A
semi-literate slob with a hairy paunch and no-neck fireplug
body.
That's the image that actor Burt Young cultivated for
dozens of film and TV roles - most notably for Paulie,
Sylvester Stallone's brother-in-law in Rocky and the
Academy-Award-winning film's four sequels.
But to dismiss him with that image would do him an
injustice.
Young is not only an Oscar-nominated actor (true, he's
mastered the slob image), but he owns a restaurant, writes
plays and scripts, and paints, with plans for his works to
be exhibited in Santa Monica and even Russia.
"I'm pretty good. I'm even better than pretty
good," he boasts with a hearty laugh during a telephone
interview from Hollywood.
And although he smokes three packs of unfiltered Camels a
day, he is - depending on when you encounter him - either
that proverbial slob or buff and muscular.
"I go up and down," he says. "I used to be
a fighter and I'm used to taking weight off. Goes back
pretty easy, though."
Young is helping to promote the upcoming release of the Rocky
Anthology, a DVD boxed set of all the Rocky
movies. Which is something of a surprise given widespread
reports that he and Stallone had a falling out over the
final film in the series, 1990's Rocky V.
Young himself confirms that he had disagreed with
elements of the screenplay in which Paulie naively
mishandled Rocky's money and threatened to kill himself. He
was hurt that Sly, unlike in the past, had ignored his
suggestions for improvements.
"So, for a short while we didn't talk," he
explains. "But now he has this reality fight show (Mark
Burnett's "The Contender"), so they asked me if I
would show up, you know? And I was pleased to hug him and
forget the time lost."
Young still wears the inscribed gold Cartier watch
Stallone gave him in '90.
So what is it about the Rocky franchise that made
it such a hit that it spawned four sequels since its debut
in 1976? Young says it really wasn't a boxing movie.
"It was people standing up, not even winning, just
standing up, and it became a delicate love story with two
pretty weak people making one whole person, meaning
Sylvester and Talia (Shire)."
And despite all the praise heaped on Martin Scorsese's Raging
Bull, Young believes the Rocky fight scenes are
the best ever put to film, and for that he credits Stallone
for pulling off a script with freshness and boldness.
"He goes away for a night and comes back with three
pages where he wrote out in pencil, punch by punch . . . and
it was like he made prose out of the fight itself.
"To me it was lookin' like an Arthur Miller play
where, if you skip over a comma, you're missing a dent in
the story that was necessary. And he really choreographed
everything."
Young thoroughly enjoys looking back at the 14-year Rocky
ride in which he'd revisit his Paulie character at regular
intervals, finding him alternately thin and heavy.
He says he patterned Paulie's insecurity after his own,
all burly bluster on the outside but a frightened pussycat
inside.
"Basically, to me he was a very scared guy," he
says. "He would cover and protect himself from that
kind of fear with bravado and empty mischief."
So will there ever be another Rocky movie? Young
says Stallone does have a beautiful script and wants to do
it.
"There's a snag with some of the studio
people," he explains. "Sylvester was very anxious.
He spent half a year writing different editions of the
story. We'll see."
The DVD set, meanwhile, is a surprise for what it doesn't
contain. Namely no extras other than an extra disc with the
A&E Biography episode on Stallone. Each title is a new
high-definition transfer with improved 5.1 surround sound.
But the set contains none of the background extras - audio
commentaries, behind-the-scenes looks, theatrical trailers -
all of which were included in a 25th anniversary boxed set
released in 2001.
A summary of the career of actor Burt Young, who won an
Oscar nomination for playing Paulie in the first Rocky
film:
Born: New York City, April 1940.
Early life: Served in U.S. Marines 1957-59. Worked as
carpet cleaner, salesman and installer; boxer; attended Lee
Strasberg's Actor's Studio.
First acting role: 1971's The Gang That Couldn't Shoot
Straight.
Prominent film roles besides the five Rocky movies: Cinderella
Liberty, Chinatown, The Gambler, Once Upon a Time in
America, Convoy, Amityville II: The Possession, Harry and
Walter Go to New York, The Killer Elite, The Pope of
Greenwich Village, Back to School, Betsy's Wedding, Beverly
Hills Brats, Mickey Blue Eyes, The Adventures of Pluto Nash,
Carlito's Way: The Beginning.
TV roles: The Connection, Baretta (as Robert Blake's
brother), Hustling, Roomies, Vendetta I & II, Columbo:
Undercover, Crocodile Shoes, Walker Texas Ranger, Firehouse,
The Last Don, The Sopranos.
Other pursuits: Writes plays and screenplays, paints,
owns a restaurant in the Bronx.
Quote: "I enjoyed playing around with that guy, and
it was a pleasure every three, four years, coming back
seeing how the wardrobe is. Is he heavy? Is he thin? I had
fun." - On playing Paulie in the Rocky films.