Hamlet in the spring of 1961, bringing to the role, as Howard Taubman noted in The New York Times (March 17, 1961), the appropriate "fret of fear and decay."[citation needed]

In 1963, Scourby was given the featured role of Gorotchenko, the Communist commissar who stalks a White Russian noble couple fleeing the Revolution, in Tovarich, a Broadway musical by Lee Pockriss and Anne Croswell, based on the comedy by Robert E. Sherwood and Jacques Deval. The musical opened at the Broadway Theatre on March 18, 1963, with Vivien Leigh and Jean-Pierre Aumont as Scourby's prey. "The signal tribute to Alexander Scourby...", critic Norman Nadel wrote in his review in the New York World-Telegram and Sun (April 2, 1963), "was the hearty hissing opening night as he strolled on stage. In polished villainy, he has no peer". Shortly after Tovarich closed, on November 9, 1963, after 264 performances, Scourby began rehearsals in Los Angeles for a Theatre Group presentation of Anton Chekhov's The Sea Gull, in which he starred with Jeanette Nolan for forty performances, beginning on January 10, 1964.

In the early 1950s, Scourby worked in television as both a narrator and actor. One of his continuing assignments was as narrator for NBC's Project 20 public affairs specials. He narrated a ninety-minute condensation of the television series, Victory at Sea, for Project 20 in 1954. Other Project 20 assignments were in regard to the atomic bomb, and three religious documentaries using great paintings to tell the Bible story: The Coming of Christ (at Christmas); He Is Risen (at Easter); and The Law and Prophets of the Old Testament. Audio from The Coming of Christ, with orchestrations by Robert Russell Bennett was released by Decca Records in 1960 to popular acclaim. In 1965 he replaced Sean Connery as narrator on the television special The Incredible World of James Bond.

As a television actor, Scourby had roles on Playhouse 90, Circle Theatre, and Studio One. He refused to tie himself down to a series, because, as he explained, "it's hard to do good things that way." He took occasional parts in westerns such as Wanted: Dead or Alive, Bonanza, and The Rifleman, as well as Mr. Novak, Daniel Boone, The Asphalt Jungle, The Man from U.N.C.L.E., The Defenders, and other set-format dramatic shows. Most of the filmed shows were produced in California. In 1972, he joined his wife, Lori March, on The Secret Storm, on which he played the second Dr. Ian Northcoate (March played his wife, Valerie Lake Ames Northcoate), until that show was cancelled in 1974. He later played Nigel Fargate on All My Children[5] In the Twilight Zone episode, "The Last Flight", he played General Harper.

Audio recordings

Scourby read 422 books for the Talking Books program of the American Foundation for the Blind, including Homer's Iliad, Tolstoy's War and Peace, Joyce's Ulysses, Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury.[1] Scourby considered Talking Books his most important work.[1] He also made recordings for Spoken Arts and Listening Library.[1]

At an unknown date Scourby also recorded the audio tapes for The Once and Future King by T.H.White.

King James Bible

Scourby was the first person to record the King James Bible issued on long-play records in the 1950s. He originally narrated the Old and New Testament for the American Foundation for the Blind. The project required more than four years before it was completed in 1953. The original goal was to produce a clean, clear recording for visually impaired listeners. The American Bible Society distributed the recordings as The Talking Bible, a set of 169 LP records with a running time of 84.5 hours.[citation needed]

Poetry recordings

Scourby made recordings of British and American poetry, including A Golden Treasury of Poetry, an LP recorded for the children's label Golden Records. It featured readings of such poems as Paul Revere's Ride, Gunga Din, The Highwayman, The Owl and the Pussycat, and Annabel Lee, and commentary written by Louis Untermeyer.[6]

Personal life

Scourby and Lori von Eltz were married on May 12, 1943. Von Eltz was the daughter of motion-picture actor Theodor von Eltz, and was well known as the actress Lori March. The couple had a daughter, Alexandra, born on March 27, 1944.

Scourby had no political affiliation nor any specific religious affiliations, though he was baptized in the Greek Orthodox tradition and his marriage to von Eltz occurred in an Episcopal chapel.

Scourby died of a heart attack on February 22, 1985, in Newtown, Connecticut, aged 71. His widow died in 2013, aged 90.

Filmography

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Sandy Bauers (February 22, 1990). "Next To Scourby, Most Readers Are 'Just Good'". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved March 19, 2014.
  2. ^ . www.scourby.com. 2011. Archived from the original on March 1, 2012. Retrieved February 20, 2012.
  3. ^ "National Geographic Specials (1965– ) Full Cast & Crew". IMDb.com, Inc. 1990–2023. Retrieved March 4, 2023.
  4. ^ Bertel, Dick; Corcoran; Ed (July 1972). "Alexander Scourby". The Golden Age of Radio. Season 3. Episode 4. Broadcast Plaza, Inc.. WTIC Hartford, Conn.
  5. ^ Schemering, Christopher (1987). The Soap Opera Encyclopedia. New York: Ballantine. pp. 215–216. ISBN 0-345-35344-7.
  6. ^ "Alexander Scourby Prepared by Louis Untermeyer – A Golden Treasury of Poetry (1962, Vinyl)". Discogs.

External links

alexander, scourby, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, decembe. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Alexander Scourby news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Alexander Scourby ˈ s k ɔːr b i November 13 1913 February 22 1985 was an American film television and voice actor and narrator known for his deep and resonant voice and Mid Atlantic accent 1 He is best known for his film role as the ruthless mob boss Mike Lagana in Fritz Lang s The Big Heat 1953 and is also particularly well remembered in the English speaking world for his landmark recordings of the entire King James Version audio Bible which have been released in numerous editions He later recorded the entire Revised Standard Version of the Bible 2 Scourby was an accomplished narrator including for 18 episodes of National Geographic Specials from 1966 to 1985 almost twice as many as any of its other narrators 3 Scourby recorded 422 audiobooks for the blind which he considered his most important work 1 Alexander ScourbyScourby in Affair in TrinidadBorn 1913 11 13 November 13 1913Brooklyn New York U S DiedFebruary 22 1985 1985 02 22 aged 71 Newtown Connecticut U S Occupation s Actor voice actorYears active1950 1985SpouseLori March m 1943 wbr Children1 Contents 1 Early life 2 Early career 3 Theater and film work 4 Audio recordings 4 1 King James Bible 4 2 Poetry recordings 5 Personal life 6 Filmography 7 References 8 External linksEarly life EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Alexander Scourby news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Alexander Scourby was born in Brooklyn New York on November 13 1913 to Constantine Nicholas Scourby a successful restaurateur wholesale baker and sometime investor in independent motion pictures and Betsy Patsakos a homemaker both immigrants from Greece Reared in Brooklyn Scourby was a member of a Boy Scout troop and later became a cadet with the 101st National Guard Cavalry Regiment He attended public and private schools in Brooklyn spending summer vacations in New Jersey Upstate New York and at a cousin s home in Massachusetts Dismissed from Polytechnic Prep School he finished his secondary education at Brooklyn Manual Training High School which he described as an ordinary high school that had an awful lot of shop He was a co editor of the school magazine and yearbook and he envisioned a career in writing though he later came to realize that writing was for him absolutely the most painful thing in the world and also that he could never meet a deadline whereas he found the reading aloud of plays easy and enjoyable Encouraged by some of his teachers he began to turn his attention to acting He made his stage debut with the high school s dramatic society as the juvenile in Augustin MacHugh s The Meanest Man in the World Early career EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Alexander Scourby news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Upon graduation from high school in 1931 Scourby not yet having abandoned the prospect of a writing career entered West Virginia University at Morgantown to study journalism During his first semester he joined the campus drama group and played a minor role in A A Milne s comedy Mr Pim Passes By In February 1932 as he was beginning his second semester his father died and he left the university to help run the family s pie bakery in Brooklyn A month after Scourby returned to Brooklyn he was accepted as an apprentice at Eva Le Gallienne s Civic Repertory Theatre on 14th Street in downtown Manhattan At the Civic Repertory he was taught dancing speech and make up and was given his first professional role a walk on in Liliom In 1933 Scourby and other Civic Repertory apprentices joined together to form the Apprentice Theatre which presented plays at the New School for Social Research in New York City during the 1933 34 season His first role on Broadway was that of the player king in Leslie Howard s production of Hamlet which opened at the Imperial Theatre on November 10 1936 and went on tour after thirty nine performances Returning to New York and unemployment in the spring of 1937 Scourby was introduced to the American Foundation for the Blind s Talking Book program by Wesley Addy a member of the Hamlet cast and Scourby s roommate on the tour who was regularly recording plays for the foundation After a successful audition in the spring of 1937 Scourby was cast in a small part in a recording of Antony and Cleopatra During the following summer he was again the player king in a production of Hamlet in Dennis Massachusetts that featured Eva Le Gallienne When he returned to audition for the American Foundation for the Blind later in the year he was told that the company of actors was filled but that he might record a novel if he wished That was the beginning of it he recalled years later adding The recordings for the blind are perhaps my greatest achievement Most of the things I look back at in the theater were either insignificant parts in great plays or good parts in terrible plays So it really doesn t amount to anything Whereas I have recorded some great books The greatest one being the Bible Scourby is credited as Hamlet s father the King as spirit on the 19 September 1936 CBS radio program Columbia Workshop directed by Orson Welles and by the early 1940s he was playing running parts in five of the serial melodramas popularly known as soap operas including Against the Storm in which he replaced Arnold Moss for two years He narrated Andre Kostelanetz musical show for a year using the pseudonym Alexander Scott At the request of sponsors his voice was heard on many dramatic shows including NBC s Sunday program The Eternal Light with which he was to remain despite heavy commitments elsewhere through the 1950s On The Adventures of Superman his was the voice of the title character s father Jor El in the one program devoted to the character s origins 4 During World War II Scourby s broadcasts were beamed abroad in Greek and English for the Office of War Information At the time a writer in Variety May 16 1962 described the quality of Scourby s voice as the kind of resonance closely associated by listeners with big time radio citation needed Theater and film work EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Scourby kept his hand in the theater by doing summer stock and a wide variety of other seasonal productions In Maurice Evans production of Hamlet which opened at the St James Theatre in New York on October 12 1938 and ran for ninety six performances Scourby played Rosencrantz Later in the same season he appeared with Evans in Henry IV Part 1 as the Earl of Westmoreland The following year he toured with Evans in Richard II as one of the hirelings of the king He returned to Broadway years later in late 1946 replacing Ruth Chatterton as the narrator in Ben Hecht s A Flag Is Born a one act dramatic pageant in which Marlon Brando had one of his early stage roles The play was produced by the American League for a Free Palestine at the Alvin Theatre On December 22 1947 he opened with John Gielgud in Rodney Ackland s dramatization of Crime and Punishment at the National Theatre in New York He was a co founder of New Stages a drama company that went into operation in a small theater on Bleecker Street in Greenwich Village during the 1947 48 season During its two year existence the company presented works by such artists as Federico Garcia Lorca Blood Wedding Edward Caulfield Bruno and Sidney and two plays by Jean Paul Sartre In Sidney Kingsley s Detective Story which opened at the Hudson Theatre on March 23 1949 and ran for a year and eight months Scourby played Tami Giacoppetti the tough racketeer Almost immediately after Detective Story closed Scourby began rehearsing another Kingsley role on Broadway that of Ivanoff the old Bolshevik friend of Rubashov in Darkness at Noon a dramatization of Arthur Koestler s novel The play opened at the Alvin Theatre on January 13 1951 with Claude Rains playing Rubashov and ran for 163 performances When the Theatre Guild revived George Bernard Shaw s Saint Joan later in the same year with Uta Hagen in the title role Scourby was cast as Peter Cauchon the Bishop of Beauvais The play was presented at the Cort Theatre from October 4 1951 to February 2 1952 Scourby and Ernest Borgnine in Man on a StringScourby first appeared on screen opposite Glenn Ford in Affair in Trinidad Columbia 1952 and The Big Heat Columbia 1953 He appeared again with Glenn Ford in Ransom MGM 1956 later to be remade with Mel Gibson and Gary Sinise Scourby played Dr Mikhail Andrassy in The Shaggy Dog 1959 None of the pictures I ve done have been really important or very good Scourby later said with the exception and it is debatable of Giant Warner Brothers 1956 In the film version of Edna Ferber s novel Scourby played Polo the old Mexican ranch foreman He later had roles in The Big Fisherman Buena Vista 1959 Seven Thieves 1960 Man on a String 1960 The Devil at 4 O Clock 1961 and The Executioner 1970 During these extremely busy years Scourby who had been living with his wife and child in an apartment near Columbia University in New York City bought a home in Beverly Hills California Calls for Scourby to work in New York however soon made the Beverly Hills residence as much a commutation point as a home Back on the New York stage Scourby played Rakitin in Emlyn Williams adaptation of Turgenev s A Month in the Country and Peter Cauchon in Siobhan McKenna s interpretation of Saint Joan both presented at the Off Broadway Phoenix Theatre in 1956 Again at the Phoenix he played King Claudius in Hamlet in the spring of 1961 bringing to the role as Howard Taubman noted in The New York Times March 17 1961 the appropriate fret of fear and decay citation needed In 1963 Scourby was given the featured role of Gorotchenko the Communist commissar who stalks a White Russian noble couple fleeing the Revolution in Tovarich a Broadway musical by Lee Pockriss and Anne Croswell based on the comedy by Robert E Sherwood and Jacques Deval The musical opened at the Broadway Theatre on March 18 1963 with Vivien Leigh and Jean Pierre Aumont as Scourby s prey The signal tribute to Alexander Scourby critic Norman Nadel wrote in his review in the New York World Telegram and Sun April 2 1963 was the hearty hissing opening night as he strolled on stage In polished villainy he has no peer Shortly after Tovarich closed on November 9 1963 after 264 performances Scourby began rehearsals in Los Angeles for a Theatre Group presentation of Anton Chekhov s The Sea Gull in which he starred with Jeanette Nolan for forty performances beginning on January 10 1964 In the early 1950s Scourby worked in television as both a narrator and actor One of his continuing assignments was as narrator for NBC s Project 20 public affairs specials He narrated a ninety minute condensation of the television series Victory at Sea for Project 20 in 1954 Other Project 20 assignments were in regard to the atomic bomb and three religious documentaries using great paintings to tell the Bible story The Coming of Christ at Christmas He Is Risen at Easter and The Law and Prophets of the Old Testament Audio from The Coming of Christ with orchestrations by Robert Russell Bennett was released by Decca Records in 1960 to popular acclaim In 1965 he replaced Sean Connery as narrator on the television special The Incredible World of James Bond As a television actor Scourby had roles on Playhouse 90 Circle Theatre and Studio One He refused to tie himself down to a series because as he explained it s hard to do good things that way He took occasional parts in westerns such as Wanted Dead or Alive Bonanza and The Rifleman as well as Mr Novak Daniel Boone The Asphalt Jungle The Man from U N C L E The Defenders and other set format dramatic shows Most of the filmed shows were produced in California In 1972 he joined his wife Lori March on The Secret Storm on which he played the second Dr Ian Northcoate March played his wife Valerie Lake Ames Northcoate until that show was cancelled in 1974 He later played Nigel Fargate on All My Children 5 In the Twilight Zone episode The Last Flight he played General Harper Audio recordings EditScourby read 422 books for the Talking Books program of the American Foundation for the Blind including Homer s Iliad Tolstoy s War and Peace Joyce s Ulysses Faulkner s The Sound and the Fury 1 Scourby considered Talking Books his most important work 1 He also made recordings for Spoken Arts and Listening Library 1 At an unknown date Scourby also recorded the audio tapes for The Once and Future King by T H White King James Bible Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Scourby was the first person to record the King James Bible issued on long play records in the 1950s He originally narrated the Old and New Testament for the American Foundation for the Blind The project required more than four years before it was completed in 1953 The original goal was to produce a clean clear recording for visually impaired listeners The American Bible Society distributed the recordings as The Talking Bible a set of 169 LP records with a running time of 84 5 hours citation needed Poetry recordings Edit Scourby made recordings of British and American poetry including A Golden Treasury of Poetry an LP recorded for the children s label Golden Records It featured readings of such poems as Paul Revere s Ride Gunga Din The Highwayman The Owl and the Pussycat and Annabel Lee and commentary written by Louis Untermeyer 6 Personal life EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Alexander Scourby news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Scourby and Lori von Eltz were married on May 12 1943 Von Eltz was the daughter of motion picture actor Theodor von Eltz and was well known as the actress Lori March The couple had a daughter Alexandra born on March 27 1944 Scourby had no political affiliation nor any specific religious affiliations though he was baptized in the Greek Orthodox tradition and his marriage to von Eltz occurred in an Episcopal chapel Scourby died of a heart attack on February 22 1985 in Newtown Connecticut aged 71 His widow died in 2013 aged 90 Filmography EditWith These Hands 1950 Doctor uncredited Affair in Trinidad 1952 Max Fabian Because of You 1952 Dr Breen The Redhead from Wyoming 1953 Reece Duncan The Glory Brigade 1953 Lt Niklas The Big Heat 1953 Mike Lagana Sign of the Pagan 1954 Chrysaphius The Silver Chalice 1954 Luke Ransom 1956 Dr Paul Y Gorman Giant 1956 Old Polo Me and the Colonel 1958 Major Von Bergen The Shaggy Dog 1959 Dr Mikhail Andrassy The Big Fisherman 1959 David Ben Zadok Seven Thieves 1960 Raymond Le May Man on a String 1960 Col Vadja Kubelov The Devil at 4 O Clock 1961 The Governor Gendarme in New York 1965 Ready on Arrival the USS Independence in Vietnam 1966 The Executioner 1970 Prof Parker Jesus 1979 Luke voice Strange But True 1981 Merton 1984 Narrator voice The Stuff 1985 Evans final film role Biography portal New York City portal Connecticut portal Los Angeles portal Theatre portal Film portal Television portalReferences Edit a b c d e Sandy Bauers February 22 1990 Next To Scourby Most Readers Are Just Good Chicago Tribune Retrieved March 19 2014 Biography of Alexander Scourby The Voice of the Bible www scourby com 2011 Archived from the original on March 1 2012 Retrieved February 20 2012 National Geographic Specials 1965 Full Cast amp Crew IMDb com Inc 1990 2023 Retrieved March 4 2023 Bertel Dick Corcoran Ed July 1972 Alexander Scourby The Golden Age of Radio Season 3 Episode 4 Broadcast Plaza Inc WTIC Hartford Conn Schemering Christopher 1987 The Soap Opera Encyclopedia New York Ballantine pp 215 216 ISBN 0 345 35344 7 Alexander Scourby Prepared by Louis Untermeyer A Golden Treasury of Poetry 1962 Vinyl Discogs External links EditAlexander Scourby at IMDb Alexander Scourby at the TCM Movie Database Alexander Scourby at the Internet Broadway Database Alexander Scourby at the Internet Off Broadway Database Alexander Scourby discography at Discogs Alexander Scourby papers 1940 1989 held by the Billy Rose Theatre Division New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Ballantine Beer ad voiceover by Alexander Scourby Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alexander Scourby amp oldid 1151378744, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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