He turned professional, briefly toured with the Short Brothers and then found himself back in Nashville working with Big Jeff Bess, husband of Hattie Louise "Tootsie" Bess, owner of the famous Tootsie's Orchid Lounge on Music City's Lower Broadway.
orchid | Tootsie | Orchid | Wild Orchid | Wild Orchid (film) | Bee orchid | bee orchid | Trees Lounge | Tootsie's Orchid Lounge | Orchid Technology | Orchid Island | Mercury Lounge | lounge lizard | Green Mill Cocktail Lounge | Blue Orchid | Anacondas: The Hunt for the Blood Orchid | Voodoo Lounge | Tootsie Roll Industries | The Orchid Thief | The Lyricist Lounge Show | The Lounge Lizards | Still Alive at the Veglia Lounge | Skytop Lounge | Salem Orchid | Plaza Premium Lounge | Orchid (screamo band) | Orchid named for Charles' wife Emma. Drawing by Pierre-Joseph Redouté | Mother-in-Law Lounge | Mermaid Lounge | Lyricist Lounge |
He was nominated for the Academy Award for editing four films directed by Pollack: They Shoot Horses, Don't They? (1969), Three Days of the Condor (1975), Tootsie (1982), and Out of Africa (1985).
Hurley Mountain Inn is a restaurant/sports bar in historic Hurley, New York. It was the setting for an upstate bar scene in the movie Tootsie.
Was trained under Harry Wolf A.S.C. for A Little House On The Prairie, John Alonzo for Blue Thunder, John Alcott for The Beast Master, Vilmos Zsigmond for Table For Five, Owen Roizman for Tootsie, Gordon Willis for Broadway Danny Rose, and operated camera several times for Blue Thunder.
It is known that Burch moved to Nashville in the early 1990s where he performed nightly marathon shows at Tootsie's Orchid Lounge, one of Nashville's most notorious honky tonks, making fans of Marianne Faithfull and Chet Atkins and forming his backing band, The WPA Ballclub.
A producer then gave him the lead role in Charot, a movie inspired by Dustin Hoffman's gender-bending performance in Tootsie.
A 1996 study by undergraduate students at Swarthmore College concluded that it takes a median of 144 licks (range 70–222) to get to the center of a Tootsie Pop.