Warren Burton
Known for: Acting
Born: October 22, 1944 in Chicago, Illinois, USA - Died: October 1, 2017
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Warren Burton (October 23, 1944 – October 2, 2017) was an American actor. During the late 1970s and throughout the 1990s, he was seen on several daytime soap operas usually in villainous roles. Burton was born and raised in Chicago, Illinois and attended Roosevelt High School and the Art Institute of Chicago. He began his acting career in Chicago theatre before moving to New York to pursue a career there. He appeared in a number of Broadway and Off-Broadway theatre productions such as Gypsy and Hair. He played the role of Eddie Dorrance #3 on All My Children from 1978 to 1979 and won a Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Supporting Actor at the 1980 awards broadcast. Other daytime roles included Jason Dunlap on Another World (1980-82); Warren Andrews on Guiding Light (1983-87); Phillip Hamilton on Santa Barbara (1988-89) and Dr. Hepler on The Bold And the Beautiful (1995). He appeared in the made-for-TV movie The Girl Most Likely to... in 1973. Burton portrayed Confederate general Henry Heth in the 1993 film Gettysburg. Since the late 1990s, Burton was a voice actor for numerous video games, including the Jak and Daxter series, Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time, Psychonauts, Battlezone II: Combat Commander, and Nox, among several others.
Known for
Showing 24 of 24 titles
Poison Ivy
Max
Gettysburg
Maj. Gen. Henry Heth
Rabbit Test
First Secret Service Man
Lily for President?
Ty Brown
The World's Greatest Lover
Greta Ga-Ga
Tome of the Unknown
Narrator (voice)
Bloodfist VIII: Trained to Kill
Michael Powell
Humanoids from the Deep
Major Knapp
Jokes My Folks Never Told Me
Chatterbox!
TV Reporter
Strategic Command
Colpart
The Girl Most Likely To...
Actor
2090
All My Children
Eddie Dorrance
Designing Women
The Facts of Life
Monk
Roger
Tales from the Crypt
Roland
Knots Landing
Dr. Glenning
Jake and the Fatman
Another World
Freddy's Nightmares
Dennis
Santa Barbara
Phillip Hamilton
Valley of the Dolls
Mitch Henry