
Audie Murphy
Acting · Born 1925-06-20 · age 45 at death · Kingston, Texas, USA
Audie Leon Murphy (June 20, 1925 – May 28, 1971) was a fifth grade dropout from an extremely poor family who became the most decorated American soldier of World War II. After the war he became a celebrated movie star for over two decades, appearing in 44 films. He also found some success as a country music composer. Murphy became the most decorated United States soldier of the war during twenty-seven months in action in the European Theatre. He received the Medal of Honor, the U.S. military's highest award for valor, along with 32 additional U.S. and foreign medals and citations, including five from France and one from Belgium. Murphy's successful movie career included To Hell and Back (1955), based on his book of the same title (1949) . He died in a plane crash in 1971 and was interred, with full military honors, in Arlington National Cemetery.
Titles

The Unforgiven

No Name on the Bullet

Night Passage

The Red Badge of Courage

To Hell and Back

The Duel at Silver Creek

Hell Bent for Leather

Destry

The Guns of Fort Petticoat

Ride Clear of Diablo

The Quiet American

Posse from Hell

Arizona Raiders

Ride a Crooked Trail

Gunpoint

A Time for Dying

Seven Ways from Sundown

Drums Across the River

Bullet for a Badman

The Cimarron Kid

Six Black Horses

40 Guns to Apache Pass

The Quick Gun

The Wild and the Innocent

Kansas Raiders

The Kid from Texas

Gunsmoke

Showdown

Apache Rifles

The Texican

The Gun Runners

Tumbleweed

Gunfight at Comanche Creek

Sierra

Walk the Proud Land

Cast a Long Shadow

Column South

Suspicion

Battle at Bloody Beach

Bad Boy

General Electric Theater

World in My Corner

Beyond Glory

Startime

Texas, Brooklyn & Heaven

Whispering Smith

Joe Butterfly

Trunk to Cairo