Born on November 25, 1911, Paul Murry spent nearly four decades as one of the most prolific artists working in American Disney comics, contributing to Dell Comics and Gold Key Comics from 1946 until 1984. He died on August 4, 1989.
Four Color #313 (1951)
Murry built his reputation primarily through his work on Mickey Mouse, where he became the go-to artist for the three-part adventure stories that ran in *Walt Disney's Comics and Stories*. These serialized tales, blending mild suspense with accessible humor, gave him a format well suited to his clean, expressive linework and his ability to keep action readable across a young readership. Goofy frequently appeared alongside Mickey in these stories, and Murry handled the lanky character with particular warmth and comic timing.
Four Color #325 (1951)
His output was remarkable in its consistency and sheer volume. Over the course of his career he worked across multiple Disney titles — including *Donald Duck* and various anthology series — functioning variously as artist, inker, letterer, and occasional writer. That range of credited roles across more than 740 issues speaks to how deeply embedded he was in the day-to-day production of Disney comics publishing during its mid-century peak.
Four Color #343 (1951)
Though Murry never achieved the crossover recognition of contemporaries like Carl Barks, his steady craftsmanship helped define the visual grammar of Mickey Mouse comics for multiple generations of readers.