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So, you can read out loud without making too many mistakes; you’ve warmed it up with a genuine smile; and added some attitude for flavor. Now, the final step is to make your voiceover performance realistic by connecting with an audience. If you’re speaking to someone – rather than just reading words off a page – your voiceovers will have an authentic, human feel to them. And most importantly, the audience will believe you.

Let me be clear – the techniques and mindset of voice acting at this advanced level are more numerous and subtle than can adequately be explained in a blog post. This is the core of acting – and it requires years of practice, experimentation and some good coaching and advice to really connect. But I’ll give you some basic ideas to work with.

1. Talk to ONE PERSON. Unless the script specifically calls for you to talk to a group, it’s almost always more effective to have one person in mind, because your listeners will feel like you’re talking to them one-on-one.

2. Pick a SPECIFIC AUDIENCE. It might be someone you know, someone you’ve imagined, or someone in the room at the time – but the more specific your choice, the easier time you’ll have connecting with them.

3. Choose an audience CONSISTENT WITH THE PIECE. If it’s a health care commercial, you might think of someone who is ill, or has a friend or relative who is ill. If it’s an audiobook for children, speak to a child. Sometimes the script will indicate the intended audience. BUT, don’t be afraid to experiment with atypical choices for practice!

4. Remember PROXIMITY & LOCATION. How physically close you are to your audience, as well as the setting, will change your performance. Sitting next to someone in a quiet room yields a different performance than yelling across a crowded cafeteria.

5. Try DIFFERENT APPROACHES. You might try and visualize your audience in front of you, or just recall the visceral feeling of speaking to someone. You may prefer to think of people you know, or invent a fictional audience. Do some experimenting to see what works for you.

6. PRACTICE & REVIEW. Record yourself using different combinations of audience and setting, and listen to the results. You may find that how it feels isn’t always how it sounds, and you need to make some adjustments.

And don’t forget to have fun!

JM

I found this video of one of my favorite character actors, Hank Azaria, explaining how he came up with one of my favorite Simpsons characters, Professor Frink (also Comic Book Guy). Take a look – it’s short and fun – and I’ll be right back.

In the video, Hank mentions that he gave the Simpsons producers a list of the various impressions and accents he does, as a basis for writing characters for him to voice. This reminded me of one of the basic lessons voice actors are taught when it comes to doing characters: it’s not about the VOICE, it’s about the CHARACTER.

A lot of beginners are initially attracted to voiceover work because they do some funny voices or impressions. But just doing a voice is NOT ENOUGH. You must develop fully realized characters.

Impressions and accents are a good place to start to build characters, but it has to go beyond that. You’ve got to give us a multi-dimensional personality – a character with a history, with attitudes and opinions and motivations and various character traits (and flaws!) if we’re really going to believe it and be compelled by it. Grandpa Simpson comes to mind as a very complex, layered character who displays all of these elements.

If you take an animation voiceover class (and you should, even if you don’t plan on focusing on character work, as it’s a great stretch and will help your other work), you’ll probably be given some sort of character sheet – this is a form that you can copy and fill out, to help you build and keep track of your characters. They typically have room for the character’s name, voice type, accent, personality traits and so on. Using these forms (make your own if you need to) and supplementing them with audio recordings of your characters is a great way to start to build your character voice repertoire.

Stay tuned for interviews with some great character voice actors…