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Tony Burton

Anthony Mabron Burton was an American actor and professional boxer. He was best known for his role as trainer Tony "Duke" Evers in the Rocky films.

Early life
Burton was born in Flint, Michigan. he was a Michigan Golden Gloves heavyweight boxing champion and two-time all-state football player. At Northern, he played halfback. In 1954, he scored 13 touchdowns and led his team in scoring. Many of his scoring runs were of 50 yards or more. He gained 820 yards rushing that year, and one of his runs was for 95 yards. That same year, he was selected to the first teams of the All City and All Valley teams as a halfback. He was also chosen as an All State honorable mention. He was the team's co-captain and Most Valuable Player. Burton led his team in yards gained and receiving yards. In one game against Grand Rapids Catholic, he gained 213 total yards. At Northern, Burton was also the leading baseball pitcher, pitching the team to the city championship title. == Boxing career ==
Boxing career
Burton's boxing career included the Flint Golden Gloves light heavyweight championship in 1955 and 1957. Burton fought in a total of 14 professional bouts between 1958 and 1959. His final fight was a defeat against knockout artist Lamar Clark, who holds the record for most consecutive knockouts at 44. His final record was 10 wins (2 by knockout), 3 losses (all by knockout), and 1 draw. == Acting career ==
Acting career
After prison, Burton began finding work with small theater companies in and around Los Angeles, garnering favorable notices early on. A life member of the Actors Studio, Burton numbers among his many credits a co-starring role in ''Frank's Place and parts in films, such as Stir Crazy and The Toy''. He also appeared as Wells, one of the prisoners trapped in the besieged police station in John Carpenter's 1976 Howard Hawks-inspired action film Assault on Precinct 13. He later starred in the Rocky films as a trainer to Apollo Creed (Carl Weathers) and later Rocky Balboa (Sylvester Stallone). He appeared in an episode of Gibbsville in 1976. Burton also appeared in The Shining, House Party 2, and Hook. He had guest appearances in Kojak, The Rockford Files, CHiPs, Twin Peaks, and The A-Team. Burton also guest starred as Conrad King Baylor on In the Heat of the Night in the episode "King's Ransom," which aired in January 1990. == Recognition ==
Recognition
In 1993, Burton was inducted into the Greater Flint Afro-American Sports Hall of Fame. == Personal life ==
Personal life
Burton resided in California for 30 years. He was married to Aurelain (Rae) from 1980 until his death. The couple had two sons, one of whom, Martin, died of a heart attack at the age of 43 on May 8, 2014. Burton was a talented chess player. He defeated Stanley Kubrick on the set of The Shining, in which Burton played Larry Durkin, the garage owner. Speaking with Kubrick biographer Vincent LoBrutto, Burton recalled his first day on the set: Incarceration After his brief professional boxing career, Burton served more than three years in a Chino, California prison for robbery. The acting exercises he performed as part of a therapy program helped steer him into an acting career after his release. NEA's Frank Sanello in March 1988: More specifically, one of the skills acquired at Chino landed Burton his wife Rae, who he met on a TV-repair house call. Moreover, a workshop in the prison that used psychodrama as a form of therapy pointed Burton toward his acting career, when an emotional breakthrough achieved by one of his partners in an acting exercise dramatically demonstrated theater's potential power. == Death ==
Death
Burton had been frequently hospitalized for the last year of his life, according to his sister. On February 26, 2016, he died at the age of 78, from complications of pneumonia at a hospital in Menifee. ==Professional boxing record==
Filmography
Film Television ==References==
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