Stand by · pulling the latest frames
Stand by · pulling the latest frames

Like most young men at the time with the outbreak of World War Two, Murray Westgate signed up to serve his country. He joined the Canadian navy and was posted to Halifax where he was trained as a wireless operator. On his discharge in 1945, he heard that a repertory company was being formed on the west coast and so he became a member of Vancouver`s first professional theatre company, Everyman Theatre, which had been formed in 1946 by Sydney Risk. A touring company resulted and Westgate and a group of young actors toured the West. He then joined the CBC in Vancouver and was cast in radio dramas for which the CBC Vancouver studios were famous. In 1949 he moved to Toronto where his voice was soon heard in many CBC network radio productions out of the Toronto studios, among them the long-running Sunday series which began as Stage 44, directed by Andrew Allan, and the Ford Television Theatre, produced by Allan Savage. Westgate won an ACTRA Award in 1979 for his work on the made-for-television movie, Tyler. He is probably best remembered by a certain age group for being the spokesman for Imperial Oil, appearing in commercials for 17 years, especially when they were a major sponsor of Hockey Night In Canada on the CBC. Westgate died at Toronto’s Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto.
6.0Rituals
1977
6.7Running
1979
10.0Shock-Trauma
1982
6.0Happy Birthday to Me
1981
6.4The Borrowers
1973
5.6L'Homme en colère
1979
5.3Scanners II: The New Order
1991
6.8Tom Sawyer
1976
4.8The Kidnapping of the President
1980
5.7Heavenly Bodies
1984
6.6Class of '44
1973
6.9F.D.R.: The Last Year
1980
7.3A Matter of Sex
1984
4.8Homer
1970
10.0Honeyboy
1982
9.0Tell Me My Name
1977
6.4Sunday in the Country
1974
6.6She Cried Murder
1973
5.5Crossbar
1979
5.6The Courage of Kavik, the Wolf Dog
1980