Biography
This page uses content from the Alexander Scourby biography page on the English version of Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. This list of authors can be seen in the page history. Rotten Tomatoes disclaims any and all warranties as to the accuracy or reliability of the content.
Alexander Scourby (November 13, 1913 – February 22, 1985) was an American actor and voice actor noted for his deep and resonant voice.
He was born in Brooklyn to Greek immigrant parents. He studied journalism briefly at West Virginia University at Morgantown and became interested in campus theater. He started as a Shakespearean actor in the 1930s (his Broadway debut was as the Player King in Hamlet) and was active in radio drama in the 1940s. He recorded talking books starting in 1937 and is particularly remembered for his landmark recording of the entire King James Version of the Bible. He was also the narrator of many television documentaries, notably the series of specials on CBS entitled The Body Human, as well as many of the National Geographic Specials. His last narrating assignment was the documentary Toscanini: The Maestro, in 1985.
He was married to stage and soap opera actress Lori March, with whom he appeared in 1956's Ransom! and in the 1970s on The Secret Storm. They had one daughter, Alexandra.
Although Scourby made voice recordings of over 500 different books, he considered the Bible to be his most important. He describes why in the following letter.
"...it is the one book that has the power to inspire, encourage, comfort and change the life of the person who hears it. I know this because during the many years since I narrated the Bible, numerous people have written thanking me for creating such a beautiful reading. I have been greatly humbled and moved by the many letters I have received from people around the world telling me how God used the Bible narrations to change their lives and the lives of their loved ones, encourage them in their hour of need, and even healed them as the listened to the Words of Life."
Scourby died in Newtown, Connecticut at the age of 71.
External links and references
- King James Version of the Bible narrated by Alexander Scourby
- Scourby narrates the War Of The Worlds for Studio One television series (1957)
- IMDB Alexander Scourby Filmography
- IMDB Alexander Scourby Biography mini-biography and trivia
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