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Willie D Burton

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Occupation
  
Sound engineer

Years active
  
1975 – present


Name
  
Willie Burton

Role
  
Sound Design

Awards
  
Academy Award for Best Sound Mixing, BAFTA Award for Best Sound, Satellite Award for Best Sound

Nominations
  
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Film Sound Mixing

Similar People
  
Michael Minkler, Alan Robert Murray, Richard Francis‑Bruce, Arthur Piantadosi, Niki Marvin

Bird Wins Best Sound: 1989 Oscars


Willie D. Burton is an American production sound mixer. His career has spanned four decades and has included films such as The Shawshank Redemption, Se7en, and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. Burton has been nominated for the Academy Award for Best Sound or Best Achievement in Sound Mixing a total of seven times, winning twice; he has been nominated for two BAFTA Film Awards for Best Sound, winning once; and he was nominated for one Emmy Award for Outstanding Achievement in Film Sound Mixing for his work on Roots.

Contents

Early life

Willie D. Burton was born in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Burton grew up in Alabama, and became fascinated with broadcasting because he lived near a radio station. While attending high school, Burton entered a work-study program in a store that sold and repaired radios and TVs. He became experienced repairing radios, and began to experiment with improving and learning more about the electronics. His attention then moved to sound and sound mixing. His work at the electronic shop fed Burton’s fascination with electronics and sound, but he was obstructed by the limited opportunities for African-Americans to work in the field, especially in the Deep South. In the midst of the Civil Rights Movement, Alabama was slow in its movement toward equality in job opportunities. As his motivation and interest grew, Burton made the decision to move to Long Beach, California after high school graduation. Burton attended a trade school and then Compton City College, where he studied electronics technology.

Career

After graduating from Compton City College, Burton worked on sonar technology for the Department of the Navy, but his ultimate goal was to work in broadcasting. He was prevented from accomplishing this goal because he needed to be a union member to work in Hollywood. Finally, in 1969, he made it into the International Sound Technicians union. Burton was the first black man to be officially accepted into the union. This led to an entry level job on the TV series Land of the Giants, directed by Harry Harris, Sobey Martin and Nathan Juran. Between TV jobs, which also included work as a boom operator on Medical Center and Gunsmoke" Burton worked as a custodian at a bank.

Fortunately, a friend from one of his TV jobs helped train Burton on sound-mixing equipment. Burton gained an immense amount of interest in sound mixing as he developed and polished his talents. Those who worked with him in Hollywood soon recognized his potential. Burton’s big break into the sound-mixing world came in 1975, when he heard that Sidney Poitier was directing the film Let's Do It Again, with Bill Cosby. Poitier agreed to hire Burton. This decision launched him into a career that has lasted more than fourth decades. With seven nominations each, Burton and television producer Quincy Jones are currently the Academy's most-honored African-Americans in the film industry.

Awards

In 1988, Burton won the Academy Award for Sound for the film Bird and again in 2006 for Dreamgirls. He was nominated for the same award in 1978 for The Buddy Holly Story, in 1980 for Altered States, in 1983 for WarGames, in 1994 for The Shawshank Redemption, and in 1999 for Green Mile. He won a British Academy Award in 1983 for his work on the film War Games. Burton has been nominated for the Academy Award for Best Sound or Best Achievement in Sound Mixing a total of seven times, winning twice. He has been nominated for two BAFTA Film Awards for Best Sound, winning once. He was nominated for one Emmy Award for Outstanding Achievement in Film Sound Mixing for his work on Roots. With his seventh Oscar nomination for Dreamgirls (2006) in 2007, Burton tied composer/producer Quincy Jones for the most Academy Award nominations by an African-American. As of 2010, Burton, sound engineer Russell Williams II and actor Denzel Washington are the only African-Americans that have won two Oscars.

Nominated films

  • Dreamgirls (2006)
  • Oscar - Won - Best Sound Mixing Cinema Audio Society - Won - Outstanding Sound Mixing for Motion Pictures Satellite Award - Won - Best Sound (Editing & Mixing)
  • The Green Mile (1999)
  • Oscar - Nominated - Best Sound
  • The Shawshank Redemption (1994)
  • Oscar - Nominated - Best Sound
  • In the Line of Fire (1993)
  • Cinema Audio Society - Nominated - Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Feature Film
  • Bird (1988)
  • Oscar - Won - Best Sound BAFTA Film Award - Nominated - Best Sound
  • WarGames (1983)
  • Oscar - Nominated - Best Sound BAFTA Film Award - Won - Best Sound
  • Altered States (1980)
  • Oscar - Nominated - Best Sound
  • The Buddy Holly Story (1978)
  • Oscar - Nominated - Best Sound
  • Roots (1977)
  • Primetime Emmy - Nominated - Outstanding Film Sound Mixing

    References

    Willie D. Burton Wikipedia