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Burt Young’s Story: The Man Who Played Paulie in Rocky Opens Up About His Family and His Craft

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb
The Truth Network Radio
September 15, 2023 3:00 am

Burt Young’s Story: The Man Who Played Paulie in Rocky Opens Up About His Family and His Craft

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb

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September 15, 2023 3:00 am

On this episode of Our American Stories, Burt Young is an immediately recognizable character actor whose half-muttered voice and flinty gaze made him the perfect fit for "Rocky" as Sylvester Stallone's ill-mannered brother-in-law, Paulie. Here’s Burt Young with his story. 

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To find long-lasting love. Bachelor in Paradise premieres Thursday 9, 8 central on ABC and stream on Hulu. This is Lee Habib and this is Our American Stories, the show where America is the star and the American people. And to search for the Our American Stories podcast, go to the iHeartRadio app, the Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. Burt Young is an immediately recognizable character actor whose half-muttered voice and flinty gaze made him the perfect fit for Rocky as Sylvester Stallone's ill-mannered brother-in-law, Paulie. Without any further ado, here's Burt Young with his story. Yes, I'm Burt Young. I was born in Corona, Queens, New York.

I had the greatest parents. My pop, he became like a minister in a high school. His name was Michael. He was a sheet metal mechanic coming from Iceland. He could do anything, build anything.

He could smock you pretty good, too. He's a tough guy himself. He was a great guy. My mother, Josephine, she lived to about 93.

The most beautiful lady ever protected me from everything. Mama knew I couldn't do wrong. When I needed money as a kid, my father would give me 25 cents. I said, Mama, I need two grand. She said, Mike, write out a check, sign a check.

That was it. When she spoke, he listened. The only trouble I ever had was when I left home. I believed in myself in life. I had 17 pro fights. I never lost a pro fight. I believed in myself. I was a very good fighter, because the mother was my first manager.

Charlie Gould was a trainer who trained Marceano. He converted me from southpaw to right-hander. In those days, you couldn't fight left-hander. But fighting was part of my nature. I did an exhibition with Muhammad Ali.

That was one of my high spots at the Olympic auditorium in California. We became fast friends, very good. You're never sad when you give up boxing.

Who gets sad getting punched in the face? Growing up, I was early in the Marine Corps, 16. I was half a hoodlum, really.

I had carpet lay in business, 60 men working, everything on a short dollar, you know. I was pretty unhappy, and this beautiful girl, she was a barmaid in the Jackson Heights gin mill. I started asking if she ever thought of being an actress, and she led up. And she said she wanted to start with Lee Strasberg. And I thought that was a girl. I don't know who the hell Lee Strasberg was. But I figured I can get her in anywhere. So I found out who he was, wrote him a letter.

I don't know if acting has anything for me, but I'm treading water. See me. And he did. He said, I never saw tension in a man's face. He said, but I fear you're an emotional library, he says.

Would you work with me? I said, yes. And I was able to take myself serious.

Well, I read the script, the Rocky script. It was like a masterpiece in simplicity. It was half a character, half reality, but it was very touching, very moving. It was like a moving poetry.

It was beautiful. I'm in the commissary in California. A young guy squats next to me. He says, Mr. Young, I'm Sylvester Stallone. I wrote Rocky. I said, congratulations. I'm proud. He says, you got to do it. I said, let me twist that arm a little bit. I'm going to do it. That's when we first met each other.

I was the highest paid actor in the first Rocky, more than he was. It was a strong piece of writing. I didn't take a chance.

I delved into it. You don't have to go too far for him. He's very bright and funny, too. Well, we worked very well together, very good.

We never had a harsh moment, really. I like working with him. And he's fast. He shoots fast. We would have shot after Rocky by now, you know. I never knew it was going to go through the seal.

I didn't know what huge hits were. Rocky had a crush on the doorbell, and that was a lot of fun, you know. My papa was much more talented. I was acting before he died, and he didn't understand it, because he knew me as a hoodlum. We'd bring him to screenings early. I had a projection room in Beverly Hills in my house out there. We'd show him some of the movies. The hell is it? He couldn't get it.

He couldn't get it. I don't think it can put me in a bottle. As an actor and as an artist, perhaps the acting, I'm a little more structured. I pick ammunition, bullets to use, to relax in, to fatten up. It could be greed.

It could be anger. And I fatten that up with personal things that I used to get there. Foley was quick and crafty. But he had many personal hobbies that were not me, you know. I made him as warm as I could make him. But you had to forgive the sucker for it.

He was a pretty ugly guy many times, you know. They miscast me. I'm a lovable son of a gun.

It's just I go straight everywhere. And a terrific job on the production, editing, and storytelling by our own Greg Hengler and a special thanks to Platinum Platypus for their work on this interview with Burt Young. Straight and simple. Like Rocky, what he said about Rocky is so true of so much great storytelling. It's simple.

It's straight and it moves people. The story of Burt Young, the story about so much, here on Our American Stories. Go to OurAmericanStories.com and click the donate button. Give a little, give a lot. Go to OurAmericanStories.com and give. See website for details.
Whisper: medium.en / 2023-10-03 07:14:33 / 2023-10-03 07:18:13 / 4

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