Wally Burr
From MediaWiki

Wally Burr (born June 2, 1926) is an American voice actor and voice director. He worked on numerous cartoons during the 80s, including the role of voice director on the original Transformers cartoon and G.I. Joe. Aside from voicing some incidental characters, he has also filled in roles for regular voice actors who were unavailable for taping. Some voices he has done include The Atom on Superfriends, Emmett Benton on Jem, Huang Zhong in Dynasty Warriors, and Rock in Soulcalibur.
Voice roles
The Transformers
- Dancitron Promoter
- Jazz (in "Kremzeek!")
- Kremzeek
- Museum Guard (in "Masquerade")
- Nergill
- Ratchet (in "Masquerade")
- Seaspray (in his PSA)
- Shrapnel (one line only, in "Traitor")
- Thundercracker (in "War Dawn")
Transformers: Prime
Voice direction
Convention appearances
Notes
- Burr has had many stories told of him by actors, who universally recall his perfectionist recording sessions as exhausting, voice-straining experiences, to the point that Michael Bell jokingly implicated the strain involved as the cause of Orson Welles's death.[1] In contrast to most directors, Burr was regularly insistent on prolonging recording sessions out to the eight-hour maximum defined by the Screen Actor's Guild - whether, to quote Townsend Coleman, "it was necessary or not."[2] That habit of his, it is said, was a major contributing factor to the 1987 animation voice artist strike; one of the striking actors' primary demands was the reduction of the maximum session length to four hours. Maurice LaMarche had less-kind words, suggesting that all Burr really wanted was for the actor to "parrot" the lines back to him as he himself would have performed them.[3] However, when LaMarche appeared at BotCon 2013, he read a prepared (and lengthy) apology and redaction of his harsher criticisms, as Burr was also in attendance, leading to big smiles and handshakes between the two.
External links
References
- ↑ BotCon 2001 voice actor panel
- ↑ Truly Outrageous! The Jem Mailing List Vol 3 #20
- ↑ Quick Stop Interview: Maurice LaMarche

