Raymond Burr

Raymond William Stacey Burr (May 21, 1917 – September 12, 1993) was a Canadian Emmy-winning actor and vintner, known for his roles in the television dramas Perry Mason and Ironside.

Early life
Raymond Burr was born Raymond William Stacey Burr on May 21, 1917 in New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada (although the 1930 census states Burr was born in Illinois), to William Johnston Burr (1889-1985), an Irish hardware salesman from County Cork, Ireland, and his wife Minerva Smith (1892-1974), a concert pianist and music teacher who had immigrated to Canada from Chicago, Illinois, in 1914. Burr spent part of his childhood in China where his father worked as a trade agent. After his parents divorced, Burr moved to Vallejo, California with his mother and younger sister and brother. As soon as he came of age, Burr went to work as a ranch and a photo salesman to help support his mother and younger sister and brother. After two years in the Navy during World War II, Burr returned home after being wounded in the stomach on Okinawa.

Early career
In 1937, Burr began his acting career at the Pasadena Playhouse. In 1941, he landed his first Broadway role in “Crazy with the Heart”. He became a contract player at RKO studio, playing mostly villains, and had roles in over 60 movies between 1946 and 1957. Burr received favorable notice for his role as a prosecutor in A Place in the Sun (1951), co-starring Elizabeth Taylor and Montgomery Clift, and perhaps his best-known film role of the period was as the "heavy" in the Alfred Hitchcock classic Rear Window (1954), starring James Stewart and Grace Kelly.

During this time, Burr's distinctive voice could also be heard on network radio, appearing alongside Jack Webb in the short-lived Pat Novak for Hire on ABC radio, as well as in early episodes of NBC's Dragnet. He also made guest appearances on other Los Angeles-based shows, such as Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar and landed a starring role in CBS's Fort Laramie (1956).

Burr also emerged as a prolific television character actor in the early to mid 1950s. He made his guest-starring television debut on an episode of The Amazing Mr. Malone. This part led to other television roles in such programs as Dragnet, Chesterfield Sound Off Time, Four Star Playhouse, Mr. & Mrs. North, Schlitz Playhouse of Stardom, The Ford Television Theatre and Lux Video Theatre.

In 1955, Burr took on the part of Steve Martin in Godzilla, King of the Monsters, a role he would reprise almost 30 years later in Godzilla 1985.

Perry Mason and Ironside
In 1956, Burr auditioned for the role of District Attorney Hamilton Burger in Perry Mason, a new courtroom drama based on the highly successful novels written and created by Erle Stanley Gardner, that was to air on the CBS TV network. William Talman auditioned for the title role of Perry Mason. However, Erle Stanley Gardner was present and demanded that the actors switch parts. Mason eventually became the role with which Burr was most closely identified in the public mind. Also starring were Barbara Hale - a 1940s movie actress and old friend of Burr’s - as Mason’s secretary, Della Street, and B-actor William Hopper as Mason’s private investigator, Paul Drake. William Talman played the district attorney, Hamilton Burger, who was destined to lose every case (at least against Perry Mason), and Ray Collins was the homicide detective, Lt. Arthur Tragg. On every show Mason built a defense case with extraordinary precision and succeeded in proving his client's innocence, often provoking an emotional confession from the true culprit.

Burr and Talman were both professionals and wise enough to realize that new or inexperienced actors could be extremely nervous during filming. In order to calm scared "newbies" Burr and Talman would purposely blow some of their own lines, thereby relaxing everyone else on the set.

Burr won two Emmys for Perry Mason which originally ran from 1957 to 1966, and has been re-run in syndication ever since. In 2006, the first season became available on DVD.

Burr moved from CBS to Universal Studios, where he played the title role in the television drama Ironside. In the pilot episode, San Francisco Chief of Detectives Robert T. Ironside was wounded by a sniper during an attempt on his life but survived as an invalid in a wheel-chair for the rest of his life. This role gave Burr another hit series, the first crime drama show ever to star a disabled police officer. The show ran from 1967 to 1975. In 1977, Burr starred in the short-lived TV series Kingston: Confidential.

In 1985, Burr was approached by producers Dean Hargrove and Fred Silverman to star in a made-for-TV movie Perry Mason Returns. While he loved the idea he only agreed to do the movie if Barbara Hale returned to reprise her role as secretary Della Street. Not only did Hale agree, but for the first time in the show's history she ended up being the accused when Perry Mason Returns aired in December 1985. The rest of the original cast had since died, but Hale's real-life son William Katt was cast in the TV movie as Paul Drake, Jr. Expected to be only a one-off special, the success of the first movie led to Burr making twenty-six more films before his death. Many of these were filmed in and around Denver, Colorado. In 1988, after three years and nine Perry Mason TV movies, William Katt left to pursue other projects. A new leg-man for Mason was needed and actor William R. Moses was hired to play Ken Malansky, a young and up-and-coming lawyer who goes to work for Mason after he clears him of murder. Moses appeared in the Mason TV movies filmed between 1989 and 1995. By this time Burr was largely wheelchair-bound (in his final Mason movie, he is always shown either sitting or standing while leaning on a table, but never standing unsupported - as his character in Ironside had been - but this time it was due to his real-life failing health). Four more Perry Mason films were made between 1993 and 1995, after Burr's death, with supposed lawyer friends of Perry's defending the accused. However, without Burr, the magic was gone.

In 1993, as he had with the Perry Mason TV movies, Burr decided to do an Ironside reunion movie. In May of that year, The Return of Ironside aired, reuniting the entire original cast of the 1967-1975 hit-series. However, as he was already in his last days suffering from liver cancer, this would be the only Ironside reunion. (In reprising the role of Ironside, Burr was forced to dye his hair red and change his beard in order not to look too much like Perry Mason).

Other work
Burr co-starred in such TV films as Eischied: Only The Pretty Girls Die and Disaster On The Coastliner (both 1979), The Curse of King Tut's Tomb and The Night The City Screamed (both 1980), and Peter And Paul (1981). He also had a supporting role in Dennis Hopper's controversial film Out of the Blue (1980) and spoofed his Perry Mason image in Airplane II: The Sequel (1982).

Burr also worked as media spokesman for the now-defunct British Columbia-based real estate company Block Bros. in TV, radio, and print ads during the late 1970s and early 1980s.

Personal life
Burr's parents, William and Minerva, remarried in 1955 after 33 years of separation. Burr had remained close to them, both during their separation and after their second marriage.

Raymond Burr was gay but was forced to hide his sexuality for most of his life due to the homophobia of his day. He had a 35-year romantic relationship with Robert Benevides (born 1930), a young actor and Korean war veteran whom Burr had met on the set of Perry Mason. For several years in the 1950s, according to an excerpt from Hiding in Plain Sight, a 2008 biography of Burr written by Michael Starr, another young Korean War veteran named Frank Vitti shared Burr's home and was identified in some publications as his nephew.

For most of his life, however, the public believed that Burr was heterosexual. In the late 1950s, Burr was rumored to be romantically involved with the young Natalie Wood. "When I was talking to Dennis Hopper about that," Wood biographer Suzanne Finstad says, "he was saying, I just can't wrap my mind around that one. But you know, I saw them together. They were definitely a couple. Who knows what was going on there?".

Burr's official biography claimed that he had been married three times but that two of his wives and his only child had died. In 1942, while working in London, he claimed to have met an aspiring Scottish actress named "Annette Sutherland" and to have married her the same year. The official biography goes on to claim that, despite protests from him, Sutherland had insisted on fulfilling her acting contract and traveled to Spain with a touring theater company. She then boarded a flight from Lisbon to London BOAC Flight 777-A, perishing on the same flight as English actor Leslie Howard. However, Burr's biographer Ona L. Hill writes that “no one by the name of "Annette Sutherland Burr" was listed as a passenger on the plane”. In fact, only one of Burr's wives, Isabella Ward, can actually be documented (they were married in 1947 and divorced in 1952; reports of the marriage having been annulled are untrue). The other "wives" appear to have never existed (Sutherland was said to be a British actress, yet British Equity has no record of anyone by that name). The same goes for Burr's "son," who is said to have died from an incurable disease sometime in the 1950s. There is no record anywhere of his birth, existence or death.

In 1963, Burr met former actor Robert Benevides (sometimes Benevedes). Benevides, who is credited as production consultant in 21 Perry Mason TV movies, was described as Burr’s "long-time companion" in a 1993 TV Guide article. Together the couple owned and operated first an orchid business, then a vineyard, in the Dry Creek Valley. After Burr died, his niece Minerva began a public feud with Benevides, questioning whether he should have been given the bulk of Burr's estate. Benevides remains the proprietor of the Raymond Burr Vineyards, located at 8339 West Dry Creek Road, Healdsburg, California.

Illness and death
In January 1993, Burr was diagnosed with cancer in his left kidney. But he refused to undergo surgery, as this would have interfered with the shooting schedule of his final two television movies. After filming was completed, it was determined that the cancer had spread to several other organs, making it inoperable. Burr threw several "goodbye parties" before his death aged 76 on September 12, 1993 on his Sonoma County, California ranch near Healdsburg, California. Burr was interred with his parents at Fraser Cemetery, New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada.

On October 1, 1993, friends of Burr mourned him at the Pasadena Playhouse in Pasadena, California. The private memorial was attended by Robert Benevides, Barbara Hale, Don Galloway, Don Mitchell, Barbara Anderson, Elizabeth Baur, Dean Hargrove, William R. Moses, and Christian I. Nyby II.

Hobbies
Burr had at least a dozen hobbies over the course of his lifetime: cultivating orchids, collecting wine and art, collecting seashells, cooking, flying, sailing, fishing and throwing small get togethers with friends. He donated most of his money to charities and friends (see philanthropy). According to A&E Biography, on several episodes of Ironside, Burr was also an avid reader with a retentive memory. In addition, he taught acting classes at Columbia University.

Burr was devoted to his favorite hobby, cultivating and hybridizing orchids. He later developed this passion into an orchid business with his partner, Robert Benevides, a fellow orchidist. Their company, Sea God Nurseries, had, during its 20-year existence, nurseries in Fiji, Hawaii, the Azores Islands, Southern California, and Northern California, and was responsible for adding more than 1,500 new orchids to the world-wide catalog. Burr even developed an orchid he named the "Barbara Hale Orchid".

Burr was also among the earliest importers and breeders of Portuguese Water Dogs in the United States. The breed may have recommended itself to Burr because his life-partner, Benevides, was of Portuguese descent.

Burr's farm land holdings in Sonoma County, California, were where he and Benevides raised Cabernet Sauvignon, Chardonnay, and Port grapes, as well as orchids. The land is still in production, and is today known as the Raymond Burr Vinyards. According to the vineyards' web site, "Raymond Burr didn't want the vineyards named for him. But Robert Benevides, his partner, colleague and companion of 35 years, after much struggle and thought, decided that, in this case, the parallels of man and wine could not be separated; it is not so much a memorial to Raymond Burr as it is his living, breathing presence." Burr also purchased 4,000 acres (1600 ha) on the island of Naitauba, Fiji, in 1965. There the couple oversaw the raising of copra (coconut meat or kernel) and cattle, as well as orchids. This land was sold in 1983 to the self-proclaimed guru Adi Da.

Raymond Burr Quotes

 * "Try to live your life the way you wish other people would live theirs."
 * "Perry Mason is a marvelous show because it has so much to do with peoples' lives and television. People were buying television sets when Perry Mason first went on, and it all goes back to that nostalgia."
 * "I'm a fine guy to be an actor. Can't stand to have my picture taken."
 * "I'm too busy to sleep. Actually, my stand-in, Lee Miller, does my sleeping for me."
 * On reprising his role as Perry Mason in 1985: "When I sat down at the defense table again, it was as if 25 years had been taken off my life. I don't think there's anything wrong with returning to a character. I played MacBeth when I was 19, and I would do it again. But of course, I wouldn't do it exactly the same way. Similarly, I hope there's been a progression in the way I play Perry Mason."
 * On being typecast as Perry Mason: "I find myself resorting to tricks and devices. I do things for the sake of the series that I never before would have done as an actor."
 * On people with special needs: "You can imagine what happens with people who are really handicapped and really crippled, that they have to spend hours in wheelchairs. The only time I had any back trouble in my life was from the time I had to spend in a chair. Yet, I was grateful for the opportunity."
 * On his brief romance with Natalie Wood: "I was very attracted to her. I think she was to me."

Philanthropy
In contrast to the "bad guys" and hard, unbending heroes he often played, Burr was an extraordinarily giving man.

Many servicemen remember him for his participation in United Service Organizations tours in Korea and Vietnam.

He gave enormous sums of money (including his salaries from the Perry Mason movies) to charity. He once sponsored 27 foster children through the Christian Children's Fund. He would sponsor children with the greatest medical needs. Burr always insisted that TV executives and directors treated his co-stars with the same respect shown to him. He also gave generously over many years to the McGeorge School of Law in Sacramento, California, including the donation of some of his Perry Mason scripts.

Burr was heavily involved in raising money for The Bailey-Matthews Shell Museum in Sanibel, Florida.

In addition to running their show business empire, the couple loved to travel and they had getaway spots in several locales. One favorite spot was the Fijian island of Naitauba (pronounced Nye-tum-ba) which they purchased and where they later built a hospital and other services for local islanders.

The Raymond Burr Performing Arts Centre
The Raymond Burr Performing Arts Centre operated in New Westminster for 6 years, British Columbia, opened in October 2000 and closed in 2006, near a city block bearing the Burr family name. Originally a movie theater, under ownership of the Famous Players chain (as the Columbia Theatre), it was an intimate, 238-seat theater. Initial plans included expanding the venue to a 650-seat regional performing arts facility. When in operation, it was the custom to have a picture of Raymond Burr included somewhere on each set, with the first toast on the opening night of every production always dedicated to his memory. The Center was commonly referred to as the "Burr Theater", or simply as "the Burr".

The Burr was closed in 2006 and remained unused until its demolition later that year. 

Burr has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6656 Hollywood Blvd.

Burr in popular culture
Burr was referenced in Beastie Boys' B-Boy Bouillabaisse from the Paul's Boutique album: "I ride around town like Raymond Burr". In an episode of Married...with Children, Al Bundy confuses a TV Guide cover shot of Delta Burke as that of Raymond Burr.

In the animated television series Home Movies, the episode 'Definite Possible Murder' features a plot mirroring Rear Window with a character named Raymond Berland.

Ozzy Osbourne song Perry Mason on the Ozzmosis album.