Walter Burke
Biography: Diminutive Irish-American character actor Walter Burke kicked off his film career in 1948. Burke's weaselly, cigarette-dangling-from-lips characterization of political flunky Sugar Boy in the Oscar-winning All the King's Men (1949) set the tone for most of his later roles. Though often afforded meaty roles on television -- he was one of several actors who subbed for William Talman during the 1960-1961 season of Perry Mason -- Burke had no objection to accepting tiny but memorable bits, such as the cockney who warns Eliza Doolittle, "There's a bloke be'ind that pillar, takin' down every word that you're sayin'!" in the opening scene of My Fair Lady (1964). In another unbilled assignment, Burke convincingly voice-doubled for narrator Walter Winchell in a handful of early-'60s episodes of The Untouchables. Closing out his film career in the early '70s, Walter Burke moved to Pennsylvania, where he became an acting teacher.
Walter Burke's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average career score: | 86 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest Metascore: | Stand Clear of the Closing Doors | |
| Lowest Metascore: | Stand Clear of the Closing Doors | |
- By date
- By user score
| Title: | Year: | Credit: | User score: |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stand Clear of the Closing Doors | May 23, 2014 | Man With Banana | 6.8 |