Belfast singing starlet Ruby Murray has been honoured with a blue plaque just yards from where she grew up. The Softly, Softly singer was one of the best-known stars in the British Isles in the 1950s.
In the Donegall Road area, Ruby Murray - arguably the biggest showbiz star to come out of Belfast - is a precious jewel. And yesterday the velvety-voiced singer's life was officially commemorated by a ...
Most people familiar with British cuisine will not be surprised to learn that the UK has just celebrated National Curry Week. In anticipation of the culinary festivities, Evening Standard journalist ...
The son of singer Ruby Murray has threatened legal action after her name was trademarked to sell curry. The 1950s singer’s name started to be used as cockney rhyming slang in the 60s, with most people ...
A CAMPAIGN is under way to have a plaque in memory of Ruby Murray erected in her native Belfast. A CAMPAIGN is under way to have a plaque in memory of Ruby Murray erected in her native Belfast. "And ...
TO grow up with a famous parent means inevitably to live to some extent in their shadow. When Tim Murray was a child his mother was among the most celebrated names in the entertainment world.
She shot to fame at the age of 19 and became a megastar in the pre-rock 'n' roll era. Now, Belfast singer Ruby Murray has been commemorated with a blue plaque near to her childhood home on the ...
Ruby’s Cafe, the Australian-inspired eatery in Soho, is in expansion mode, staring with a Murray Hill outpost that will open for business on Thursday. The new Ruby’s, at 442 Third Ave., will seat 42 ...
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. Ruby J. Murray's The Biographer's Lover is a novel posing as the biography of Edna Cranmer – an unknown artist from Geelong, Victoria – ...