- His is the voice you hear on the majority of the trailers/previews at movie theaters nationwide. His body of work included voice over narrations for at least 5,000 film trailers and possibly as many as half a million TV and radio spots.
- In interviews he stated that his voice spontaneously cracked in mid-sentence at the age of 13. He became very self-conscious about his "new" voice until his classmates at school would pay him to speak as their fathers to make "sick calls" on their behalf so they could take a day off from school.
- He would bring portable recording equipment with him on vacation. He once mentioned that he received an urgent call for a voiceover when vacation. He shut himself in the hotel bathroom, took a seat on the toilet and did the job in one take.
- Claimed that he was able to do nearly 80 voice-over jobs in a single day.
- Did voice-over work for over 40 years.
- In an interview he stated that his favorite voice-over for a film trailer was the one he recorded for David Lynch's "The Elephant Man" (1980).
- His death caused such a significant decline of voice-overs in trailers that they have become very rare.
- After high school, he enlisted in the Army, and learned about recording engineering. The first promo he engineered was for Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964).
- Was imitated in Pablo Francisco: Bits and Pieces - Live from Orange County (2004).
- His first professional voice work came while working on the 1964 movie Gunfighters of Casa Grande (1964). He filled in for a voice actor in a radio promo. This led to more voice work; by the 1970s, he was one of Hollywood's busiest voice talents.
- Said that Peter Thomas influenced his career.
- Recorded as many as 25 voice-over sessions in a single day and over 100 separate spots in a day.
- His agent is Vanessa Gilbert.
- Father, with Nita Whitaker, of Christine, Skye and Elyse.
- Don was of French ancestry.
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