Murphy Beds

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Richard Finegan

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PostThu Dec 16, 2010 2:50 am

More Murphy Beds:

The Itching Hour (2-1-31) - RKO short
Hot Money (11-16-35) - Hal Roach/MGM short
Sappy Pappy (10-30-42) - Columbia short
There Goes My Heart (10-14-38) - Hal Roach/UA feature
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nitratejho

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PostSun Mar 06, 2011 5:36 am

Flipping for the Murphy Bed
CBS) For more than a century, sleepy people with no room to spare have turned to a unique piece of furniture. Here's Serena Altschul:


Since the earliest days of moving pictures, the Murphy bed - you know, the disappearing kind - has played a starring role.

From Abbott and Costello . . . to 007 . . . and Laverne and Shirley.

Gene Kolakowski, who runs the Original Murphy Bed Company on Long Island, says nobody really gets stuck in them. "Only in Hollywood," he laughed.

"There's a lot of jokes about that. But, no, it's impossible for the bed to go up. You have to put it away manually."

The company's been making the floor-mounted steel beds since it was started by William Lawrence Murphy in 1900 near San Francisco.

Family legend has it that Murphy was pursuing a young lady but dating rules back then wouldn't let him bring her up to his one-room apartment.

"He was a tinkerer, inventor, and he came up with the idea, 'If I could put the bed away then she can come into my living room," Kolakowski said. Genius!

"And it's only a bedroom when she leaves - that was the concept, and that's what got him started."

That idea helped Murphy invent and patent the mechanism that would make him famous. What makes the Murphy bed the Murphy bed is really the mechanism.

Murphy soon moved his company to New York - a booming city where every inch of space counts.

Bed historian Robyn Einhorn is with the Smithsonian in Washington. She says owning one of Murphy's designs became a status symbol.

"People would move into these hotels in New York and they would have a suite which would include a Murphy bed, so they could pick up the bed and have a parlor," Einhorn said.

New York University student Dustin Kreitzberg lives in one of those old hotels. The 1929 building is now apartments, but still has a handful of original, creaky Murphy beds, from their heyday in the 1920s.

"Yeah, it's super nice," Kreitzberg said.

"And how do you sleep on it?" Altschul asked.

"I sleep wonderfully, it's super-comfortable, and I always have a good night's sleep to be honest," he said.

In the 300-square-foot studio apartment, the bed frame is a relic from a different time, but the design idea endures - providing two spaces that fit into one.

"It's completely true," said Kreitzberg. "I can entertain people with a nice living room and then when I'm ready to go to sleep I can pull it down and I have a wonderful bedroom."

And these days, he's not alone. Murphy beds are hip again.

Fancy hotels like the St. Francis in San Francisco have them in their suites. Bed stores sell expensive high-end units. There are automated Murphy beds, futuristic Murphy beds . . . even one for Dido.

And they're not just for apartments.

For Ivy Fahrer, a Murphy bed was appealing when she built her whimsical, five-thousand square foot house in Westchester County, New York, even though it has six bedrooms. She showed us her king-size Murphy bed.

"By having a Murphy bed that retracts, I have exactly what I wanted - an all-purpose utility room for all reasons," she said.

Fahrer had the Original Murphy Bed Company build the $20,000 unit she designed, complete with metal finish. Her friends and family all have the same reaction.

"They absolutely love the bed," Fahrer said.

William Murphy probably wouldn't have imagined making beds like that 100 years ago, but no doubt he'd be proud of his invention that's saved so many so much space.


hundred island
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Richard Finegan

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PostSat May 21, 2011 10:32 pm

Murphy Bed just spotted in feature JOHNNY DOESN'T LIVE HERE ANYMORE (Monogram, 1944) shown tonight on TCM.
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Jim Roots

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PostSun May 22, 2011 9:24 am

"Bed historian"????


Jim
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Richard Finegan

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostFri Aug 19, 2011 9:19 pm

Another Murphy Bed sighting:
LIVE AND LEARN (1930) - Pathe two-reel short.
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mndean

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostSat Aug 20, 2011 6:45 am

IIRC, Didn't Hotel Haywire have one? I remember Lynne Overman getting caught in it.
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Richard Finegan

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostMon Aug 29, 2011 6:23 pm

Another Murphy Bed spotted in THE AMAZING MR. WILLIAMS (1939) - Columbia.
Actually I haven't seen that one in quite a while, so I don't recall it exactly, but I just found that among several stills I have from it is one showing Joan Blondell pushing a Murphy Bed up into the wall. (It is still #54-141).
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Richard Finegan

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostWed Sep 07, 2011 4:53 am

Another Murphy Bed spotted in the 20th Century-Fox Picture SAY ONE FOR ME (1959). Debbie Reynolds has one in her apartment.
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Frederica

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostWed Sep 07, 2011 8:09 am

Richard Finegan wrote:Another Murphy Bed spotted in the 20th Century-Fox Picture SAY ONE FOR ME (1959). Debbie Reynolds has one in her apartment.


There was a Murphy Bed at Cinecon, but I can't remember which film. Anyone?
Fred
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Richard Finegan

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostFri Sep 09, 2011 5:20 am

Murphy Bed seen in THE MORE THE MERRIER (1943) - Columbia.

In a scene where Charles Coburn is looking for his pants he opens what he must think is a closet door and out falls a Murphy Bed.
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Jim Roots

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostFri Sep 09, 2011 6:19 am

I'm still waiting to be told what a "bed historian" is and how they manage to get paid for such a job!

Jim
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Re: Murphy Beds

PostTue Sep 27, 2011 6:03 am

Here's another one: You and Me (1938), an odd but charming comedy/drama from Fritz Lang with 3 musical numbers by Kurt Weill. Stars Sylvia Sidney and George Raft are both ex-cons. They marry (against the rules) and live in a small apartment. Their Murphy bed is designed to look like a fireplace when closed up.

I thought this was a wonderful film even though the plot is implausible. The extended "Knocking Song" montage about life in prison is amazing. Sylvia Sidney is stunning.
Ed Lorusso
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greta de groat

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostSat Oct 29, 2011 11:13 pm

Just spotted a nifty one in De Mille's Saturday Night, on the Thought Equity site

http://www.thoughtequity.com/video/clip ... 542_s01.do

An hour and 6 minutes in, it's hidden in a piano.

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostSun Oct 30, 2011 7:18 am

Jim Roots wrote:I'm still waiting to be told what a "bed historian" is and how they manage to get paid for such a job!

Jim


Jim, Ms. Einhorn is a "bed historian" for the Smithsonian. You know... U.S. Government... the entity that pays $600 for a hammer, declares "National Helium Balloon Day," etc. Who's to say the Smithsonian doesn't have a (paid) historian for every stick of furniture?

Michael
(Who's probably going to catch hell on his next visit to the LoC)
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Richard Finegan

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostMon Dec 19, 2011 10:13 am

Another Murphy Bed spotted in:
ADAM'S EVE (1929) - Paramount / Christie "Talking Play" - two-reel short.
There's a very cool Murphy Bed in the apartment of Frances Lee and Geneva Mitchell that's inside a revolving door that opens into a large walk-in closet.

And if just mentioning one counts, Richard Widmark mentions a Murphy Bed in the 1955 MGM feature THE COBWEB.
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Re: Murphy Beds

PostMon Dec 19, 2011 5:52 pm

MikeH0714 wrote:
Jim Roots wrote:I'm still waiting to be told what a "bed historian" is and how they manage to get paid for such a job!

Jim


Jim, Ms. Einhorn is a "bed historian" for the Smithsonian. You know... U.S. Government... the entity that pays $600 for a hammer, declares "National Helium Balloon Day," etc. Who's to say the Smithsonian doesn't have a (paid) historian for every stick of furniture?

Michael
(Who's probably going to catch hell on his next visit to the LoC)


http://blogs.smithsonianmag.com/aroundt ... n-einhorn/" target="_blank
"National Museum of American History’s Assistant Collections Manager Robyn J. Einhorn researched the bed’s place in American history for her second master’s thesis."
Fred
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s.w.a.c.

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PostWed Dec 21, 2011 6:22 am

Barthesian wrote:I've just posted to YouTube a video compiling a number of Murphy bed movie appearances:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EKZF3QMgXXk

Fun video! And it answers the question I was about to ask about the possibility of a Murphy bed gag appearing at the end of a Pink Panther film.

My girlfriend actually owns and runs a mattress and bedding store, would you mind if they put a link to it on their website?
Twinkletoes wrote:Oh, ya big blister!
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Agnes

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostWed Dec 21, 2011 9:53 am

We had one in Myrtle Beach, SC a few years back. It advertised that it slept 6 with a bedroom, & a sitting room with a Murphy Bed.
They go out of sight in the day & give back floor space, but appear @ night with a real matress for sleeping ( as opposed to the cots inside of sleeper sofas). It was great to have the room in the day, yet be able to sleep a larger family at night.

They are making a resergence lately. The PBS show"Hometime"has featured a series of cabnets (one containing a Murphy Bed) as a great alternative for that spare room or finished basement. It is a real bed for guests, but folds away when guests leave to reclaim space for craft room or home office.

As to old films.......was there a studio that did not use them for comedy?
The "Working girl" apartments were always just a room...... with a hotplate & a Murphy Bed.
Inevitably, someone always closed it up with someone still in the bed.

In real life I don't know anyone who was ever closed up in one, but that is only reality.
Agnes McFadden

I know it's good - I wrote it myself!
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Frederica

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostWed Dec 21, 2011 10:23 am

Agnes wrote:In real life I don't know anyone who was ever closed up in one, but that is only reality.


OMG, you just reminded me! Some time in the late 70s, early 80s...around there...I read a death cert where the person had died from being closed up in a Murphy Bed. Spine had snapped.
Fred
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LongRider

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostWed Dec 21, 2011 8:27 pm

Frederica wrote:
Agnes wrote:In real life I don't know anyone who was ever closed up in one, but that is only reality.


OMG, you just reminded me! Some time in the late 70s, early 80s...around there...I read a death cert where the person had died from being closed up in a Murphy Bed. Spine had snapped.



Good Grief! Do you remember if the deceased was an adult or a child? Sounds awful.

Thanks,
Maureen
Cheers,
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Frederica

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostThu Dec 22, 2011 10:45 am

LongRider wrote:
OMG, you just reminded me! Some time in the late 70s, early 80s...around there...I read a death cert where the person had died from being closed up in a Murphy Bed. Spine had snapped.


Good Grief! Do you remember if the deceased was an adult or a child? Sounds awful.

Thanks,
Maureen


As I recall, it was an adult woman, and she'd been making the bed when it suddenly closed on her. I'd completely forgotten about it until reading your post. Phew. Yet another reason to avoid making the bed.
Fred
"You love your children. It's your one redeeming quality. That and your cheekbones.”
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LongRider

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostThu Dec 22, 2011 12:18 pm

Frederica wrote:As I recall, it was an adult woman, and she'd been making the bed when it suddenly closed on her. I'd completely forgotten about it until reading your post. Phew. Yet another reason to avoid making the bed.



I don't need much convincing for that!

Cheers,
Maureen
Cheers,
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Richard Finegan

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostTue Jan 03, 2012 5:06 am

Murphy Bed spotted in
THE ARTIST (2011).
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Richard Finegan

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostSat Jan 07, 2012 7:08 am

Murphy Bed just seen in

TOMORROW IS ANOTHER DAY (1951) - Warner Bros.

(Showing on TCM right now.)
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Re: Murphy Beds

PostSat Jan 07, 2012 8:37 am

My wife and I were watching House Hunters on HGTV Thursday night. If you are not famaliar with the show, a person/couple/family look at three houses or condos, and decide which one to buy. This show featured a couple looking for a condo in Manhattan, and each one was tiny (400-750 square feet). House #2 featured a Murphy bed, which they had never seen before.
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Richard Finegan

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostSun Jan 15, 2012 5:35 am

Murphy Bed seen in

FOUR JACKS AND A JILL (1941) - RKO Radio.
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Richard Finegan

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostMon Jan 16, 2012 12:27 pm

I know that some were already mentioned, but I don't know if they were regarded as real Murphy Beds, but in two recently-viewed films I saw scenes with beds that slide into a wall, out of sight:

ALMOST MARRIED (1942) - Universal feature.
WHO'S GUILTY? (1945) - Columbia serial (Chapter 2).
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Ed Watz

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostMon Jan 16, 2012 2:40 pm

My son Dennis and I were running two reelers on the projector this afternoon and spotted a couple more Murphy beds:

TIME OUT FOR TROUBLE (1938; Charley Chase hides in one in the wall)
CORNY CASANOVAS (1952; the bed falls out of the wall onto Larry Fine).

Columbia comedies with their stock gags seem to feature more Murphy beds on average.
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Brooksie

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostSat Jan 21, 2012 9:12 pm

Not sure if it's been mentioned, but there is a Murphy Bed-esque device in Judy Holliday's apartment in 'Phffft' (1954) - it pops out of the wall drawer-style with the push of a button, rather than folding upwards.

It's a nice screwball scene. Every time Jack Lemmon gets a little too eager, the bed disappears into the wall.
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Richard Finegan

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Re: Murphy Beds

PostTue Feb 21, 2012 5:16 am

Murphy Bed just seen in TV show "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis" episode "Live Alone and Like It" (4-19-60).
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