The Voice Director Presents: Let’s Talk Voiceover
Let’s Talk Voiceover dives deep into the nitty-gritty universe of voice acting. Hosted by Emmy Award-winning actor & director Gillian Brashear, and casting & talent director Randall Ryan, this is where industry luminaries open up about the personal, the prophetic, the profane, and yes, the professional.
Episodes
Sunday Jun 30, 2024
Lets Talk Voiceover_Episode 43_Lisa Stokke
Sunday Jun 30, 2024
Sunday Jun 30, 2024
For most actors, the dream of hitting it big in any genre would be life-changing. Lisa Stokke has managed to do that on the stage, TV, film, and voice-over. Her optimism and grounded sense of self sometimes mask the fearlessness that has been a hallmark of her career. She's fascinating and inspiring, and has a lot to say about the craft of acting.
Thursday May 30, 2024
Lets Talk Voiceover_Episode 42_Ryan Buckley
Thursday May 30, 2024
Thursday May 30, 2024
A sound designer who started writing dialogue rather than allowing others to "screw it up," Ryan Buckley has been central to the creation of Chivalry 2, a game with a large and loyal fan base that's unlike anything else, and has changed the genre of fighting games. He has a great sense of how to harness creativity, collaborate and empower actors and other creatives to make something bigger than the sum of all the parts.
Sunday Dec 03, 2023
Let’s Talk Voiceover_Episode 41_Kirsty Gillmore
Sunday Dec 03, 2023
Sunday Dec 03, 2023
A native New Zealander who moved to London to pursue acting, Kirsty has become an in-demand video game director. Her background in acting, sound design, and production , and her perspective as an international woman gives her a style and an empathy that's makes her one of the best in the business.
Saturday Apr 08, 2023
Let’s Talk Voiceover_Episode 40_Jeff Howell
Saturday Apr 08, 2023
Saturday Apr 08, 2023
Although trained as an actor, Jeff has had a varied and storied career in voice acting on the other side of the glass. Voice Director in comedy radio, promo & animation, a former Agent, and Production Executive; he is now an in-demand Dubbing Director, with shows on every major streaming network. He is also one of the nicest human beings in the business as well as being a highly respected voice acting coach. There's a lot to digest here, so settle in!
Monday Nov 07, 2022
Let’s Talk Voiceover_Episode 39_Brian Lohnes
Monday Nov 07, 2022
Monday Nov 07, 2022
Haven't thought of play-by-play or live announcing of events as voice acting?. Brian Lohnes possesses, cultivates, and draws from all of the same set of skills when he calls NHRA broadcasts for Fox Sports: musicality, breathing and vocal care, building drama and emotion, storytelling. And, since there's rarely a script, he does it all on-the-fly. Not only that, he runs a school to grow and teach the next generation of play-by-play announcers. Possibly a new career angle? Sit back and listen!
Monday Sep 12, 2022
Let’s Talk Voiceover - Episode 38 - Debra Wilson
Monday Sep 12, 2022
Monday Sep 12, 2022
A force of nature. Inspirational. Wickedly talented. That's what colleagues say about Debra Wilson. She's gone from improv comedy on the stage to sketch comedy on television to movies and one of the most sought-after voice actors in the industry. Mad TV, The Weakest Link, Saints Row, Diablo, Destiny 2, Ratchet & Clank, World of Warcraft, Hearthstone...literally too many to list. What stands out more than her credits is her passion and her love of the craft. Get ready, because a conversation with Debra is a full-contact ride.
Debra Wilson:
... I've been with CESD almost two decades.
Randall Ryan:
Wow. Yeah. That's you and Dave Fennoy.
Debra Wilson:
My crush, by the way. One of my crushes.
Randall Ryan:
Yeah. I think there's a “get in line” on that one.
Debra Wilson:
Yeah. Yeah…mmm.
Randall Ryan:
(laughs) Debra-
Debra Wilson:
I'm going to put you on the spot, ‘cause you're in there too, Randall Ryan, and you know that.
Randall Ryan:
Go ahead, put me on the spot. What are you putting me on the spot for?
Debra Wilson:
I just told you. I said I'm going to put you on the spot because you're in there too. And you know that already.
Randall Ryan:
Oh, that I have a crush on Dave?
Debra Wilson:
No, you idiot.
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs) Oh, that was priceless. Who? Me? Little ol’ me? Little ol’ Randall? Stop it!
Debra Wilson:
Thank you, Gillian. Thank you Goddess, for getting it.
THEME MUSIC
Randall Ryan:
A couple of weeks ago, I was speaking with one of the best and most well-known voice actors in the industry, and Debra Wilson's name came up. “She has to be the best in the industry. I'm not even sure who's second.” That's what this person said. I got to tell you, there is no higher praise in when your colleagues speak privately about you in those terms.
Here's my story. The very first time I worked with Debra, she had a character who was supposed to speak an unintelligible language, and she was inventing this. The thing is that she hadn't even seen the script because it was under such tight NDA. So, the first time she saw it was when she came into the studio. She not only did such a great job inventing this, and in a ridiculously short period of time, she set the bar for what everybody else was going to do with this particular race of people anytime that there was a character there. And oh, by the way: she also voiced two other characters for the same game in the same session that had nothing to do with those.
Years as a cast member on Mad TV, Savathun and Destiny 2, HALO, Saints Road, Diablo, Cosmonious High…she has way too many credits to even attempt a synopsis. It's better if you just hear from the fascinating person that is Debra.
So, let's talk voiceover, Debra Wilson.
Debra Wilson:
Yes. Let's talk voiceover Randall Ryan. Let's talk voiceover, Gillian.
Gillian Brashear:
Let's do.
Debra Wilson:
You need your own island.
Gillian Brashear:
Okay, great. I'll take it.
Debra Wilson:
Yeah, Gillian's Island.
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
And that's how it begins, Gillian. That's how it begins.
Gillian Brashear:
I'll take it. (laughs) You can come, too! You can visit my island, both of you.
Debra Wilson:
Yay. You have internet?
Gillian Brashear:
I will. It's called a pigeon.
Debra Wilson:
Call me when you do.
Randall Ryan:
I never have asked you this.
Debra Wilson:
Uh huh.
Randall Ryan:
You, at least to my consciousness came up more as doing comedy and especially doing sketch stuff. You don't do any of that anymore.
Debra Wilson:
It's not that I don't do it, it's just that it hasn't really come up. And it hasn't been a venue that's come up where it's like, wow, here's this offer. Wow, I want to create this type of show. Or, wow, let's go up and do some standup. Or, wow, let's host this event and bring out comedians. So there just hasn't been the opportunity to do that kind of stuff live more than anything else. And of course, you have to include, in that equation, the pandemic.
Randall Ryan:
So, for you, it was never a conscious, like you know, I think I'm done with this and I'm just going to go do this other thing. VO became kind of a venue for you that essentially filled your plate.
Debra Wilson:
Yes. And then, on-camera stuff started becoming less and less because I knew I was moving in a different direction. And I began to choose moving in a different direction and started getting tattooed, which was a subconscious as well as a very, very conscious decision creatively, which signified not being on camera as much or not being on camera at all.
Randall Ryan:
So, why? Whether you were actually eschewing it or not, why did you just say, "You know what, I think I'm either done with this or I'm not going to pursue it." And you moved into what, really, from an acting perspective is, almost a completely different realm.
Debra Wilson:
No, it's actually the same realm because people have a tendency to believe that voice acting is not acting. And so, it's the exact same realm, I just don't have the lights, camera, the makeup, the wardrobe, but I'm using my mind and I'm using my imagination, I'm using my third eye. And I'm being able to be quite an amazing storyteller because I choose to delve into what I'm doing no differently than what I'm doing on front of camera. I may have cameras and stuff in front of me, but I've got a mic in front of me, and either way there is a story that needs to be told. And at the end of the day, nobody wants to hear it, everybody wants to feel it.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
And so, being able to create from that space easily and more openly and more giving, and being able to bring myself to the table is really, really wonderful. And creating all of those varying choices. Because no matter what, even if you're in a booth, you are never having a monologue. It's never a monologue, unless it specifically is written as a monologue, it's never a monologue, it's always a dialogue. It's always a conversation.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
Even if the other being, other creature, other sentient thing that takes up space is not speaking, their emotions speak, their body language speaks. And so, you're still using your third eye no matter what. You get a chance to create that, and you get a chance to experience that and bring yourself to the table on both realms. So, it is no different. It's absolutely no different. In fact, sometimes, it's even more challenging for me in voiceover emotionally because I go so deep. I bring up a lot of stuff, which is really wonderful and cathartic at the same time. But I'm very proud that I make sure that my most authentic voice of who I am begins to be a part of the being that gets the chance to come forth through me, through my voice, through my body, through my heart, through my third eye, to be able to have their story told. And I'm very grateful that I'm that vessel for that. It just so happens that voiceover became so prominent before letting go, before me saying, no, I don't want to do this anymore. Or, hey, I'm moving away. Voiceover had already become prominent at that point.
And, the realms of voiceover were a full spectrum: ADR, looping, book on tape, animation, straight announce, promo announce for NBC. And most recently, I'm the first woman and the first person of color to voice two major attractions, one at Disneyland and one at Disney World Orlando, the first one being the Jungle Cruise.
Gillian Brashear:
That's great.
Randall Ryan:
Wow.
Gillian Brashear:
That's fantastic, Debra.
Debra Wilson:
So, that's pretty significant. Disney has become so inclusive and they said we're going to flip the script to a certain extent in the narrative slightly. And if Albert Awol, traditionally, goes off on his wild adventure and leaves his capable sister to do it because they know each other and he trusts her with the radio station, then you get Skipper Missy, darling.
Gillian Brashear:(laughs)
Randall Ryan:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
And most recently, at Disney World, which is a huge, I cried, I bawled when I found out I booked this, which is a significant thing for me. After 40 years of using Tom Kane who had been doing the voice of the Monorail system, he's the Monorail captain, he's been doing it for 40 years, now it's me.
Randall Ryan:
Wow.
Debra Wilson:
So, I am now the new Monorail captain. I have recorded all of the dialogue. It's a lot of work and a lot of paperwork, but it's going to be interesting to see all these people from around the world in my mind's eye, or who live in the area and traditionally come, to hear a woman's voice. Yes, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome aboard.
Gillian Brashear:
That's amazing. I'm so excited for you for that.
Debra Wilson:
Thank you, goddess. Thank you, goddess. Yeah, it's pretty prolific. So, I run the gamut. Plus, I do a lot of creature voices for video. I worked on a film directed by Philip Noyce, Australian director who directed Clear and Present Danger. It's a film that you can find on Amazon Prime and it's called the Darkest Hour.
And Naomi Watts is the only physical person in there. I think there's one snippet of a physical person, but you only see him from a rear-view mirror, only his eyes. And I play the 911 officer. But the character's name is Dedra Wilkinson. And Dedra is spelled D-E-D-R-A.
Gillian Brashear:
Uh huh!
Debra Wilson:
And my name is spelled D-E-B-R-A. And her last name begins with W-I-L and so does mine. So, I like to believe in kismet.
Randall Ryan:
For many years now, I've made it a point of sticking around to watch the credits in movies and watching the extra voices and things of that nature.
Debra Wilson:
All the loop groups.
Randall Ryan:
Right, and it's amazing how many times you come up. I was like, "Oh, I know her." (laughs)
Debra Wilson:
(laughs) It's a lot of fun. And also, when Jane Lynch was hosting the revised version of The Weakest Link on NBC, I was the game show announcer for that. And Steve Harvey had a judge show. I don't know if it'll come back for another season on ABC prime time, and I was the court announcer on that, but it was all voiceover. And so, I'm really digging voiceover to the point in which I really don't have the same passion or drive for on-camera because of the way I look. And at my age, it's easier to hire someone who looks like a grandma or a senior than to say, "Okay. Well, she doesn't have any hair and she has tattoos and we need to cover her up." And so, it's easier to hire somebody who already looks the part than to cover me up. When it was all comedy, it was no problem covering me up, I wasn't nearly as tattooed. But when I say that I'm tattooed, I'm tattooed from the tips of my fingers all the way through my neck, down my entire body, to the tops of my feet.
Gillian Brashear:
Wow. Debra.
Debra Wilson:
I have a full body suit.
Gillian Brashear:
Wow.
Randall Ryan:
But I would say this, and Gillian's going to be able to speak to this more than me because she's got an on-camera career. But…
Gillian Brashear:
Hmm.
Randall Ryan:
…you don't look like anybody that I know. And I understand we're all doing voiceover. So, all of us kind of live in this world where nobody tends to know what we look like. I think you're extraordinarily striking. Part of it is that you don't look your age. You don't look anything like what something is supposed to be. And so, it would just seem to me that if this was something that you really wanted to pursue, which is why I'm guessing it's something that you don't. so it's obviously not something that you're even pursuing. At least, that's my guess.
Debra Wilson:
Correct. It's not anything I'm pursuing. However, if someone said, listen, I have an independent film. There's no money in it, but it's a passion project of mine. For me, it is the flip side of the same coin as voiceover. And if someone is saying, “I really hope that you will come in and help tell this story. This story is very important to me. And it speaks volumes to the world.” In a heartbeat. In a heartbeat for stuff like that. As long as it's a project that I go, it's a passion project. I want to steep myself into this role and allow this being to come forth and tell their story. But they're far and few between, because a lot of the auditions that come in, and those are far and few between to begin with, are the sassy black grandmother.
Giilian Brashear:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
The sassy black friend.
Gillian Brashear:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
The girlfriend who is friends with the others who went to college together, and one of them is dying of cancer, and they play music and they dance. And one of them married a rich guy, but he's a ne'er-do-well and cheats on her.
Gillian Brashear:
(chuckles)
Debra Wilson:
And so, they all get together to be friends again, and you know, that kind of stuff. But I did a lot of that when I was on Mad TV, ‘cause those are real sitcom characters. And some things never change in television.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
It has to a certain extent in how it's shot. Things like Modern Family, those amazing characters, they're all layered.
Gillian Brashear:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
But it's still a sitcom, and it still has its parameters.
Gillian Brashear:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
And so, because of those parameters, I realize in voiceover I don't have any parameters. The only parameter I can set is a limitation for myself, and I choose not to do that. And so, no one cares whether I'm a little boy or if I'm a dragon. No one says, "Is that dragon black? Is that dragon a woman?" Unless it's specifically in the specs that way, but nobody cares. And as I get older, I'm working more than I've ever worked. I'm 60 and the momentum is only growing. I'm also Daisy Duck for Disney.
Randall Ryan:
Are you really? (laughs)
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
I know. Who would have thunk it when you look at me, right? And you hear this voice and (as Daisy Duck) “all of sudden and this comes out. Really? Quackers. Oh, Donald!”
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
But it was done by the prolific and amazing Tress MacNeille, who I know both of you know. But when it comes to the show that she was doing initially for the first season called Mickey Mouse Funhouse on Disney Junior, she said, "I don't want to do a second season. I'm so busy with so many other things." And Daisy Duck was a huge commitment because sometimes it branches out into other things that are Disney-oriented.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
And it has for me already. So, it's been very, very lovely. And it was a grueling audition process because I don't do soundalikes. And initially, they wanted someone who sounded very much like Tress MacNeille doing Daisy Duck, and that's a tall order. Because Tress MacNeille is fucking brilliant, number one. And number two, to sound like somebody who's doing something else as opposed to sounding like them. And I kept thinking, I don't do soundalikes. I don't enjoy soundalikes unless it's Whoopi Goldberg, who I have down, Oprah Winfrey, who I have down, and Viola Davis, who I have down. But our timbres are all in those same registers.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
I didn't enjoy the process. The first time I did it it took me three hours to get through a single audition and sent it to my agent. And then the second time I got a call back, and the first thing I thought was "Why?" It wasn't a joyful “Hey, guess what? You got a call back!” It was like, Ugh. So, now, I have to go through a grueling process again of sounding like a woman who sounds like Daisy Duck.
Randall Ryan:
(laughs)
Gillian Brashear:
(chuckles)
Debra Wilson:
I did the call back and I went, okay, I don't do soundalikes, but guess what? Here's the positive. At least I got through a second audition, a call back for a soundalike and I don't do soundalikes and I don't enjoy soundalikes, and yet I got a call back. That's really great. That's the end of that. That's what I did. I wiped my hands and went, that's great. Until I got a third callback, and I went, "What the fuck?" It was not joyful.
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs)
Randall Ryan:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
But when I went in the third time, I was like, "Oh, fuck." And I didn't mean to tank the second audition, but I showed up an hour and five minutes late.
Randall Ryan:
Mmmm.
Debra Wilson:
I was on my motorcycle and I took a route. And I was like, "Oh, I'll find my way around Burbank this way. I'll go this way."
Randall Ryan:
Mmm..
Debra Wilson:
And I didn't know how I ended up. And I came in and was like, "I am so sorry. I really am." And I really was. But they were gracious. The folks at Disney were so absolutely gracious, like they really wanted to hear me. And the last time I went in, of course, I was on time and I was like, "Okay, just go through it again and this is going to be it. They're going to choose someone else. So, just go in and do what you have to do. You've done it twice already. This is like a third tooth being pulled. You're used to it. No, no, we can't, here we go."
Randall Ryan:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
And it was different. Something clicked. And it was one of the most fun auditions. It was silly. I bunny-hopped through it. It was amazing. And my amazing agent, Pat Brady, who has a close relationship with the Disney Corporation who is now retired, had a retirement party. And someone from Disney was there and said, "I want to tell you something, I'm a producer on the show and congratulations, we wanted you. But what ended up happening is Disney corporation wanted that Tress MacNeille sound. They were afraid of losing that and losing audience.” But they didn't know what they wanted. So, their conformity was the Tress MacNeille template.
Randall Ryan:
Mmm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
But not just Tress MacNeille, Tress MacNeille as Daisy Duck template, which is a tall order. And so, he said, "Well, what is Daisy Duck? What is Daisy duck? Who is Daisy Duck? And all these Daisy Ducks that came before Tress. What is it to the corporation as opposed to this person that didn't exist when Daisy Duck was around? So, what is Daisy Duck? If you had to describe her, you would describe her by personality, but not by a person, not a human being. You're making her a human being. You're making Daisy Duck Tress MacNeille, and it should be the other way around. So, who is Daisy Duck? And can this person, Debra Wilson, be Daisy Duck in all of those characteristics that has always been Daisy classically, and the stuff that has been written for Tress MacNeille, in general, in how we've kind of evolved Daisy Duck just a smidge from the 1950s and 60s, can we just update her?”
And so, when they said, "Okay, here's what you do. Here's Daisy in this situation,” and I had to do some soundalike stuff. And then, they stopped the soundalike stuff almost immediately and went straight into “let's do an episode.”
Randall Ryan:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
“Here's how Tress does it. We're not asking you to do Tress. We're just asking you to be Daisy: sassy, fun, all of those things, in this register though. The only thing we require from Disney is this particular register because we don't want it to match with Minnie Mouse.”
Randall Ryan:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
And so, I did. And then, I became Daisy. And they let me become Daisy. And Daisy became me. So, the next person who does Daisy Duck, it will always be prolifically, and it will always be classically, what they want for Daisy Duck. And can you fit the role and fit the bill as Daisy Duck with these characteristics in these specs? As opposed to you have to sound like Debra Wilson, she did it before and you have to sound like the Debra Wilson as Daisy Duck.
Randall Ryan:
Mm Hmm.
Debra Wilson:
(as Daisy Duck) So, now, Daisy sounds like this, but not too far Tress MacNeille. Quackers, really? Oh, Minnie! Mickey! Oh, Donald, really?”
Randall Ryan:
(laughs)
Gillian Brashear:
So did you do Daisy before you did your bits for the Monorail and the Jungle Cruise?
Debra Wilson:
I've been doing Daisy Duck for about a year now.
Gillian Brashear:
Mm.
Debra Wilson:
Because what they did is they said, "Well, we've got a lot of catching up to do. Since we know that Tress MacNeille is no longer interested in doing the series, we've got a lot of catching up to do.” So every recording session, usually on Fridays, was five to six episodes per Friday. And along with music. And I had to sing in Daisy Duck's register.
Randall Ryan:
Oh, yeah.
Debra Wilson:
Which is a challenge for me with my voice. But, I managed it because it was Daisy and I was like, "Whatever, you're not you. So, stop thinking about you're a register. You're Daisy." And if you can talk like Daisy, then you can sing like Daisy, and you will. And I sing. So, it's like, you got this. You got this.
Randall Ryan:
You know, Gillian, you were saying something to me, I don't even know how long ago it was. But you said something about Debra and just the way that she throws herself into something that's a little bit different than somebody else, I don't remember exactly what you said with that.
Gillian Brashear:
Well, what I find so interesting about working with you Debra, and also listening to you talk is just the total abandoned into the depths that you're willing and wanting to go, and I think that's really interesting. So, I think the conversation that we had been having, Randall, was that sometimes people do need to be, I don't want to say led, because I don't know that that's particularly fair, but allowed. Here, you can do this and you can go farther. And there's just more to do with the characters. I think it's rare sometimes when you hear someone approach a character and you go, "Wow, I had never considered that" or "That is so really interesting. I actually have to stop and listen to it for a bit just to let it all soak in all the levels of what is happening.” And that sort of gets in a nutshell of what happens for me when I'm working with Debra. (laughs)
Debra Wilson:
(giggles) I call it immersion and possession, because I need that being to take over. So, before I start any session I will ask a million questions, and then I will talk to them as that person; that person will come through me. It really is like an immersion and possession. And that person will come through…
Gillian Brashear:
Mmm.
Debra Wilson:
…and they'll tell you a moment about their lives. And then, they'll begin. It works for two reasons: because I allow that possession to take place, that person is completely aware of their life. They're conscious, they're now a sentient being in their life, and they're just using my body to do it. And the booth director and the game devs or whoever's listening in can also go, "Yes, we like this voice. Let's raise the register. Let's give her more of this. Let's give her more of that." And so, it works as a dual purpose. But once I'm involved, I have an emotional aspect to this life, a personal aspect to this life, a family aspect. And what I'll do is I will break down that story immediately in that booth, as I am introducing myself. And I'll tell you about my life, where I've been, why I am, who I am. So, I never go approach anything without asking why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why?
Because all those details are important because a lot of people don't pay attention to it. But emotionally, they register that vibration…
Gillian Brashear:
Mmm…
Debra Wilson:
…because it comes from a reality and it becomes from an authenticity.
Gillian Brashear:
Yeah.
Debra Wilson:
So how you're looking at somebody and how somebody looks at you, you can't hide it. Just like body language. You can't hide it.
Gillian Brashear:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
And so, it's really, really important because body language should be used, because it says I'm not hiding my authentic being in this moment. I'm giving it a door opening, so that this other being can come through and use it and tell their story.
Gillian Brashear:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
They don't have their own emotion fully because they came from a page. But they have mine, and they go, "Yes, I can relate to that." So, I'm going to take that and borrow that, and I'm going to cut myself open with your past. And that's how I work.
Gillian Brashear:
Mm hmm. That makes a lot of sense to me because I am listening when I'm in the director mode, but also as an actor, too. I'm always listening for that tone or that scintillation that is the sound of something being true. You just know it when you hear it like, aha and that's it. That's the one, that's where everything comes together: the reality, the truth of the character, and the emotion drops in. And then, suddenly, it's alive.
Randall Ryan:
There are actors that do this. It's kind of like Gillian saying there are some people that need to be led and that's not really fair, because that's NOT really fair. But you seem to have the ability to both simultaneously allow yourself to be very vulnerable with what you impart, with what you do, with what you allow to come to the table.
Randall Ryan:
And yet, you never lose yourself. It's an interesting juxtaposition. What is the mechanism that allows you to essentially throw all of yourself onto the table and throw yourself into a character, and allow all those personal vulnerabilities to come forth in the character and then still just be able to turn on and say, "Thanks. That was fun guys." And walk away.
Debra Wilson:
Sometimes, I do have a bit of a challenge walking away immediately, and they say, "Hey, you okay? You need a break?" And then, I just recalibrate. So, sometimes it does take me a minute. Even if the scene takes three seconds, four seconds, where I'm saying one word. But the one word is very, very loaded like a no or a yes or anything else. And so, it's not a throwaway, it means everything. Because one word can be the emotional stretch and expanse of years of experience or years of pain in that one word. And so, my job is to serve the project. Initially, I'm a storyteller. And people say voiceover and I say, yes. But first and foremost, before being a voiceover artist or a voice actor, I am a storyteller. And so, it's important for me to tell your story. And so I'm here to serve your project.
And I liken it like this.
You hire a babysitter and you go out for the night. And the babysitter calls their friends and lets the kids run around, and lets them do what they want while their friend comes over, and they drink a beer out of the fridge. And right before their guardian comes home, they put the kids in bed. They wash their face quickly, brush their teeth and say “Shh. now, pretend you're sleeping.” And so, they don't really pay attention. But an au pair says, "I will treat your children like they're my children." So, there is no phone that I have with me. No one is allowed over. I read with them, I engage them, I help them with homework, I play with them, I stimulate them. We watch something that is child-friendly, that is of your approval. I give them snacks that is of your approval. I bathe them. I put them in bed. I read them a story. I tuck them in. And you come in to do the rest by tucking them in or seeing that they're asleep, safe and sound. And so for me, it's the same thing with somebody's story. When they want to tell the story, whether it's a video game or an animation or anything, I have to be your au pair. I have to make sure you get everything you want so that you go “this is purely my vision. And little did I know that this would be the voice.” Because a lot of times in voiceovers people are like, and especially with commercials, I don't know until I hear it.
Randall Ryan:
Yeah.
Debra Wilson:
You know, they can describe something, but it's like, mmm…I'll know when I hear it. And so, my responsibility is when I book something to be able to support and help you carve out that thing that is definitive and why: the emotion, the psychology behind it, and ask you every question to go “why,” so that being comes to life and you go, "Fuck, that's what I’m…that’s it. That's it." So I ask questions, and I make sure that I dig into myself on that psychological level and on that emotional level and that cutting-that-self-open level, so that that being becomes so three-dimensional that you go, "This is what I had in mind. And now it's off the paper."
Randall Ryan:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
It's jumped off the paper, it's jumped off the pages and it's exactly what you want. Which makes it easier when you're directing me, because now, that is a full body that has depth and breadth. You can go, "I want this, I want this. I don't want this. I don't want this. Try it this way, try it this way, do it this way, do it this way. Don't do it this way, blah, blah, blah." And that being is just there to tell their story. And they know that you are guiding them and helping them tell their story. They know that directors and game developers are there to help them tell their story so that they can be alive. And so, it's easier for me to be directed by people who are like, "I want this, I don't want this. I want this. I don't want this. Okay, do this, do this, do this, do this." Because it's not a dictation to me. It's not a dictatorship. It's a matter of, this was your baby. And now, I am here to serve your project. And in serving your project, I want to be all that you expect and all that you want and all that you need, and beyond that. So that you go, I'm so proud of this. I look forward to doing this. And everyone goes, "Yes, this role is fulfilled." And it becomes something that's important. I did a video game and I had no idea how massive and internationally prolific this game is, and it's called Destiny and Destiny 2.
Randall Ryan:
Right.
Debra Wilson:
I had no idea who Savathun was. I didn't play the game. I don't know anything about it. I've heard the title. And then, when I got the role, I still didn't know. And so, I was just bringing the humanity to this being because people have the tendency to use the word evil; she's evil. And I'm like, well, I don't believe that anyone's evil. I believe that they have an intention that you just don't understand. She has to be that loner who does what she needs to do in order to reach a particular goal, whether people understand it or not. And that, in and of itself, has an emotional toll on a being, to know that no one is with them. And so, they turn their back on everything as everything is turned their back on them. So, instead of being just this evil, non-emotional being, the psychopath, it's because you have not been loved.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
And so, I'm always bringing those human elements because I don't care if you're playing the sentient being or a tree, the moment it speaks it has human emotions. The moment it speaks! And therefore, there isn't any role that I can't bring my emotional and psychological self to.
Randall Ryan:
I agree.
Debra Wilson:
This game went nuts when it came out, because it came out on Tuesday, 2/22/22.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hm.
Debra Wilson: And I got massively solicited on Cameo to do cameos as this Savathun. And a fan had to tell me the lore of Savathun and the lore of Destiny and how it's played, and the massive groups that play it across the world in clans. And it was really powerful, and it was really wonderful. And some people even came to me on Cameo, some people like, "I'm going through something and I need the strength of Savathun. Would you do her voice and strengthen me and somehow, or offer advice or share with me?"
Randall Ryan:
Mm hm.
Debra Wilson:
And so, it's been a great vehicle that people have emotionally used this character to go, "I need something in my life," or "I feel like I'm missing something and I want to connect." And I've been able to take what I do in the booth outside of my booth and authentically share with people. And that to me was the greatest gift of all.
Randall Ryan:
Were you the original person doing Savathun or did you replace somebody else?
Debra Wilson:
There was no Savathun. Savathun had been talked about in Destiny lore for 10 years, 10 years.
Randall Ryan:
So, you are the original?
Debra Wilson:
Yes. There's just been dialogues and monologues of Savathun, but she had never been a playable character and no one had ever really seen her. So, she's in the lore. But this was the first time, Destiny 2 The Witch Queen was actually, oh, my God, we get a chance to really see Savathun because she's all throughout the lore. But now, we get a chance to see who she is and what her voice is.
Randall Ryan:
Interesting. Interesting. The other question I kind of have along the same line of the first one was: given that you at least, again, to the consciousness of someone like myself came up through comedy, what was your love first? Was it literally just acting and storytelling? Was it comic? Was it just performance in general? Because you also sing, all of that. What took you from childhood, essentially, to this is what I'm going to do.
Debra Wilson:
You're absolutely right. It was acting and storytelling. I loved being other people. I loved being other people for reasons that had been dark, because of childhood trauma. And I loved being other people because I was fascinated with how I could glom on and absorb. I was relentless when it came to glomming on something and absorbing. I learned how to do an English accent by the time I was like five years old.
Randall Ryan:
Wow.
Debra Wilson:
My parents thought it was a hoot..
Randall Ryan:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
…because it was a Diet Rite soda commercial, and the woman on the commercial was British. And I glommed onto wanting to do accents. And because of falling in love with that English accent from that commercial, I wanted to watch The Monkees for Davey Jones. And I wanted to watch H.R. Pufnstuf, and anything that had a British accent. British comedies, the Beatles, any interviews with people that were Brits.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
Any British movie. So, for me, I was glomming on and I glommed onto character actors. I glommed onto those that were the bad men of character actors in the 1970s and '80s. I had to be the only one my age, who was 13, 14 years old, who would buy a TV Guide. And back then, TV Guide would do a cast list after it did the synopsis.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
And I would circle the cast lists to see who these actors were and watch them. And I realized for me at an early age psychologically, I was also the only kid that I knew that had a subscription to Psychology Today at the age of 14.
Randall Ryan:
(laughs)
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs) Who were some of those favorite actors that you circled?
Debra Wilson:
Oh, my God, William Smith, Anthony Zerbe. Oh, my God. They're just so many of them. Juliet Lewis's father, Jeffrey Lewis. I was obsessed with him. I was also obsessed with JB Perry. JB Perry turned out was Matthew Perry's father. Robert Pine, who turns out that he's Chris Pine's father. I was obsessed with Robert Pine. Kevin Spacey, he did a series called Wise Guy on CBS, and it was a recurring role for a whole season.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
And he was a psychopath and it was amazing. And so, I loved watching these psychopaths because I knew that there was emotional and psychological damage. There was a kinship for me because I felt my own emotional and psychological damage. Of course, they acted out on it, and they were my escape. Their pain was so great that they did what they did.
Gillian Brashear:
Fascinating. Were there women as well?
Debra Wilson:
Not so much women because it was the '70s and the '80s.
Gillian Brashear:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
More than anything else, you had Wonder Woman, you had Charlie's Angels.
Gillian Brashear:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
So, more than anything else, you had women that were heroes and women that were badasses.
Gillian Brashear:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
Women's lib, all of it, you know? And then, you had women in comedy who I fell in love with because of what they do. Ruth Buzzi!
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
Joanne Worley…
Gillian Brashear:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
…who became heroes. Carol Burnett!
Gillian Brashear:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
It was just... I was obsessed. Lucille Ball. So, for me, they were the other spectrum of not just comedy but heroes. They were prolific. Joan Rivers, who I ended up working with, on a series with her. People like that who caught me as women who were coming to the forefront, and who had to deal with the men who said, "Women aren't that funny."
Randall Ryan:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
They said it behind closed doors while they were smoking their cigarettes. And it was general knowledge in the industry that women weren't funny; that's why women never got the chance.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
But yet, Joan Rivers still was the first woman to ever host the Tonight Show.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
It was brilliant. And her symbol was always a bee. And the reason her symbol and jewelry and everything else was a bee was because according to the physics and the physiology of a bee, its body weight is too massive for its small wings, proportionately, so it's not supposed to fly. But tell that to the bumblebee that's already flying.
Randall Ryan:
Right.
Debra Wilson:
And her thing was, you can't tell a bumblebee that it can't fly. And that's what she was, and that's what she was symbolic of. She was an amazing human being and I loved working with her.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hm.
Debra Wilson:
And she also cut herself open in order to share. I was her audience warmup as well.
Gillian Brashear:
Wow!
Debra Wilson:
And because I volunteered. I said, "I want to do the warmup. I want to do the warmup." And what I did was I memorized everybody's name in the audience. So that by the time she came ou, I introduced them individually.
Randall Ryan:
(laughs)
Gillian Brashear:
That is fascinating.
Debra Wilson:
And here's the also thing about kismet: my manager at the time's name was Joan Rosenberg. And Joan River's married name is Joan Rosenberg.
Randall Ryan:
I did not know that.
Debra Wilson:
And so, at the audition she just said, (as Joan Rivers) "Oh, I like her. Hire her. Yes. Oh, she's the one. She's the one.{
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
“I love her already. She's great." And that's how that came to be. Because when I auditioned, I was doing improv. For me, it was like, it doesn't matter whether I get this. And I think going into acting, it wasn't a matter of where's my agent and what do I have to do? And I'm going to get this and I'm going to make this. It was a very lackadaisical attitude that I've always had and I still have. Like it'll come, and you just be yourself and have a good time. And that's a rarity because most people do the hustle thing.
Gillian Brashear:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
And I have to admit, I never hustled. I never. I am 60 years old and I never had to hustle for work. When it didn't come I had to let it go. And that was a psychological and emotional challenge for me. But I never tried to hustle for work and get that back. Never. And so, when the Joan Rivers thing happened, it was, I don't care if I get this. Right now, my audition is with Joan Rivers on a stage here at CBS Studios in New York on 11th Avenue and 57th Street. The lights are on, I'm dressed for the audition and they're shooting my audition like it's a TV show. Fuck it. I'm on TV with Joan Rivers right now. I don't give a fuck if I work this show!
Randall Ryan:
(laughs)
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
I already have this. This moment is it for me. I did not care. This moment was it. This moment was the job. And if I do a great job here, I don't care because even if I don't book it, I don't go “what did I miss? What did I not do?” I'm leaving it on the floor. I'm spilling it all on. And because I had been doing improv in New York in comedy theaters with troupes, she could throw stuff to me and I would throw it right back. And I would joke with her and there was no audience there, but I would go to the cameraman, "Hi, what's your name? Okay. Try this, watch one. How did blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah." And then, you had to read a prompter, and then “Back to you Joan.” And so, I played with her. It was Joan Rivers!
Randall Ryan:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
So, I conversed with her. It was never like, "Hi, Debra." And I was like, "Hi, Joan." No, "Hey, Joan, how are you today? We're going to have a great show, aren't we? Well, actually, you're going to have a great show. Aren't you? Okay, well I'm looking forward to it." And she's like, "Tell us about this, watch Debra.” “Sure." And I could sell ice to Eskimos at that point…
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
…because it was pretend. It was the biggest fun pretend. That was the first time I went “this is amazing. And if I don't get it, that's fine.” And I remember doing voiceovers in my friend's basement because I would hear these radio commercials with voiceovers and I would go and find magazines, and then read all of the text from the magazines, from the ads in the magazines. And I would ask my friend: listen, you have a studio, a music studio. Would you just put music behind this and then put it on a cassette for me? And I would listen going, did I sound good enough, like it would be a real spot? Yup. Okay. I'm done. So, I never pursued it. But it was a matter of: could I be as good as someone I hear? And did I feel it? And did it work? And I was very meticulous back then as well, because I wanted to sound just like everyone else. I wanted to be as professional as everyone else. And when I sounded that way, I was done. Same thing with Joan Rivers.
Randall Ryan:
So, you talk about the hustle. You talk about the not-doing-the-hustle.
Debra Wilson:
Correct.
Randall Ryan:
How did the work initially come about? Because very few people, if lucky as even the right word, get that kind of lucky where there's just enough work, especially initially, that they don't have to hustle.
Debra Wilson:
Here's how it started: working for the city of New York Parks and Recreation, decide to go downtown Manhattan because Young Guns was opening up.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hm.
Debra Wilson:
Got a chance to see it, came out early, it was already in downtown. I was in the Village. Somebody was handing out flyers for a show. Improv at the beginning. What do you mean improv? Oh, these guys that come out, they get suggestions from the audience and then they create comedy on the spot. That's really cool. Preface, I'd already gone to the high school of performing arts.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hm.
Debra Wilson:
But I didn't take it seriously. Like, it was fun to be immersed in that. But like Joan Rivers…yes, I ended up booking the show. But if I didn't, it was like, this is an amazing experience.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hm.
Debra Wilson:
So, for me, I was always living to be in the experience in that moment. But I was like, I don't want to starve. I don't want to have to work hard at this; I want to enjoy it. And the moment it's not fun for me. I'm like a three-year-old: I'm out and I cry. I don't want to do this.
Randall Ryan:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
So, I said, I'm not hustling for stuff like that. I'm not going to be a starving artist. People who have to do this for their art. They're just passionate about it. I'm like, "Yeah, great for you. I like having food in my stomach, I don't know about you. I like a roof over my head and I like my jewelry." So, I went to the show. Everyone was with a group. I was very much a loner still. And at one point the improv group goes, "Hey, we'd like a volunteer from the audience," which is a part of their show. No one would get up. People were pushing each other, no, you go, you go, you go.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hm.
Debra Wilson:
I had done theater. I came from the high school's performing arts. So, for me, it was like, "Okay, let me just see what this is." Because I didn't know what improv was. So, for me, it was an experiment.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hm.
Debra Wilson:
Because it was so “improv? What's improv? I don't know, come and see the show.: Went, raised my hand and it was only two rules, yield and don't deny. So whatever happens, go along with everything.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hm.
Debra Wilson:
Don't deny it, go along with everything. Great. So, there was an improv, they got all the suggestions from the audience and I'll never forget. It was a spy mystery movie and it was called The Game. The exercise was called Foreign Movie. So, two of the improv troupe would sit down in the audience and they would dub what we were doing into English…
Randall Ryan:
Mm hm.
Debra Wilson:
…while I mouthed gibberish. And the other actor who was in the troupe would mouth gibberish. And so, whatever these two said, we had to do.
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
Unless we took over. And then, whatever they said after that we would do. And so, it was a spy movie that took place in Paris on the Eiffel Tower. And at the end, we fall off. And that was the suggestion.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hmm.
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
So, for me, I was already in that mindset to have fun. I'm like, "Okay, only two rules to this game? Fucking easy!”
Randall Ryan:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
Yield and don't deny. Go along with it. I go along with everything. And so, for me, I got... like a child, I got immersed. So, it became very real for me.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hm.
Debra Wilson:
And so for me, I didn't see the humor in it because I wasn't trying to be funny. I was trying to do the improv, which was you’re a spy and you're going to fall off the Eiffel Tower. But the people who are doing your voice are telling you. So, they're the vessel, they're filling my vessel.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hm.
Debra Wilson:
Just like every character that I do with voiceover fills my vessel and then it's commitment time. And that's exactly what happened.
Gillian Brashear:
Hm.
Debra Wilson:
The owner of the troupe said, "Listen, we don't have a lot of black people that do improv, and certainly not a lot of black women. Would you join the troupe?" "No, I have a city job." Okay. But would you like to do a workshop, just for fun and do it some more? Like if you don't want to come back on-stage and do it and you don't want to join the troupe, let's do a workshop. On a Saturday, we're just all coming around. We're playing and coming up with new ideas for games.” Okay, I'd like to sit around and meet you guys again and say hi again. Absolutely, after working with you. I did, there were three other black women there. And I went, what the fuck is this scam?
Randall Ryan:
(laughs)
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
And we all played. And I'm like, "This man is trying to get into black women's panties."
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
‘Cause there are only black women here. He's done it. Because that's what I thought. He must have done this with other women…
Randall Ryan:
Uh huh.
Debra Wilson:
…and got them on-stage. And it was like, "Hey, you know, come and play."
Gillian Brashear:
Mm hm.
Debra Wilson:
And then, pick the pussy he wants. That's what I felt.
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
That's what I felt. He going to pick the pussy he wants, you know what I'm saying? Like a fucking box of Toblerone.
Randall Ryan:
(laughs)
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs) Box of Toblerone!
Debra Wilson:
What ended up happening is everybody left, and it was just me and him. And I was like, “I'm going to have to beat this white man down. I'm going to have to beat this white man down in the rehearsal hall in Manhattan.” And he said, "I just wanted to let you know that this was a professional audition." They have picture and resume. But you, you get so into it and you listen and you pay attention, and you're not trying to force yourself. You know how to flow. You naturally do improv. We work on the weekends. It won't interfere with your city job and we make money. You can bring friends. You can bring family. They get a chance to see you perform. If you do no other performance, think about it. We would love to have you in the troupe. You're a new addition,. you're a new dynamic, you're a black woman. We don't get a lot of black women that do improv. You're going to bring a whole new dynamic to this all-white troupe. And you have your voice. I mean, your voice! And I went, "okay."
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
A month later, amanager was there because she had a standup who was coming on after us. “Hey, you know what? You're really wonderful. I would really love to represent you.” No, I don't do this professionally. This is fun. “You sure?” Mm hm. I don't do this. This is just fun, thank you very much. The person she was representing was a man at the time.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
So anyway, troupes come and go and I'm learning how to write now. Oh, this is fun.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hm.
Debra Wilson:
So, I'm learning how to write and I'm already doing what I'm doing with the improv and this is great. We're writing sketches and we're writing improv pieces and things. And this is improv exercises and improv games. This is really great! One of the women in there, Nancy Murrah, God love her. I just adore this woman. So, she ends up joining, it's an all-women's group called Significant Others. We write, we play, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. We do some stuff. Nancy says, "Listen, I'm auditioning for a TV show. It's a pilot. I think you should audition with me." "Nancy. I don't do this professionally." "I know, you say that, but you're already been doing it professionally because you get paid for it. And it's just a pilot, it may go nowhere, but it's going to be fun to audition. And you're not a threat because we work together. And I don't see your talent overshadowing mine. And I don't see my talent overshadowing yours. But we worked together, because we had this Clarence Thomas sketch and it was hilarious.
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
And she's like, "Let's do the Clarence Thomas sketch and going with our individual characters."
Randall Ryan:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
So, we did and we both booked it. And she said, "Now you're going to need a manager." She introduced me to her manager, which was the same woman I had turned down, years before.
Randall Ryan:
(laughs)
Gillian Brashear:
Wow, fantastic.
Debra Wilson:
And so, that's why I mean, I honestly, I stumbled my way up. And with voiceover: same thing. Two things I always did as a kid, and I grew up doing, because people were fascinated: authentic baby crying and dogs, dog barking. Dog barking in the distance, growling dogs, fighting rottweilers, that kind of a thing. And I would run up behind my friends (snarls & growls).
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs) And I bet they loved that. I bet your friends really loved that. (laughs)
Debra Wilson:
Oh, yeah, they absolutely love that. I kept friends for a lifetime.
Randall Ryan & Gillian Brashear:
(laughs)
Debra Wilson:
But what I would do is I would stand behind them and then grab them at the back of their knee.
Gillian Brashear:
Oh, my gosh, it'd be terrifying!
Debra Wilson:
It's terrifying.
Gillian Brashear:
Oh, my God, I'm surprised you didn't get hurt!
Debra Wilson:
I know it. But it was funny to me! It was funny to me! Someone laughed! And so, I was in the audience at a comedy theory at LaBrea, not in the audience. I was onstage because it was a young man named J. Keith van Straaten. And I was on the show What's My Line, and they brought out celebrities from the '50s and '60s and '70s, and that's my time period. So, they brought them out, they talked about their lives and what they're doing. And we had to guess who they were. And then, there was of course that chat interview from j. Keith van Straaten. “And what are you up to now? And thanks very much.” And then, there was a board like on the original show, not a wiper board, but cardboard. And it had a frame as if it were a picture. And they would write their name when they came out. Someone stood behind it and pulled the sign up so it looked like it disappeared.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hm.
Debra Wilson:
And for me, it was like, when I looked at it the first thing I thought was this is a magic trick for a baby, like peek-a-boo. So, I did my baby giggles and my baby laugh. Little did I know that Paul Doherty, the Head of Cunningham-Escott-Slevin and Doherty…
Gillian Brashear:
Hmm.
Debra Wilson:
…was in the audience because his client was J. Keith van Straaten. He asked me to take a meeting. I met all their agents. They were sitting in a conference room. And all I was was like, "Well, okay, what do you want to hear?" For me, it was like I was five years old again.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hm.
Debra Wilson:
"You want to hear my English accent?" Because again, I had nothing to lose.
Randall Ryan:
Mm hmm.
Debra Wilson:
I had nothing to lose except having fun. And I believe in being in the moment. And so, acting was in a kinship to me because it was always about being in the moment. And voiceover is in a kinship to me. about being in the moment, I've been with CESD almost two decades.
Randall Ryan:
Debra, one of the most fascinating things about you is that I always look up and I cannot believe how much time has gone by. And I find you fascinating, I always have.
Debra Wilson:
Oh, thank you.
Randall Ryan:
You're just your own unique being and, both as an actor and as a person. And I think that's awesome.
Debra Wilson:
And it's not because of my tarantulas and scorpions?
Randall Ryan:
Yeah, I don't know.
Gillian Brashear:
(chuckles)
Randall Ryan:
Well, I live with tarantulas and scorpions, so I don't care.
Debra Wilson:
Okay. Well, see?
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs)
Randall Ryan:
That would probably be neither a draw nor a detriment.
Debra Wilson:
Okay.
Randall Ryan:
It's like, oh,oh you have these things. Okay, whatever.
Debra Wilson:
See? There's the kismet.
Randall Ryan:
There's the kismet.
Debra Wilson:
There's the kismet all over again.
Randall Ryan:
There's the kismet.
Gillian Brashear:
I just want to say: in listening to your story about you, about all of these aspects of you, the pictures that were coming into my mind with your beautiful descriptions, honestly, it was breathtaking to hear everything that you had to say. And I feel so fortunate to have been able to work with you as I have. I really thank you for that.
Debra Wilson:
Thank you, goddess.
Gillian Brashear:
Yeah, I look forward to it.
Debra Wilson:
Here's to the next now with us, yes?
Gillian Brashear:
Yeah, absolutely.
Debra Wilson:
Yes.
Gillian Brashear:
Randall.
Randall Ryan:
Sure.
Gillian Brashear:
All right. (laughs)
Randall Ryan:
(laughs) Like you do.
Gillian Brashear:
All right.
Randall Ryan:
Debra. Thank you as always.
Debra Wilson:
My pleasure.
Randall Ryan:
Thank you for doing this. And we need to do this again. And we might even need to do it again while we're not recording.
Debra Wilson:
(chuckles)
Randall Ryan:
And there you have it. The force of nature, that is Debra Wilson. Let's talk Voiceover is hosted by Gillian Brashear: actor, director, visionary. And me, Randall Ryan: owner of HamsterBall Studios, delivering the world's best talent, virtually…anywhere. And we also can both be found at www.thevoicedirector.world. If you got comments or questions, or just want to let us know what you think, reach out at info@letstalkvoiceover.com. You can find us at all of your favorite places to get podcasts: iTunes, Stitcher, Apple podcast, Podbean. If they have podcasts, chances are we're there. Thanks for listening. And Let's Talk Voiceover again, real soon.
Sunday Jul 03, 2022
Let’s Talk Voiceover - Episode 37 - Mark Estdale
Sunday Jul 03, 2022
Sunday Jul 03, 2022
Mark is one of the most well-known and credited video game directors in the world, casting and directing actors in titles such as Warhammer, Tropico, Wallace & Gromit, Need for Speed, and so many more. He's been at the forefront of the creation of the industry. and he's still a bit of a mad scientist: creating, tweaking, and pushing the technology envelope. He has his own definite style and a deep love of the craft of acting. We got to have a rare in-person interview with him, where he put us in separate booths so we could experience "the lab" that is his London studio OMUK. This is what came out!
Randall Ryan:
You want to do a sync clap? Just like one, two, three? It'll just make it easier for me to sync the three feeds.
Gillian Brashear:
All at the same time?
Mark Estdale:
Yeah. You're recording now. Do it now.
Randall Ryan:
Let's do it now.
Gillian Brashear:
Okay.
Mark Estdale:
Okay.
Randall Ryan:
All right, here we go. Three, two, one. Way to go, Mark. You didn't clap.
Mark Estdale:
Oh, you want me to clap as well?
Randall Ryan:
Yeah, all three of us.
Mark Estdale:
Okay.
Randall Ryan:
Three, two, one. Perfect. Close enough.
Mark Estdale:
Ish.
Gillian Brashear:
Nice.
Randall Ryan:
It's ish, it's ish, yeah.
Gillian Brashear:
Right. We're ready to roll here.
THEME MUSIC
Randall Ryan:
Mark Estdale is one of the more fascinating personalities in our industry. Over 25 years, he's directed more than 140 video game titles, including some very well-known franchises, Warhammer, Tropico, Need for Speed, Wallace & Gromit, The Witcher, and Tales of Monkey Island. He's an innovator who really pushes the technology envelope when it comes to casting and recording. Gillian and I had a rare in-person conversation with him at his London studio, OMUK, which he refers to as the Petri dish.
Gillian Brashear:
Mark Estdale, let's talk voiceover.
Mark Estdale:
Let's do that.
Gillian Brashear:
Yeah.
Mark Estdale:
And you're in the lab.
Randall Ryan:
We are in the lab.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah.
Gillian Brashear:
It's a bit of a mad lab.
Mark Estdale:
It is a mad lab.
Randall Ryan:
Mark, when did we first meet? Do you even remember?
Mark Estdale:
Fuck knows. I have no idea. It's a few years ago anyhow, so.
Randall Ryan:
Interesting conversation that you and I were having just a minute ago about how you got into this because ... Mark, hey, look at the guitars. Are you a musician?
Mark Estdale:
No. I play for myself. It's a meditation. I ended up messing around with music, which, fundamentally, has to do with being with people and doing interesting creative stuff. I think musicians have, people have a degree of competence and can produce music. I doodle and from doodling sounds happen. Connecting those sounds is another art form. I doodled all my life. And I went to run a studio for a record company and I brought my doodle tapes. I would get my mates into the studio. We would just experiment with stuff. It was the beginning of digital. The only music I was working with was experimental industrial stuff in the '70s and early '80s. And you were going out recording foundries and factories and noises. And then making tape loops and running tape loops in the studio and experimenting with all that kind of stuff.
Mark Estdale:
So the art of replacing sounds with other sounds was about cutting tape and doing all that kind of stuff. So, my deal was the studio. They paid me fuck all. When I wasn't in session, I had free rein of the studio to do what I wanted. So I just record staff and have friends around and some of the musicians, we'd just experiment with things. So I basically transitioned to another studio with my tapes. The owner of the record company went, I want to give you a deal. And I went, great. And then, suddenly, it became work. And all the pleasure went out of it. And I went blind in the sense of there's no way I can mix my own stuff. I can't direct myself as an actor. So I'm on a journey as an actor right now. So I'm doing training right now.
Mark Estdale:
But yeah, we did a single and it was great. Let's have the album. And it was just like nah, nah. It's too much light work and it doesn't come from the heart and out of the weirdness of it, but I'm still planning. So I've been building instruments and I bought interesting drums and things and just things that just got weird sounds. But the world has changed dramatically since my skill as an editor was with a razor blade.
Randall Ryan:
Razor blade, right.
Mark Estdale:
And then when digital came in, I got really into that early ... We were mastering to Betamax and things like that back in the-
Gillian Brashear:
Right.
Randall Ryan:
Yeah.
Mark Estdale:
That was in the, I think that was the early '80s when that all came in. Then, my journey took me away from that. But I got into the whole music stuff that it was just farting about, trying to break things, trying to do things that were interesting. You wouldn't call it music per se.
Randall Ryan:
But the thing is that you produced. You produced albums, you produced singles, you produced bands.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah.
Randall Ryan:
Well, I mean you did. And so-
Mark Estdale:
Yeah.
Randall Ryan:
I've talked about this before. Actually, one time, you and I were at Buca di Beppo in-
Mark Estdale:
What? What is that? Where is that?
Randall Ryan:
Well, it's this little place where they can ... Yeah.
Mark Estdale:
Somewhere in LA.
Randall Ryan:
D.B. Cooper had organized something.
Mark Estdale:
Oh yeah, that'll be in, yeah, that'd be in San Francisco.
Randall Ryan:
Yeah, so it was in San Francisco, right. You and I were talking about this at Buca di Beppo, which is the first time I knew you had anything to do with music. And you were talking about the band that you did and just how you were taking all these electronic pieces and parts and stuff and putting them together. And I just remember listening to that going, this guy's a producer. And that's probably, I'm guessing, somehow how you got to doing what you're doing now.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah. Well, the thing is I came from performance originally. So, one of the things I got into was acting, but it wasn't really starting as acting. I was just a bored teenager on the street with a mate. We'd used to sit and watch people, then mimic people. The game we played was copy somebody and see how close you could get to them and copying all their mannerisms, just walking down the street. And it was just hilarious. We got more and more outrageous, making it bigger and bigger. And we would gather an audience. People would see us doing it than just stop and watch. And the person we were mimicking was completely unaware of it.
Randall Ryan:
That was going to be my question. Like, people started to come up going, do me?
Mark Estdale:
No, no, no, no. It was just us and about. But we had so much fun doing it and it was a real buzz from it. I was 15 at the time. And then, yeah, we started doing a bit of sketch stuff and I just loved it and I thought I really wanted to be an actor, but I'm deeply dyslexic. I got thrown out of school at seven. And it's a long brutal history that goes behind that. And one thing about acting was learning words and scripts. And I just, I can't do that.
Gillian Brashear:
Are you able to learn and memorize without reading it? Like just listening and memorizing?
Mark Estdale:
Nah.
Gillian Brashear:
No. Interesting.
Mark Estdale:
Nah, I can't even memorize what's in my own head. I'm an endless note-taker now. So I think on paper and on screens. But I love words. Being dyslexic gives me a, I think, a massive advantage in doing what I'm doing. Because in the studio I've learned that playing dumb is the blessed place to be. It's proven to be in a sense. I also get ill where I can't talk.
Gillian Brashear:
Really?
Mark Estdale:
Yeah. I can't remember the name of the disease. But essentially, if I talk I get stomach acid in my lungs, which would destroy my lungs.
Gillian Brashear:
And so then physically, the ability to talk, it's shut down or you just-
Mark Estdale:
Yeah. So it becomes ... I get into a state of uncontrolled coughing because, basically, your stomach acid is eating in your lungs.
Gillian Brashear:
My gosh.
Mark Estdale:
So it's potentially a very, very dangerous disease, but it's just a tiny thing. So, if it starts, I start coughing, that agitates it, and it gets into a loop. So, fundamentally, I can't talk. So, when I first got ill, I was in the studio and I had to communicate completely nonverbally. So that was a really interesting learning space too, because it was all about body language and communication. And the studio was set up like a regular studio where the engineer is in the main position and the director is at the back or somewhere else. I prefer to be in the booth with the actor if I could, but I'm far too noisy. So the glass is a necessity. But then I realized having this level of intimacy where it's between you and I, and it's about that trusting relationship. And one of the things about not being able to speak is then to be able to communicate ... I became Silent Bob. All hand gestures, things gestures, but it became a really intimate way of directing. And just the performances that were coming out were just great.
Mark Estdale:
And I just thought, okay, director, shut up. And in the studio, it's that whole sense of you want the performer to perform. We speak 9,000 words an hour. And sometimes, especially when you're doing the advertising stuff, you'll have a team of people just chatting away in the control room. The actor's doing nothing. Or then the director is talking, talking, talking. You're actually paying the actor the most to do the performing. And the ratio between performance and chatter, there's a tendency to be more talk here than in there. And just from the fact of being ill, observing that process and going, okay, this is liberating the actor in certain ways. That was interesting.
Gillian Brashear:
That is interesting.
Mark Estdale:
I've learned to just ask those straight questions. So rather than directing somebody, being in control, doing all that background work, it's been in the moment and going, I don't understand this. So we work in the studio exactly like we are here now. We're all talking to each other. And what I do is have the writer in. I'll have currently those people on Zoom, which is horrible. But generally, there's a group of people here and the whole idea, this is a collaborative process. So there is no talkback button. It is always open. So you are coming into the studio space to do your part, but we're working as a team. And it's exploring together.
Mark Estdale:
So, my default for directing is not talking to the actor, it's talking with the writer or questioning the script in an esoterical way or just going, I don't really understand this. What do you think? I go, what do you think, and joining into a conversation and letting the actor take from what is being said what they think is necessary. It's a non-pressure thing. But actually playing the dumb guy in the space, to ask the stupid questions is the liberator.
Gillian Brashear:
It allows the space for things to happen.
Mark Estdale:
And I think that was the thing when you mentioned earlier about record production and all that kind of stuff. It never came to where I wish I was doing it now because I know so much more. But the one thing I really noticed was having the studio as a liberating space was the most important factor of getting a great performance. Like bands in rehearsal rooms, in their own space, can produce magic and be fluid. Come into a studio, that's that level of stress. Then you'll say, recording, that's another level of stress. So, I looked at everything down the line, which actually liberated that space, that stress. So for instance, the space here is a living room.
Randall Ryan:
Basically, yeah.
Mark Estdale:
It's a den. It's somewhere to come and feel at home and you want to relax in, you want to hang out in it to feel safe. It's breaking down those barriers. So for instance, the recording engineer is working like recorders on film set. They're out of sight. It's all about the action. It's all about living in the fluid space, without words into the moment of the game. They're absolutely in the game. It's about immersing them in the game.
Gillian Brashear:
What do you mean by that? That you're immersing them in the moment of the game. How do you do that?
Mark Estdale:
The one thing that you need to be connected to is the game. I always think artwork is a corpse, animation is a zombie. An actor embodying the zombie, bringing it to life, is a fully realized character. So, all of those elements are really powerful. So with the game developers, say, they've been working on a game for five years. If you've not cast early, you are dealing with a team of people who have got a voice in their head. And every single person will have a different voice in their head.
Randall Ryan:
Yep, absolutely.
Gillian Brashear:
Mm-hmm.
Mark Estdale:
So you're competing against that.
Randall Ryan:
Absolutely.
Mark Estdale:
Well, the phrase that's used always is, fuck yeah. Casting is about fuck yeah.
Randall Ryan:
Yeah.
Mark Estdale:
It's just like, yes, that character is fully alive within the orchestra of the ensemble. And if you cast early and the developer's going, fuck yeah, there is no doubt whatsoever about the character. There is clarity at that point. And then you can move that character in different directions. You may even want to recast it because it doesn't quite work within the context of the world. But what you have is a united vision, early, and that is so powerful because it influences the nuance of the writing. It influences the nuance of the animation. Every element is feeding each other. And by the time you come to record, you are already well ahead. And we want the actor engaged in that process, within those discussions that we have with the developer, so they're part of that process of developing a character.
Randall Ryan:
So, because the culture is so strong for casting late, doing all the VO late in the development of the game ...
Mark Estdale:
Yeah.
Randall Ryan:
... how do you get people to buy on to, hey, we need to do this now. Scripts aren't even written a lot of times.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah, they don't. We don't need them to be written.
Randall Ryan:
You still buck up against the culture.
Mark Estdale:
We are the culture. Those ideas are the seeds. You are bringing in a master of character in an actor, somebody who knows how to interpret and to bring that character to life. You're bringing that level of craft and expertise into the team to weave magic within that team. You need to just talk about it like this and people go, oh yeah.
Randall Ryan:
Right.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah. But that's the way we roll. The sausage factory of just churning it out at the end..hey, that is an opportunity to do magic beyond. So if we're working on a big plan, they're just throwing everything to the universe, and I'm working with an indie with no money. We can so outperform, outclass with so little.
Randall Ryan:
Absolutely.
Mark Estdale:
Simply because of the depth of engagement. And that depth of engagement costs bugger all. But it's a human engagement in a process and it's a creative journey you're embarking together. It makes a profound difference.
Gillian Brashear:
Absolutely. And it makes use of what actors do and have early in a process. It makes so much sense now listening to you ...
Mark Estdale:
Yeah.
Gillian Brashear:
... that for the writers to be able to hear the words while they're still in the process of making it all, but actually hearing a character must inform the writing aspect in such a more rich way.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah. We look at games that we've worked on that are ongoing franchises, which is a really good example is a game called Vermintide, which is a Warhammer game. And there are a bunch of player characters. And it's all about the interactions between those player characters. As soon as the actors came on board, the characters became fully alive. And over the years, each time we record, the actors bring feeds, the writing feeds, everything else, and feeds the humor and the humanity of everything. The way the dialogue works is really interesting as well, because it's not just straight dialogue, you're using buckets. So, conversations are actually built up.
Randall Ryan:
So you're randomizing some of the responses?
Mark Estdale:
Yeah. But the way that the whole system here works is the actors are always working with each other in the booth, in that random space. We're not ensembling it because ensemble won't work in the situation. But they're always working off each other and adjusting, and everything becomes this fluid movement. So, the cast is now mature. The game is now six years on. But the writing has become funnier and funnier and more nuanced.
Randall Ryan:
So are you doing playback? Here's just some random playback for you to respond to.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah. There's a thing called CDT. There's creative dialogue tools. And fundamentally, what creative dialogue tools does is connect any game asset to the script. So for instance, you've got this script in front of you. You can see here. So, you've got this bit of dialogue. And whatever's going on, it can be video, so you've got character scene, item video. So, anything visual is there. I don't need to explain that conversation to you. You know where you are. We also got the voices of the actors. Source that if it's another language. Spot effects, those are just things that may interrupt, like an explosion or a door slamming or a sonic interruption. Then you have ambience, which is the ambient noise of the thing. And then music. So all those layers are available instantly. So what the CDT does is connect all the potential game assets to the script, so the actors in the movement. So this one is just this scene here is you're in a bar. This is Randall. He's talking to Elaine.
Gillian Brashear:
Randall, you're talking to Elaine.
Randall Ryan:
Well. She was there. She bought me a drink. What are you going to do?
Mark Estdale:
So, you can just go in and act this straight away, but I've got the Randall line straight here. So you can go off, you're off.
Gillian Brashear:
I'm nervous since you're here. More like barracudas. Okay, good. ´Cause I don't.
Mark Estdale:
So she's straight into ... She knows the scene, you know the level, you know everything, you are utterly connected.
Gillian Brashear:
Yeah, this is fun.
Mark Estdale:
Exactly. And that is the response. You're entering the roller coaster.
Gillian Brashear:
Yeah.
Mark Estdale:
So the actors are coming in just going, they just make choices and run.
Gillian Brashear:
Yeah.
Randall Ryan:
Yeah.
Mark Estdale:
I was talking earlier to you about the neuroscience of this. This is where I'm super excited, but I can't really articulate much of it now. When I first started doing game stuff, one of the things I really noticed was you'd be really diligent and give actors the script in advance and they will study it-
Randall Ryan:
When you can.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah, when you can.
Randall Ryan:
Right.
Mark Estdale:
The actor will prepare and come in and do their thing with the context of the directors who knew the background work and got the choices and all that kind of stuff. But then if you gave the actor a side they'd never seen before and say, just go, oftentimes their very first read, it'd be just knock the ball out the park. And I was going, what is going on here? So I never ever give actors a script in advance. Never. It doesn't matter how intricate it is. There was this really profoundly personal dark journey a character had gone on. There's this monologue, long monologue. And I thought, this is one to give in advance, but I didn't. I decided not to. And he hit it in one take. And by the end of it, we were all in tears. And the actor didn't know what was coming. They didn't know what the next sentence was. They didn't know what they were going to expose about themselves. It was profound for us in the studio here. We just go, fuck yeah.
Gillian Brashear:
Mm-hmm. I think it's got something to do, when I listen to what you're saying, the element of discovery.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah.
Gillian Brashear:
And when the actor is allowed to discover in the moment, the reactions they're going to have are very fresh and real. They're not manipulated.
Mark Estdale:
When I first started experiencing this ability to just live in the moment, I was thinking about where in the real world does this kind of acting exist? In theater, it's within improv.
Randall Ryan:
It's improv, right, exactly.
Mark Estdale:
But an improv is part of devising, part of knowing…
Gillian Brashear:
Mm-hmm. Rules.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah. However, in the real world where that improvised space is happening is when somebody's working undercover. So if you've got a cop who's working undercover, they are acting, they're being somebody they're not. And they have to survive in the world and their life is at stake. So that is improv extreme. Somebody from MI6 came down to the studio and couldn't talk about anything. But then he said, I would take it, I would take ...
Gillian Brashear:
It was a silent session.
Mark Estdale:
But what he said to me, he said, this is what we do, but for fun. And he's like, I can't tell you anything, but I can take you on a journey. And an interesting journey unfolded after that. That thing about living in the moment, I was really curious about how can you cold-read a script? Because somebody working undercover is total improvisation.
Randall Ryan:
Absolutely.
Mark Estdale:
Improvised theater is improvisation. But having a script and reading it, how come that works cold? And I was really curious about that. Basically, our brain is so much faster than we think it is. The thinking, speaking part is a linear element that comes from insane complexity. But if you think of the connections in the brain that are happening and firing at all times, if those connections were a ball of Christmas tree lights, that ball of Christmas tree lights would be the size of the known universe. That is the complexity and the power and the speed of our brain. We're coordinating everything at any one time. So you're trusting our humanity. The choices we make are always instant. If you go out on a date, and you prepare things, you just fall over yourself.
Randall Ryan:
Yeah.
Gillian Brashear:
Mm-hmm.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah. But if you don't care and you relax and you yourself, you come out and it's enabling that to happen. There's a lot more depth to the neuroscience of it. One of the really exciting things that's happening in cognitive science is the merging of psychology, of neurology, of physiology in their language and understanding. The connection between that and what's happening in the scientific world about how the brain works is so exciting. And the thing is, actors have known the essence of that and have created their own language about how we function because they're questioning how we function.
Mark Estdale:
Anybody who studied acting or taught acting is looking about how do you become another character, how do we embody fully somebody we're not? And that's the essence of the heart of the craft of acting, but it's studying humanity from a creative point of view. Whereas the science, the cognitive world is thinking about exactly the same subject from a scientific point of view. And those two worlds are converging.
Mark Estdale:
Rizzolatti, the Italian neurophysicist discovered mirror neurons. And mirror neurons are those neurons that respond ... I think some 300 people or 3,000 people probably take me in a corner and beat me up for getting it wrong. But they are the things that ... They're our imagination. So if I tell you a story, you will have an emotional response as if that was real.
Randall Ryan:
Right.
Mark Estdale:
I remember when I was at the Game On thing in LA and I talked about my fingers being broken.
Randall Ryan:
Oh yeah. Right.
Mark Estdale:
And the whole audience went ACCK!, you know what I mean? We learn from other people's experience.
Gillian Brashear:
Absolutely.
Mark Estdale:
And that is why theater is so wonderful.
Gillian Brashear:
That's storytelling in itself.
Mark Estdale:
It's storytelling.
Gillian Brashear:
Yes.
Mark Estdale:
The whole art of storytelling.
Gillian Brashear:
Right. That's why we do it. It's our shared consciousness.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah.
Gillian Brashear:
We're learning from your experience.
Mark Estdale:
Now science is beginning to go, oh, there's all these connections. So you've got embodied cognition. You've got a thing called 4E cognition. We're not just a brain in a head. We're a brain in a body. It's that physical connection. So, you get embodied acting. Then you get transformative acting, which is taking a step further. If you look into the relational stuff that Uta Hagen talks about what is the relationship between you and an object or your environment, really important. But this 4E cognition is about the cognitive process is connected fully to the environment, not just to head, not just to body, but it is external as well as internal. So, it's to do with spaces and containers, and containers is the thing I'm really interested in. That's when the new studio lab is going to be built, is looking at that research into containers.
Mark Estdale:
I can talk about this for hours and just go, because it is really interesting. But the fundamental thing is it's about how to liberate somebody in that moment. For an actor coming into the space, it's about being. One of the things I advise in auditions. You can hear when somebody's crafted it and reread something first. You can hear somebody living in the moment. You can hear when somebody's directed. You can hear when an actor is stuck in front of a microphone. It's a cage. I am caged. Because I keep moving off mic and you can hear it. That means it's a bad take. You will never give me a bad take. So when we're casting, what I recommend now is don't look at the sides, look at the character. Yeah, think about the context of who you are, what you are. Look at the context for the lines, not the lines themselves. Then cold read the lines, then press send. Without reviewing it, listening back or anything. If you fluff it, stop, start again. But keep that in and just give one take, send it.
Gillian Brashear:
I like it. I like that whole idea.
Mark Estdale:
Because it's about coming ... You're making a choice. So when I'm casting and having people in the studio, when somebody have made a decision, you have something tangible that you can flow with. And they've come in with a decision, you are throwing them into something and they're going with it. And then you can go, how about this? And they go, oh, different decision, let's go that direction. That's what I'm looking for in casting. That's all. Actors are coming to the booth wanting to please me.
Randall Ryan:
Right.
Gillian Brashear:
Right.
Mark Estdale:
And it's just dead.
Gillian Brashear:
Yes.
Mark Estdale:
It's never going to happen. And it's what I call licking. People want to lick you. It's like uh-uh, make a choice, run with it and let's play. They're entering a playground. They're being a child. And that is what training really gives people, that ability to play and to be safe and have confidence. We get actors bouncing into auditions and it's just like, okay, let's play. It's always a learning experience. And they're less invested in trying to please. And the more they're embedded in being the better chance they have. And the tough thing is, the actors who are really experienced know that. But that's why we have these agent sessions, where the agent comes and sits in here and we'll discuss everything and do the same thing as if I'm directing a session, open mic, just mess around. Here's a scene. I go through these scenes here with the actor, throw them about and introduce them to it. And this is basically what I call a no-risk session. So, we have a very strict score system. Four is on the knows. Zero is what the fuck. So, fuck yeah to what the fuck. Yeah.
Randall Ryan:
So one is I don't give a fuck. Two is ...
Mark Estdale:
You could give a fuck.
Randall Ryan:
Could give a fuck. Three is fucking pretty good.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah.
Gillian Brashear:
The four levels.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah, we could have the fuck scale. Yeah, we haven't thought of that. But I think, we actually do do that, having the fuck scale. The Randall Ryan fuck scale, that's what we're going to call it.
Gillian Brashear:
Four levels of fuckery.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah, exactly. So, we'll zone people.
Randall Ryan:
Right.
Mark Estdale:
To start with. So it won't go into refined. This will be a three, four or a two, three or a one, two, or a zero, one on their first take. That to me is meaningless. Because what happens, you are dropping somebody into the playground for the first time and they're going, do I like this, do I want this, do I embrace this? Then they go away and they think about it. And if they want to come back, they'll be a different person.
Randall Ryan:
So when you're casting with this, when you're doing things like that, is that either you're already thinking about casting them and so these are like call back auditions, because you probably can't do that with everybody, right, unless you have a really small number of people that you're calling from.
Mark Estdale:
We get people to self-take. The casting side's really important.
Randall Ryan:
Right. Of course.
Mark Estdale:
Because that score system exists. We have a thing called the casting matrix. I think I can bring up a matrix for you, which is terrifying because it's another sheet. Yeah, Google Sheets is wonderful as well.
Randall Ryan:
Do you realize this visual stuff is great for a podcast?
Mark Estdale:
Yeah, that's perfect for a podcast. But it's fundamentally. So this is a casting sheet. This is sanitized so you don't see all the actors on it. Fundamentally, get their scores. Our casting briefs are really precise. And within it, there is a description of how to submit, what to submit. So we'll say things like don't slate your sample. So if an actor slates the sample, they don't get listened so they go straight to the bin.
Randall Ryan:
I've told so many people that exact thing. Thank you for saying that.
Mark Estdale:
Well, the thing is if somebody can't follow instructions when they want a job, how the fuck are they going to listen when they're on their job?
Randall Ryan:
100% agree.
Gillian Brashear:
Mm-hmm.
Mark Estdale:
So there are details within the casting submission, which adhere to or be damned. And the other thing is, so the way we look at the casting is each actor, if they're going to submit for multiple roles, their best score is going to be the average. So if they submit for one role and nail it, they've got top score.
Randall Ryan:
Yeah.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah. We've got some down here that submitted for a couple of roles. They've nailed one, but they submitted for three, and they're off the scale down here. They were four for one role, but they wouldn't be considered for that role or they wouldn't be the top choices for that role because their average was lower. And the reason we do this is, one, it's about self-awareness. It's also about production awareness. So when you submit, it takes at least 20 minutes to listen through to a sample. And oftentimes, when we're in casting, three people will listen to that sample and make notes. That takes time. Yeah. If you're carpet-bombing want to be hopeful and you'll say, oh, I'll go for this one and go, you are wasting our time. You may be brilliant and be able to nail them all, but get through your door on one is all you need to do because we can play once you're in production.
Randall Ryan:
Okay. So let me give you a little devil's advocate on that.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah.
Randall Ryan:
So, unless you are doing one-to-one casting, one actor, one part, one part, one actor, even if you're submitting for roles that maybe you don't get, if you're submitting for something that you have no business submitting for, that's a faux pas. But you submit for that one role that, as you said, you nail. And then maybe you submit for a couple others, like they're okay, they're average, they would work if we had to work with them. Isn't there something positive to that if you are having to say, they're going to get that main role of rows, this actor is just perfect for rows? I can give them two other roles. I can give them an NPC. I can give them maid number eight.
Mark Estdale:
That's my decision, not yours. It's a production decision. So this is about getting through the door. You do a self-submission, submit your best. Because then, if we don't know you, we'll call you in and then we'll mess with you. We'll send you on a roller coaster. So we'll play around with that character because we want to see about adjustment. The self-tape tells you nothing. Some self-tapes, whether that actor can really do it, especially if it's somebody you don't know, it may have taken hours of crafting and all that kind of stuff. So, it's saying, yeah, this works, but I want to see it work under production conditions. If we don't know the actor, then we'll bring them into the studio, put them into production conditions. And during that exploration, we will explore other characters.
Randall Ryan:
Well, this is something you can do because of what you said, where you are getting casting done early. That gives you that luxury of that.
Mark Estdale:
But it's always pushing that casting time. Having casting time is ... Casting is king, is everything.
Randall Ryan:
Yeah, it is.
Mark Estdale:
We cast wide all the time. So, probably the casting backlog is about thousand actors right now within productions. We've got all these samples. So, Zach here and Nat are going through those building the database. So which is the matrix here, which is scored. So every sample gets a score. And the average score is the actor's in through the door score. So if they come in, they cast, they go, that is the role I want. If the actor is undecided because they're so brilliant, just come to make one choice. That is the message. Make a choice. Because if it's good, we will call you back for other stuff anyhow, even if you don't get the role.
Mark Estdale:
So this is statistics. And this also gives us statistics about the agent and every statistic tells a story. So, the average score from the actors then becomes the average scores to the agents. So we basically expect agents to do a lot of the work for us. So we will send the briefs to the agent. And if the agent is really hot, they know their talent, and they go, he'll be good for this role. Or she'll be great for this one. And they will send specific actors.
Randall Ryan:
And they don't give you 10 to show that they've got a bunch, which happens a lot.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah. So some of our agents will just send us three samples.
Randall Ryan:
Right.
Mark Estdale:
And they all go bang, bang, bang. They're in the bag. Oh, nice agent, good, saved us time. And others will get all the briefs come in. They just put it onto their website for any actor to put in whatever they want. And they just pipe it all to us and we'll get 100 submissions.
Randall Ryan:
Absolutely.
Mark Estdale:
Do we want to work with that agent? Do you know the production cost of dealing with that and waiting through that? And some of those samples will be shocking. So having the agents in here for these agent sessions, we talk about this thing. And so we are evaluating the agent as well as the actor. And if we get carpet-bombed, okay, they don't understand production and they're not putting their best foot forward. They're just being hopeful or hoping something will stick in there. And that ain't good practice. We don't want to work with those agents who carpet-bomb because it is wasting our time. It's making them look really crap. The data tells a story. So we know when an agent's carpet-bombing and there's no filtering.
Randall Ryan:
Do you try to train the agent at all?
Mark Estdale:
Yeah. That's why we invite the agents down. So we've got two sessions this week with different agents. They're coming down from different agencies. So oftentimes, agents don't get to really know their crew, the actors. There's hundreds of actors on the book. And it's a real opportunity for the agent to get to know the talent, which they wouldn't normally get within the normal working day. And it's about us educating the agent, educating the actors. And that is the fundamental thing. And we find gems in doing that. So we have a massive database. Every single casting that comes through here goes onto a database. We have all the score and their average score over everything, and the notes. Every sample that comes in is an asset for the database. So there's tens of thousands of the data thing.
Gillian Brashear:
My gosh, it's incredible that you have time.
Mark Estdale:
But it means it's all at the fingertips.
Gillian Brashear:
Yeah.
Mark Estdale:
So for on a production side, you want that sense of know who you are as an actor. Put your best foot forward, what you think you're great for.
Randall Ryan:
Okay. So let me ask you something else then.
Mark Estdale:
Go on.
Randall Ryan:
So, let's just say you're precasting for a game. You've got a main role for something. And an actor submits for that. And they give you two different submissions for it that are radically different from one another. But they're making choices like here's one way I could play it, here's something else I could see. Or maybe the first one is, here's something that is absolutely in spec based on the brief. I have an idea on something else and I just want you to hear it. I mean, that's their thinking. They may not say that in the audition because they're just going to give you a couple of things. In your world, is that a positive, is that a detriment, could it be either?
Mark Estdale:
In my world, I would say it's a detriment.
Randall Ryan:
Reason being?
Mark Estdale:
Make a choice.
Randall Ryan:
What if they have, they've made two choices?
Mark Estdale:
They made two choices. Choose between one of them. Run with it. Yeah. What's your gut feel? Sometimes, they may want to go off the brief, fine. It is about conviction. Conviction carries.
Randall Ryan:
Okay. So if what they're doing is they're giving you one on the brief, even if they nail it, but the reason they give you the second one is because this is a little bit off the brief but this is what I feel. You would probably say, if you were the actor, give me the second one, don't give me the first, correct? That's the dilemma.
Mark Estdale:
It's not a dilemma. It's just make a choice and run with it. Because once you start building an ensemble, we want the brief to be precise. What actors submit expose a brief. Because if actors are submitting wild shit, we've got something wrong with the brief. But with the brief, yes, there are choices to be made. And you could go in different directions. And some actors will give me five variations, all of them wonderful. But again, that takes five times the time.
Randall Ryan:
It does.
Mark Estdale:
To do it, to review it.
Randall Ryan:
Unless you hear one and you're like, I don't care what else they did, that's it?
Mark Estdale:
Yeah. We would never make that decision. So, a self-submission is that's interesting. All you need to do is pique my interest. Because the next stage is getting them in the booth and working with them. And then that is where the discussion opens up. It's just clarity of choice. It doesn't have to be to the brief. It can be, I've got this idea, I think this will be this and give it. Because what you see is choice momentum, life in the performance, it's there. And when something is fully alive and realized and vibrant that you go, that's interesting, I want to go that way. What I'm looking for is talent to work with. As we said earlier, there's 26 productions live right now. It's not just that one role we are casting for. We are casting all the time. And if somebody's showing stuff that's interesting, that interesting gets flagged. It's part of the pool for all the productions. They may not be good for that role, but they'd be great for this one.
Randall Ryan:
Right. And that happens?
Mark Estdale:
Yeah, all the time. People will submit stuff and you go, ah, that's such a great performance, but it's just not right. And it's not just about the performance. You're building an orchestra. It's all about the group of actors. It's the ensemble that is what makes a piece work. And you want different tones and textures, pictures. You want color. It's like an orchestra. If an orchestra was all fucking violins, it'd be dead.
Gillian Brashear:
Right.
Randall Ryan:
Right.
Mark Estdale:
It doesn't matter how virtuoso you are. You're looking for different instruments to give you the thing. So casting is not about the brilliance of your performance for that one thing. It's about that performance in relationship to everything else. But a great performance will always be noted. And it'll go into that resource for the casting team.
Randall Ryan:
So a technical question then on the way that you're doing your thing.
Mark Estdale:
Go on.
Randall Ryan:
Somebody gives a great performance, but it's not what you're looking for on that brief. They are possibly going to be scored something like a two.
Mark Estdale:
But if it's a great performance, it wouldn't get a two.
Randall Ryan:
Okay. So even it's like, they're not going to get this role, you're still essentially saying, by your scoring system, they got a three. Because even though it was a great performance, it's not what you're looking for in that role. Is that not how that would work?
Mark Estdale:
Yeah. But three's good. They can nail it.
Randall Ryan:
I see.
Gillian Brashear:
You bring them in?
Mark Estdale:
I would bring them in and work them.
Gillian Brashear:
How do you deal with people across the ocean?
Mark Estdale:
We don't do any remote recording.
Gillian Brashear:
Interesting.
Mark Estdale:
Because it's all about this.
Gillian Brashear:
Yeah. So people have to come here and record.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah.
Gillian Brashear:
For any of your jobs. Wow.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah.
Gillian Brashear:
Okay.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah. We won't remote ... Well, the thing is if it's one voice in something, then fine. I did one production in lockdown with actors all over the world. We were shipping out the same equipment to everybody. But the most expensive thing about a recording studio is the room you sit in.
Gillian Brashear:
Yeah.
Randall Ryan:
That's right.
Mark Estdale:
And ...
Gillian Brashear:
That's the toughest.
Mark Estdale:
... basically, people in their cupboards, under duvets, whatever, will sound different. And the thing is, you've got a disconnect. The actors are dealing with the technical as well as performance. Some actors are massively technical. Some of the best ones don't know what the internet is.
Randall Ryan:
That is correct.
Mark Estdale:
So the technical side of it, it's always a compromise, it's always a loss, it's always a degradation of what you can do. So we've made that in June last year. That's the way we roll. And we started mid-June, July last year back into full production.
Gillian Brashear:
Do people fly over for you?
Mark Estdale:
For doing stuff from the States?
Gillian Brashear:
Yeah.
Mark Estdale:
There's so many Americans over here now.
Gillian Brashear:
Okay.
Mark Estdale:
Now that was one of the thing is like 50% of our productions are US. And we are looking for studios to work with in the States right now. But we want to be able to plug them into our way of working.
Gillian Brashear:
You might have to go back and rebuild that studio again!
Mark Estdale:
Well, yeah, it still exists. Now, I'm not going to go and do that. We want to do it in a partnership thing.
Gillian Brashear:
So you're looking for a partner over there who can do something with the same type of setup and have the same relationship.
Mark Estdale:
But it's having a really great room to be able to do this. This is fundamentally my playground. And the research element of it I'm doing. You are sitting in the Petri Dish. Everything you do is noted. And so, why does that work, why does ... I've done this for decades. And you notice patterns and you see things and you're going, okay, I'm going to change this and I want to be able to take that further. Now I'm understanding more of the science. The science has caught up with the acting. So the dialogue is now current and live between the cognitive sciences and performance. And it is the most exciting. There's three great books on the subject. The one that really got me is a guy called Dick McCaw. He did a book called Training the Actor's Body. Originally, I thought the most important element in performance is one of the things I watch in casting is the physicality. So, how an actor physically enters a character. You can't do it with a 416 in front of you or a U87.
Randall Ryan:
Well, you can but-
Mark Estdale:
You can but you are caged. You're in a cage.
Gillian Brashear:
Mm-hmm, mm-hmm. You're doing this and working with them.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah, yeah. You can do it wonderfully, animation there. The common practice is to do it in a cage.
Randall Ryan:
Right, right.
Mark Estdale:
But when you release the beast, holy fuck, you get something different.
Randall Ryan:
So another technical question. This mic, small capsule.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah.
Randall Ryan:
How are you getting the depth?
Mark Estdale:
Okay. So, it's a 4060, it's a DPA.
Randall Ryan:
Okay. But what's the technology that makes this give that bottom menu and all that stuff that's around 180 hertz that sometimes you're rolling off, but if it's not there and those harmonics aren't there, you lose that.
Mark Estdale:
You are listening to a voice. For me, performance is a voice in an environment. So, what we want is something that's natural and neutral. That is the focus. Every mic colors.
Randall Ryan:
Absolutely.
Mark Estdale:
And you want a constant coloration. So, there's a distance, the way the mic is placed and everything. We've researched this forever. And it's like working that mic where it is, is like working at U87 at a meter. But you need a good room for it. That's another side of it. And-
Randall Ryan:
So its polar pattern is a little more omni?
Mark Estdale:
Yeah, they're omnis. So, I want a really natural sound to it. And the other thing is the more performance capture you're doing, you've got mics attached to people. Yeah. And they're using these mics on the stage. So the performance capture stage we're building is going to be just a very big sound studio. But it's going to be one that's going to have controllable acoustics because I want to put orchestras in there as well. But it's having that playground because when their new studio comes, to be able to connect all the different rooms in the different environments, that means we could do some really crazy shit. And the crazy shit is something that tickles me.
Randall Ryan:
You realize you can't die because you've got a good 50 years' worth of ideas here.
Mark Estdale:
Oh God, yeah. I know I can't die.
Gillian Brashear:
I got to say ...
Mark Estdale:
But it's ... Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Gillian Brashear:
Your spirit of experimentation, I applaud. That you're constantly curious and experimenting to get to a more refined connection and truth. I really appreciate that.
Mark Estdale:
I guess so.
Gillian Brashear:
Yeah, yeah.
Mark Estdale:
Yeah, so it's ... Yeah. You only have one life.
Gillian Brashear:
Mm-hmm.
Mark Estdale:
And it's like, if we don't enjoy our craft and what we do and can't be supportive in each other's shit, what the fuck's the point?
Randall Ryan:
I'm kind of with you.
Gillian Brashear:
I agree. I agree with you fully. Randall?
Randall Ryan:
Gillian?
Gillian Brashear:
All right.
Randall Ryan:
Sure.
Gillian Brashear:
Thank you so much, Mark.
Mark Estdale:
Thank you for being here.
Gillian Brashear:
Mark Estdale, it's fantastic.
Mark Estdale:
Thank you. It's lovely to have you in our day in the Petri dish.
Gillian Brashear:
Oh, my gosh.
Randall Ryan:
I already feel a little more moldy. My cells are dividing as we speak. I don't know. Maybe someone can pull Mark out of his shell someday, right? I really enjoy hearing his perspective and it's a joy to feel the passion that he's got for creativity and really just for our industry. Let's Talk Voiceover is hosted by Gillian Brashear, actor, director, visionary, and me, Randall Ryan, owner of HamsterBall Studios, delivering the world's best talent virtually anywhere. And I can also be found at thevoicedirector.world. You got comments, questions, or just want to let us know what you think, reach out at info@letstalkvoiceover.com. Find us at all your favorite places, GetPodcast, iTunes, Stitcher, Apple Podcast, Podbean. If there are podcasts, we're probably there. Thanks for listening, and we'll talk again real soon.
Friday Mar 11, 2022
Let’s Talk Voiceover - Episode 36 - Gillian Brashear
Friday Mar 11, 2022
Friday Mar 11, 2022
LTVO has a new host! An actor and director with production chops, Gillian came from the stages of New York City to the big (Chekhov and Maria) and small screens (CSI: Cyber, Criminal Minds, Legends) in Los Angeles before delving into voice acting, and then directing. She also narrated the Emmy-winning series Wonder Women. Her vo credits include Leisure Suit Larry: Reloaded, Lord of the Rings Online, Chivalry 2, Vacation Simulator, and World of Tanks. Smart, curious, glib and with a wicked wit; she's the perfect person to sit in the virtual cocktail bar and converse with anyone in the industry. So, welcome, and Let's Talk Voiceover, Gillian Brashear!
Gillian Brashear:
When I was in New York, there was, oh darn it, a show that it was all about the nudity, but I was seeing it probably 20 years past its prime. So, I was this acting student…
Randall Ryan:
Like Emmanuel?
Gillian Brashear:
No, it wasn't that, I…OH! (laughs) I see…is it Oh Calcutta? But no, it's not that.
Randall Ryan:
No that was, wasn't it?
Gillian Brashear:
It is Oh Calcutta?
Randall Ryan:
Yes, as soon as you said it, it’s like yes
Gillian Brashear:
it was still going in New York. It was…you know, when you go to the strip bars like we do and ther're tired gals, they've done it a lot, it was a bit like that. Like yeah I'm naked, I'm on stage. Meh (laughs) It just was such a bizarre experience in New York going, okay,well uh, yep, that's a job, I… I guess that's acting. I don't know!
THEME MUSIC
Randall Ryan
Let's talk so Let's Talk Voiceover, Gillian Brashear.
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs) Okay let's do it.
Randall Ryan
Welcome to this thing that we do called Let's Talk Voiceover, and thanks for doing this, and thanks for wanting to get in and do this. So, I'm curious because even though we talked about it and it's like, would you like to do this thing and you're like, I'd love to do this thing. We never talked about why. So why?
Gillian Brashear:
Why do I want to do it? Well, ultimately I like to play and you're a great play partner.
Randall Ryan:
Yes! you're already better than Brian!
Gillian Brashear:
And I love learning about people. I'm excited to hear people's stories. I am excited to hear what they know and what they want to share and what they want to talk about, and actually, honestly, there are questions that I have for people that I've done their work, worked on their work, shall I sa,y on their files and what not that we've recorded and I've worked on, and I have things I want to know and that I want to ask them.
Randall Ryan:
Right. So you're talking like some of the people that you've worked with, the kind of things where you say, I don't know why she chose or he chose to do this, but that's really interesting? Or are you talking more the techniques that they use to get a specific sound or specific delivery out?
Gillian Brashear:
I think both. You know, when I'm working on somebody's recording, I get into the world that they've created and I become very curious. Sometimes it's I'm curious how did you come up with that as your portrayal? Sometimes it is literally, how do you make that sound with your voice? ‘Cause I don't even understand how that comes out of anybody's human body. Yeah. And then sometimes I notice people have incredible technique and I'd like to know about that. A lot of things. Sometimes they just sound like they're really fun and I want to hang out with them for a while. So this might be as close as I ever get.
Randall Ryan:
You never know. And the thing that's really interesting to me listening to the comments that you've said back to me about stuff, because again, you come at this from being an actor, and this may not be accurate, but in my head, you really come at it first from being stage actor and everything else kind of came 2nd 3rd, or is that accurate? Is that not accurate?
Gillian Brashear:
Yep. When I decided that I wanted to actually dive in and be an actor and admit that that was the passion that I had, I wanted to do it in the best way possible, or what that meant to me at the time was I wanted to learn in the place that I thought I would get the best skills and that would really challenge me to be the best that I could be, and for me that was New York stage.
Randall Ryan:
So, you probably have told me this before, but I don't remember all the details if you did, because I know you went to drama school.
Gillian Brashear:
Yeah.
Randall Ryan:
Obviously, not everybody that comes into, at least the stuff that we talk about while they may have had an acting background or a singing background, not everybody has gone to drama school. You went to acting school. What led you to do that?
Gillian Brashear:
Well, I had always had a passion for it. I started acting just casually in the things that you do when you're a kid, and then I put it away to do other things: go to school, be a little crazy. I ended up traveling to Australia and spending some time there and I think getting away from the United States and being in a different place, which was marvelous, for a very long period of time allowed me to look back at my life and really assess what it was that I wanted to do. So away from the drive and ambition and the, the courses that were sort of served up as young people. You know, this is a path and this is a path and this is a path. And there just came a point where I realized I this is what I want to do. So, I auditioned for acting school in New York. I let that decision guide me. I was accepted and there I went.
Randall Ryan:
That's really interesting. This is a total sidebar: what things did you see differently leaving the United States? And it may have absolutely nothing to do with acting, but just, how do you think that kind of just shaped you as a person and maybe lead you to make some different decisions?
Gillian Brashear:
I can say that my time out of the United States has profoundly changed my outlook on life in a good way. I went there, I had extreme culture shock and given that it's an English-speaking country that's saying a lot. But I was. I mean, I was kind of paralyzed for a while. It took me easily six weeks just to be able to relax, and relax into the environment, and be able to relate to people on the pace that they have there. But spending enough time there really allowed me to identify the fact that they actually, really they actually enjoy living life more. They're really invested in enjoying their lives and not so much ambition-driven. Now this, frankly, is when I was there, and it's not that they weren't out doing stuff. There were people doing great things and having businesses and, and doing such, but it was the balance.
It's that they had a healthy balance of enjoying their life and socializing and being extremely jovial while also doing the other things in life that you have to do. And I think that's really my big takeaway.
Randall Ryan:
So you think that allowed you in some way to say: yeah, acting. Because, maybe because acting is not If you're going to get into it to make a lot of money, that's probably not, you know, your top 10 picks? Or some other reason?
Gillian Brashear:
Well, again, I think I had a passion for it. I had a desire to do it from the time I was really young. I mean, honestly, probably six years old, it was a thing for me, and something I got deep joy out of. The act of pursuing it was very frightening, which is really why I didn't do it, and why I didn't go any farther with it for a really long time. And at that point, while I was there in Australia, I could no longer deny the fact that, even though I was terrified to do it, I would never resolve the wanting unless I went ahead and tried. And I just realized, I don't want to spend my life wishing I had done something. So just go do it, and let the chips fall where they may.
Randall Ryan:
What was the terror for you? I ask as a person who went out and did music the same way
Gillian Brashear:
Uh, . putting yourself out there. Really, honestly, it's throwing all the chips on yourself. It's a big move. It's bold. I didn't grow up in a family of artists of really any kind, so there's no system of support for “hey, yeah, and I know this is what you do.” I mean it wasn't like anybody was holding me back, but it was a pioneer move as far as any upbringing that I had.
Randall Ryan:
Right.
Gillian Brashear:
And New York is scary!
Randall Ryan:
Yeah, yeah.
Gillian Brashear:
If you haven't been and you listen to all the stories about it, it seemed like a really big, scary place. Now, it's actually one of my favorite places and I love it, and it doesn't scare me now. But you know, it's all the stuff you don't know, it's your fear of the unknown. And it's also, you know, the fear of figuring out, can you really, do you really have what it takes to follow through on a dream.
Randall Ryan:
Well in New York, while maybe differently than Australia, New York is culture shock. It's culture shock to people who live in the United States, and I would argue that New York is culture shock to people who even come from other big cities.
Gillian Brashear:
Absolutely.
Randall Ryan:
I love Chicago; Chicago is not New York and vice versa. New York is its own thing. It's just absolutely its own place. And, sure there are some parallels, but they're just very…you know, L.A. Those areyour big three cities in the United States and they're just drastically different from one another.
Gillian Brashear:
Yes, they are.
Randall Ryan:
So one of the things I'm really looking forward to with you doing this; really, I've worked with you in all stages. I've worked with you as an actor. I've worked with you doing editing and mastering. I've worked with you where you are directing and I’m fly on the wall with that. I'm just really fascinated by how in some ways how lockstep we are with a lot of things, but how also very different we are with things. You will hear things and do things that I didn't hear, but that what you heard is correct. And you will do things that are not right or wrong compared to what I do, but they're different. And sometimes quite frankly, a lot of the things that you have done, I think “Wow, that is different than how I would have done, and I think how you approach that is much better than I would approach that in that situation.” So that's one of the things that for me I really want to hear, because you have a tremendous amount of insight and I learn from you, and I've watched how you've made me think differently. So I think, when it comes to talking to somebody, your thought process with that person is a little bit different. And I also think that there's a lot to be said for just you being a woman actor and how you just are going to have a different kind of sensitivity to stuff than then I certainly will.
Gillian Brashear:
Great, thank you. First, thank you for all of that. (laughs) Um, I think it comes down a lot too for me is that I am essentially a very curious person. And, so even when I'm listening to somebody in a directing session, I become really curious about the lines and how they're saying it. And somehow there's something to that, that if you're curious about something, a door opens and suddenly whatever direction needs to be said makes sense. Does that, does that make sense? (laughs)
Randall Ryan:
Yeah, of course, absolutely. It does. You know, I think all of us are curious in some way. It's just the angle of curiosity that I will often listen to you go down, or the way that you will talk to an actor and say “I have an idea.” And I do that too, and other directors that I've seen who I admire do that, but everybody's got a different way of approaching it, and a different way to say it. And I also think again, you know, I look at somebody like you, like my friend Tom Keegan, where you both have an acting background, and sometimes you come up things very differently than say, like myself or Andrea Toyias, who come from a music background, and you also have that music background. Which by the way, may I say, while I always knew it was there…
Just to tell a little story on Gillian. There's this Austin singer-songwriter group that I've been in for, you know, 5, 6 years, and it's this really intense thing of, you get a prompt and you got one week to write a two-minute or more song. Usually fully produced. I mean, sometimes people don't fully produce them out, but all the people that are in the group, for a lot of them, this is what they do for a living. So you have like these heavyweights in there, and you're just sticking your little old songs in there. And I asked her if she wanted to do it, and she kind of said, oh sure. And I thought, well, it'll be interesting to see if she makes it through the whole semester. The very first song I heard of hers, I'm listening to her sing…you never told me you could sing like that!
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs)
Randall Ryan:
And then we had some weeks where we were asked to collaborate, because that was just part of the the prompt, and we collaborate on a song. And so now I'm giving her stuff that I would have sang, and I'm not a great singer, and I'm just listening to her bring this whole thing alive and like: why did you never tell me this? Why did you never tell me that? It's like you didn't even, you didn't even bother. Like oh yeah, this thing I do. Sure. Yeah, it's it's this thing. I mean, you're a really, really solid singer.
Gillian Brashear:
I…well, thank you again. I can't say that that's something I really embody thinking about myself. I go around singing, but it was a whole different thing to write something and then actually sing it and actually record it, and actually put it together. I've never done that before. And again, I found the process of being curious about it, curious about writing a song, curious about singing, curious about recording. It was fantastic. Yeah.
Randall Ryan:
So what's your takeaway from that? Just for you personally. Not for the process so much, because you made it all the way through.
Gillian Brashear:
Yeah.
Randall Ryan:
What's your takeaway with that?
Gillian Brashear:
My takeaway is I'd like to do more.
Randall Ryan:
So what about it makes you want to do more?
Gillian Brashear:
Well, the process itself was so invigorating, and opened up this whole new avenue about myself I didn't even know. I really didn't know. I know you say it sounds like I was hiding something from you, but I frankly didn't know, Plus the fact that
Randall Ryan:
(laughs)
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs) that I have these songs, I have these baby songs now. And when I go back and listen to them I'm really happy about it. I mean they're not perfect, but I love them! And I would like more of that.
Randall Ryan:
Right.
Gillian Brashear:
I think anybody, everybody, even if you don't think you should do it, you should do it, because it's an amazing process. And fun.
Randall Ryan:
So relate it to acting. What did it teach you about acting?
Gillian Brashear:
I think it's that it allowed a creative process that you don't often get. The issue with acting is that you need someone else to act. You really do. And it's hard to explore by yourself. And this was a way to explore my creativity and my voice and words, and having words come out of me in some sort of a framework of a song. It's a satisfaction that you get. It resonates with the same satisfaction that you get as an actor, but it was a way to really let it bloom in a new way and in a new capacity that feeds acting, most certainly. But just allowed for some…was like a sweet dessert. Just yummy.
Randall Ryan:
(laughs) I love that. And with that: thank you for doing this. Really, really look forward to however long you and I are engaged in doing this.
Gillian Brashear:
I'm looking forward, too. It's going to be a good adventure and, well, I hope I don't embarrass you too much, but, maybe once or twice I will have to embarrass you. (laughs)
Randall Ryan:
You know, that was never an issue for BT. If he ever had the opportunity to, he would. So what's new?
Gillian Brashear:
Okay. Game on! (laughs)
Randall Ryan:
(laughs) And now we need to come up with a sign off.
Gillian Brashear:
Okay. I could go “Alright.” (laughs)
Randall Ryan:
That would actually be a fun little inside joke.
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs) That would be funny. Alright.
Randall Ryan:
Sure.
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs)
Randall Ryan:
Oh sure.
Gillian Brashear:
(laughs) Alright.
Randall Ryan:
sure.
Gillian Brashear:
Alright
Randall Ryan:
sure.
Yeah, it's gonna be a fun ride. Probably at my expense. Let's Talk Voiceover is hosted by Gillian Brashear: actor, director, visionary. And me, Randall Ryan, owner of Hamster Ball Studios, delivering the world's best talent, virtually anywhere. And I can also be found at thevoicedirector.world. Got comments, questions or just want to let us know what you think, reach out at info@letstalkvoiceover.com. Find us at all your favorite places to get podcasts, iTunes, Stitcher, Podbean. If there are podcasts, we’re probably there. In the meantime, thank you for listening, and we'll talk again very soon.
Friday Dec 17, 2021
Lets Talk Voiceover - Episode 35 - Mara Junot
Friday Dec 17, 2021
Friday Dec 17, 2021
Mara Junot is one of those fascinating people you meet that you instantly fall in love with. Warm, genuine, and easy to talk to. Funny, inviting, and personable. And one hell of an actor. Video games, such as Ikora in Destiny 2, Fortnite, World of Warcraft, Mortal Kombat, and Guild Wars 2. She's also highly in demand as a narrative and promo actor: ESPN, CNBC, Lifetime, and others. Oh, and a commercial actor, voicing spots for Target, AT&T, Walmart. And then that strange and wonderful talent as a live announcer for VHI1 Divas, CNN New Year's Eve with Anderson Cooper...yeah. She's got crazy chops.
Randall Ryan
Can it beat my favorite bad movie line from Mel Gibson's The Patriot? Of course, if you haven't seen the movie, and by God if you haven't seen the movie, please don't.
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
(laughs) Done.
Randall Ryan
But, it’s pre-Revolutionary War. So he comes up to this woman, he says, “mind if I sit here?”, and she says “Sure, it's a free country…or at least it will be.”
Mara Junot
No, she..uh, uh No she doesn’t! (laughs)
Brian Talbot
(laughs)
Mara Junot
(laughing) That’s kind of fantastic.
Brian Talbot
(laughing) Oh, that’s beautiful.
Mara Junot
(laughing) At least it will be.
ThEME MUSIC
Brian Talbot
So Let’s Talk Voiceover, Mara Junot!
Mara Junot
Let's Talk Voiceover.
Brian Talbot
Well, that was pleasant! I like that.
Mara Junot
Excellent.
Randall Ryan
Hi, Mara.
Mara Junot.
Hi!
Randall Ryan
How are you, Mara?
Mara Junot
I'm great! I've been…been…like messing with real estate and games and all kinds of crazy things like…
Brian Talbot
Real estate? Like what? What's going on?
Mara Junot
I'm home shopping. Yeah.
Brian Talbot
(gasps) Cool!
Mara Junot
And in like the worst market in the past 16 years.
Randall Ryan
Well, there is that. There is that.
Brian Talbot
Buy high, sell low! That's what they say. right?
Mara Junot
Literally I think homes are more are 30%...25% more expensive this year than last year. And last year there were 20% more expensive than the year before.
Brian Talbot
See? Going up, up, up. I love that!
Mara Junot
It’s just nuts. It is like, I mean literally looking at one place, in, I think, six hours they had 140 offers.
Randall Ryan
Oh, jeez.
Brian Talbot
Isn't that insane?
Mara Junot
It is so nuts.
Brian Talbot
People who want to sell their house nowadays, they literally go hang out somewhere for one day. They come back with multiple offers over asking at ridiculous prices. The only problem with that is if you're not leaving the area then you have to buy in that market…
Mara Junot:
Right?
Brian Talbot
… and that becomes the challenge, right? So
Randall Ryan
Yeah, that is a problem.
Mara Junot
Yeah, it's nuts.
Brian Talbot
Well that's very cool though. I mean, you know, home ownership, American dream.
Mara Junot
Absolutely, absolutely. So fingers crossed all is going well so far knock on wood. But yeah, this market, you guys, if you're, if you don't need to buy a house right now, do not buy a house.
Brian Talbot
Don't, yeah. Yeah.
Mara Junot
God! Insanity!
Randall Ryan
Other than that, you got a little project that you've been working on of late. Just, you know, something came up, I don't know, it's something,
Mara Junot
Yeah! Yeah, little little project. Um I just,…I am a new actress in a existing role in a very, very popular game, happens to be called Destiny 2.
Randall Ryan
Mm hm.
Mara Junot
Has a teeny tiny little fan base; might have heard of it, but…
Brian Talbot
Nice!
Mara Junot
Yeah!
Brian Talbot
Congratulations!
Mara Junot
Thank you. I'm, I’m like crazy stoked about it. Like I'm, I'm just overwhelmed at the reception that I've received from the fans, ‘cause I kind of was dreading it because this is a long-established role.
Randall Ryan
Sure.
Mara Junot
A marvelous actress, Gina Torres. I'm sure we all know her from Suits and Firefly and lots of other fantastic shows, and she's been established in that in that role for quite some time. And so, you know, I've, I've never quite been in a position like that um in, in a game that was so popular and has such a big fan base with something so established. But everybody has been extremely, extremely kind and welcoming me to the community and, I'm just, I'm just thrilled to pieces ‘cause I kind of was scared I was going to be (laughs) eaten by wolves when, when this happened.
Randall Ryan
Well, yeah, ‘cause any time, almost in some ways it doesn't even matter if they're, if they're good or not and that's…
Mara Junot
Right! You like what you like.
Randall Ryan
Right.
Mara Junot
You know, you get attached to the naturally so, you know, somebody's established a character a certain way and you've been hearing it in your ear a certain way and, no matter how great of a mimic you are…
Randall Ryan
Right.
Mara Junot
…you're just not gonna be able to capture all of that. So, fortunately, Bungie has been just excellent and you know, has just kind of allowed me to to be me while still trying to capture the essence of the character, Ikora, as much as as much as I can.
Brian Talbot
That is excellent.
Randall Ryan
But that's what they should do because…
Mara Junot
Right
Randall Ryan
…if you try to do what Ms. Torres did…
Mara Junot
Right.
Randall Ryan
…first of all, you're gonna fail.
Mara Junot
Right!
Randall Ryan
Because you said you're never gonna be what she is…
Brian Talbot
Yeah.
Randall Ryan
…and then what's the purpose of having somebody else.
Mara Junot
Right.
Randall Ryan
That's the whole point of hiring any actor is let them be the actor, let them be. You bring a piece of yourself to what it is or what's the point?
Brian Talbot
Right?
Mara Junot
Exactly. But you know, it is just such a tricky situation because at the same time you want to honor enough of what's already been established and what people have already fallen in love with, right? And so finding one's essence, you know, in a character that's kind of this elusive thing. You know, you're just like, okay, well, how much is it the voice? Is it the, is it just an attitude? It's hard to not get in your head about it. Especially, you know, when you are a musical sort of person, like I am and you know, I am very good at soundalikes and things, and so it's hard for me when I hear somebody else…’cause I do a lot of soundalike sort of work…when I hear somebody else, and I'm used to trying to match, you know, as closely as possible. And so this concept of like, “no, we just kind of need that essence, but be you and bring your own flair to it.” It's just this sort of uncanny valley of weirdness (laughs) for the performer because you're like, you know, am I giving you what you really want?
Brian Talbot
Really? You…you want mine? You…me? Me?
Mara Junot
Right. (laughs) Yeah.
Brian Talbot
Well, and, and the other hard part about that is you don't want to end up being the new Becky against the old Becky from Roseanne, right?
Mara Junot
Right.
Brian Talbot
Or the new Darren versus the old Darren, right?
Mara Junot
Right.
Brian Talbot
You like Dick York, or do you like Dick Sargent?
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
I don’t know, they’re just different. You know, you gotta bring what you bring.
Mara Junot
Right.
Brian Talbot
Bring what you bring to the ball game.
Mara JunotSo you do play?
Brian Talbot
Uh not that game.
Mara Junot
Oh, gotcha, gotcha.
Brian Talbot
But I watch Roseanne and I watched Bewitched
Randall Ryan
(laughs)
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
And I spend way too much time watching old TV shows that haven't been on the air for 40 years. So
Mara Junot
That’s a train wreck right there.
Brian Talbot
I got time, I got time on my hands. Okay, I'm just gonna say it out loud. I've got uh…
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
It's really cool when you have that opportunity to take over a role for good reasons and add your own flair to it and add your own touch to it, because it can really, for a player or a viewer, depending on what it is, it can really expand the depth of that character.
Mara Juno
Absolutely. And that's what I hope to do.
Brian Talbot
And I imagine the writers are probably excited because once they get to know you a little bit, they can start to build some of those kinds of characteristics into the character or adapt their writing just a little bit of that character, to bring out some of the additional stuff that you bring to the table. So that's wonderful.
Mara Junot
Right, right. Hopefully that is the goal.
Brian Talbot
Did you get to meet the writers?
Mara Junot
Not in person, but I have spoken with many of them…
Brian Talbot
Good.
Mara Junot
…and the whole team has just been absolutely, absolutely wonderful. I just couldn't ask for a nicer team of people to work with and yeah, it's been a really a nice smooth transition. So.
Randall Rya
That’s great.
Mara Junot
It's exciting. It's super exciting.
Brian Talbot
So do you have any advice if you're trying to replace someone that's existing? Like, um, I don't know, like if I wanted to try and replace Randy.
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
Is there something that you should or shouldn't do? I don’t know.
Mara Junot
The inimitable Randy? I mean…
Brian Talbot
Hypothetically, of course.
Mara Junot
It’s so elusive. I just don't know if that's possible.
Brian Talbot
I just I'm just putting it out there for conversation's sake.
Mara Junot(laughs) Well, first stay up till one a.m. Start there.
Brian Talbot
Note to self: cancel Randy auditions.
Randall Ryan
(laughs)
Mara Junot
(laughs) We're gonna cancel the Randy cancel.
Brian Talbot
Uh. Cancel the Randy replacement auditions. Uh, Okay. (laughs)
Randall Ryan
I am sending out a spec for that in the next week or so. So you should be getting…
Brian Talbot?
Are you?
Randall Ryan
Yeah, you should be getting an audition from me because you know, to replace myself.
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
(laughs) I get the opportunity to audition to replace Randy on the Brian and Randy podcast. There you go. (laughs)
Mara Junot
Oh, God I love it.
Randall Ryan
But you know, if you could play both sides, just think of it that way. Think of the monetization opportunities.
Brian Talbot
Yeah, no, but yeah, no, no, no. Yeah. Um, yeah, but if you can play both sides, you know? Um…(laughs)
Randall Ryan
Right! Exactly.
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
Right! Right. Exactly!
Randall Ryan
You've got this. So now, when you get the script just do exactly that, just don't think about it, do exactly that…
Brian Talbot
Uh huh.
Randall Ryan
…and you should be fine.
Brian Talbot
Uh huh. Uh huh.
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
No, no, no. Three in a row. Can you mix it up a little bit? Uh huh. Uh, huh. Uh, huh!
Randall Ryan
I think he's got it!
Brian Talbot
See that was good. That was good. (laughs)
Randall Ryan
Perfect.
Brian Talbot
Oh my gosh, alright. Back to the..
Mara Junot
Dead ringer.
Brian Talbot
…(laughs) back to something that people actually want to listen to. How about that?
Randall Ryan
Oh, that's overrated.
Brian Talbot
So Mara, that's absolutely amazing. But I know that that's not the only thing going on in your world. What else have you been doing?
Mara Junot
Oh goodness.
Brian Talbot
Especially over the last year with all the challenges and changes that people have been going through. I know you've kind of been going like gangbusters.
Mara Junot
Yeah. You know, it definitely has been, of course, just psychologically, it's been a trying past year for everybody. Fortunately I guess, for me ,I'm already quite a bit of a homebody and don't really leave the house much anyway. I mean, I literally cannot leave the house for two weeks and don't even notice. Like between Amazon grocery deliveries and constantly being glued to my booth, it's just not that big of a life change for me.
Brian Talbot
Right? Right?
Mara Junot
Except wearing the mask. But..
Brian Talbot
Lockdown? I got this.
Mara Junot
Yeah, pretty much! You know I mean I started my career in a smaller town, and I have been running my own home studio for over 12 years now, so I kind of was an advantage that a lot of talent, especially talent in big cities like Los Angeles and New York and Chicago, you know, where they're just used to going into studios and only auditioning on their phones,perhaps, or just some sort of portable rig at home that didn't have to be broadcast-quality, they kind of had to start from scratch and the pressure of that. I can only imagine trying to keep everything running smooth.
Brian Talbot
Oh, It has to be overwhelming.
Mara Junot
Oh, absolutely.
Brian Talbot
For people who are talent to now have to understand how to be an engineer.
Mara Junot
Absolutely.
Brian Talbot
But it's also surprising to me how many people didn't already have a home studio set up.
Mara Junot
No.
Brian Talbot
I mean I just, I just kind of figured that everybody had one by now.
Randall Ryan
No.
Mara Junot
No. I mean again, if you're in a major market, especially like Los Angeles where there's studios everywhere…
Brian Talbot
Yeah.
Mara Junot
…you just don't have to. And I can understand why somebody wouldn't want to invest in, you know, a $2,000 microphone and then, you know, a $10,000 booth, and…
Brian Talbot
Yeah.
Mara Junot
…and all that stuff when you can just go to the session, we have the client pay the studio fee when he's there.
Brian Talbot
Sure. Sure.
Mara Junot
So I get it, but it is a hot mess trying to figure it all out. So I was fortunate in that regard. Business on my end has been really good because I was prepared, in part. I'm sure that's not all, it wasn't all my tech skills, but it didn't hurt anything.
Randall Ryan
No.
Mara Junot
So.
Randall Ryan
No, it doesn't.
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Randall Ryan
Where I'm kind of with Brian on things, ‘cause I've seen this too, of course. Yeah, we can book that person, but I already know we have to put them in a studio.
Mara Junot
Yeah.
Randall Ryan
But there's also a difference that I don't understand. Let's just say you live in Los Angeles. The amount of time that it takes to go from studio to studio to studio to do auditions, if that is what you're doing.
Mara Junot
Mmm hmm.
Randall Ruan
At least having something that is audition-quality…
Mara Junot
Right.
Randall Ryan
…at your living space. It doesn't necessarily even have to be final-quality.
Brian Talbot
And that's not hard to do.
Randall Ryan
No, it's not hard to do.
Brian Talbot
Yeah, that's not a super high bar. Right?
Mara Junot
Yeah, exactly. You can get great audio on your, on your iPhone if you're in a quiet enough space. So I think that's frankly what a lot of people were doing. But now. it was like overnight when the pandemic hit, and it's really not fair to the talent to be perfectly honest.
Randall Ryan
Of course.
Mara Junot
I saw a big shift in the demands. It was like, it went from lockdown to “Hey do you have a U87 a and a double wall booth and a this and that?” And it's like come on!
Randall Ryan
Right.
Mara Junot
It's just kind of crazy.
Brian Talbot
Yeah.
Randall Ryan
Well, there is the other side of that, that has also been a problem. Well, you see that with almost anything, right? You see that with all kinds of social issues where something does need to occur, and then there becomes an overreaction to whatever that is. And I think in a totally different way…
Mara Junot
Right.
Randall Ryan
…that's what you have here. Like, “ oh well since people are gonna have to be at home, surely you’re tricked out just like it was when you were coming into the studio, right?”
Mara Junot
Riiight!
Randall Ryan
And that expectation is just whacked.
Mara Junot
It’s totally whacked!
Brian Talbot
Yeah, can I hear you on the U87, the 414, and the Sennheiser shotgun, please, right?
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Randall Ryan
Yeah, right. And the 421.
Mara Junot
Which fortunately, I have but most talent don't. Yeah.
Brian Talbot
Right. I got a Radio Shack mic. What do you want?
Randall Ryan
Yeah, can go back in your vault? Maybe just for this one session, can you pull out an AKG 414..the 414B, not the C, like…
Mara Junot
Right.
Brian Talbot
Yeah, yeah.
Mara Junot
Yeah, it's nuts. I mean, yeah. And it's not as if, you know, everybody's on one page as far as microphones, either. I mean, I've literally done games where, most games they're like, oh you know the TLM 103 or the U87, but I have some developers, they want the 416, you know?
Randall Ryan
Right.
Mara Junot
And so it's, it's just nuts. What do you guys think in terms of that? Because I hear arguments on both sides. Some people say look, this whole mic debate thing is just long and drawn out and unnecessary, because if you're going to go into a studio, every celebrity is going to be on that exact same damn mic, nobody's tweaking it for their voice and finding the right model and the right this; everybody's either on the shotgun or they're on their U87 or whatever mic they happen to have in studio. So it doesn't really matter. It's just about what sounds good. But then other people are like: “oh no. You need the rejection of the shotgun of the 416 or you need, you know? What do you guys think? Is it ultimately about just what sounds good on your damn voice? Or is there really some big differences that you find it's kind of necessary to make sure that you're close enough?
Brian Talbot
For me personally, I've been using the same mic for 30 years.
Mara Junot
Wow, which one?
Brian Talbot
Uh, the Audio Technica..
Randall Ryan
Mr. Microphone?
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
…4033. It's the original, it's the original 4033.
Mara Junot
Yeah.
Brian Talbot
And that went through a bunch of iterations and some tech spec changes and all that kind of stuff. But I have the original 4033. And it's funn,y because I was moving from New York City back to Indiana, and I didn't know what I was going to do. So I ended up buying a bunch of studio gear, and I went microphone shopping. So I went to a Guitar Center, Sam Ash, or whatever it was, right? And they literally had like 200 microphones in a room. And so I put on a set of headphones and then I just went around and pushed the button for each and every single one of them and listened to my voice, listened to my voice, listened to my voice on every single one, including the 414 and the 416 and the U87…
Mara Junot
Yeah.
Brian Talbot
…and the 103. And, I mean I listened on everything. And I figured out that, for my voice specifically, what I really loved about the 4033 is that it gave me enough bottom end, but I'm not like that deep announcer voice
Mara Junot
Right, right.
Brian Talbot
But it was able to resonate what is down there, and then it was able to take my midrange and really put a crisp edge on it.
Mara Junot
Interesting.
Brian Talbot
And so I'm like, okay this is the mic.
Mara Junot
Yeah.
Brian Talbot
Right? And now, obviously I've gone into studios and used all sorts of different kinds of mics and all that kind of stuff. I still like my mic.
Mara Junot
Right. Right. “And nobody's ever stopped you on a project and said oh we can't work with you because..
Brian Talbot
..you don't you don't have the right mic.!
Mara Junot
Right.
Brian Talbot
And in fact, I have had comments on even recording from home, right? How clean and what a great sound I can get coming out of my mic.
Mara Junot
Mmm hmm.
Brian Talbot
I mean at the time it was a $400 mic. I don't know what the going rate on something like this is these days, but it's still it's nowhere close to what you're paying for the Neumanns or some of the higher end Sennheisers or any of the other stuff, right? People spend so much time focused on the microphone. Like the tool is gonna make the difference. It's like well why don't you, first of all, spend the time working on your environment, so it doesn't sound like you're standing in your shower…
Mara Junot
Right.
Brian Talbot
…recording. And then after that, work on your technique, for God's sakes.
Mara Junot
Right.
Brian Talbot
Work on your acting. Work on your delivery, work on your performance.
Mara Junot
Right!
Brian Talbot?
You know what?
Mara Junot
Right.
Brian Talbot
I have never, ever had someone say “Man, it just sounds like you're on a bad mic.” I've never had that.
Mara Junot
Right, right
Brian Talbot
And so everyone who does this get so obsessed by things like,”well I think I should upgrade to the…” No, whatever.
Mara Junot
Right. I agree. And I've heard plenty of people on the wrong mic for them, I have to say. You know where they’re too sibilant and too bright or you know…
Brian Talbot
Absolutely. Absolutely.
Randall Ryan
And that's usually what the wrong mic is. There are exceptions to this, but it usually takes a characteristic of your voice that you DON’T want.
Mara Junot
Right.
Brian Talbot
And overaccentuates it. Yeah. so Randy, what's your take on this?
Randall Ryan
Well, you already said it. The very first thing is your environment.
Mara Junot
Right
Randall Ryan
I had a project where, let's just say there was a bit of a disagreement. It was something that was…
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Randall Ryan
…that was supposed to be done at a particular studio, and they were doing all of these measurements. They were literally measuring from the actor's lips to the mic, and making and taking pictures and making
Brian Talbot
Oh, my God…
Randall Ryan
Right.
Mara Junot
Wow. Wow.
Randall Ryan
They changed preamps to make sure they were getting the right sound, which…I'm sorry…if you can actually tell the difference between one preamp and another when everything else is exactly the same, God love you. By the way, the people that you're making this for cannot, will not…
Mara Junot
They can’t.
Randall Ryan
..and never will.
Mara Junot
(laughs) Right.
Randall Ryan
Get over your bad self.
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
And make sure that preamp catches a very effective “AAAHHHHHH!!!”
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Randall Ryan
Yeah! And…so the pandemic hits, right? So they continue this project with people's home studios, and where the disagreement came over…
Mara Junot
Oh, God.
Randall Ryan
…was an actor was in her booth and had her door open, and I could hear traffic noise going by.
Mara Junot
Sure!
Brian Talbot
Wel,l you know, it gets a little stuffy and you need some air flow. So I mean, come on Randy.
Mara Junot
Wow.
Randall Ryan
And so I asked, “Hey actor, is it possible for you to close the door to your booth?” I said “Can you do that?” She said yes.
Mara Junot
Does she normally not??
Randall Ryan
Well, that's not actually the point.
Mara Junot
(laughs) Point? That’s, uh..I’m sorry..
Brian Talbot
Although it's a good side question. It's a hell of a good side question.
Randall Ryan
The same people freaked out because we had changed her environment.
Brian Talbot
You changed the environment…
Mara Junot
Are you kidding?
Brian Talbot
…right in the middle of the record. How dare you change the environment! Well, it sounded like shit before. What do you want?
Randall Ryan
So you're actually so hyped that you want a specific preamp that you shipped stuff to her, but yet, you don't bother to tell her to close the door to her goddamn studio as trucks go by.
Mara Junot
Right. Right
Brian Talbot
Ugh.
Randall Ryan
So sometimes engineers don't know what they're talking about. They went to school, they did stuff. Absolutely agree: Very first, number one thing is your environment.
Mara Junot
Yeah, exactly.
Randall Ryan
First and foremost.
Mara Junot
I’m with you there.
Randall Ryan
A Neumann U87 in the middle of a concrete room is going to sound terrible.
Mara Junot
Oh, totally.
Randall Ryan
Just ‘cause I said it as a joke earlier. a Mr. Mmicrophone in a pristine environment…
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Randall Ryan
…is going to sound better than that. Now. I'm not saying that's what you do, but the point being that will sound better.
Mara Junot
Right. Right.
Randall Ryan
So, don't do the first thing.
Mara Junot
Yeah.
Brian Talbot
Well, and actually don't do the second thing either.
Randall Ryan
Well, don’t do the second thing either. Right.
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
Don't do, don't do don't do a Mr Microphone I’m in the middle of..
Randall Ryan
Don’t do a Mr. Microphone.
Mara Junot
Darn. I was dusting off my Mr Microphone right now.
Brian Talbot
(laughs) Hey, good looking. Be back to pick you up later.
Randall RyanDusting off? Mine’s just sitting right over here!
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Randall Ryan
That’s what I’m talking to you on. What are you talking about?
Mara Junot
(laughing) I know, who knew I could have been using it all this time?
Brian Talbot
See?
Mara Junot
Save me a lot of headache.
Brian Talbot
Yeah, Mara. Um, for this time, can you hook up the Mr Microphone please? That's uh..
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
…we want to make sure we get that, uh, Mr. Microphone sound. (cups mouth) Hey good looking, be back to pick you up later.
Randall Ryan
(laughs)
Mara Junot
(laughing) Oh my God…I always sound like this.
Randall
Don't you use the close and play for your speakers?
Mara Junot
Yeah, of course! Of course.
Randall Ryan
Right. Doesn’t everybody?
Brian Talbot
Absolutely.
Mara Junot
But I forgot about the Mr Microphone part.
Brian Talbot
See?
Randall Ryan
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
No, uh…this is the funny part. I'll have people who know me, right? And they’re like, “I really want to get into, uh, voiceover because, uh, people tell me I have a great voice.
Mara Junot
(laughing) I know!
Brian Talbot
“What microphone do you think I should buy?” And I’m like, well, why don't you practice first?
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Randall Ryan
Yeah. Yeah, there’s that.
Brian Talbot
Yeah, yeah, uh, that's a good idea, but uh…what microphone do you think I should buy?
Mara Junot
Oh, God, I know! It is asking a lot though. We…I mean the tech side really, we are asking so much. I mean, already talent have so much on their back with self-directing…
Randall Ryan
You do.
Mara Junot
…trying to interpret the specs; we have to mind read, we have to do all these things. And now, trying to learn Twisted Wave, or some people think they need Pro Tools and all this crazy stuff, and it's so much, it is so, so much. I do not envy anyone who has not had to deal with the tech side before. Because it really is, you're using different sides of your brain too, you know? I mean, you're going from this right brain performance, “I just want to act and do the art.” And then now you're like…
Randall Ryan
Right.
Mara Junot
You know, you're totally switching gears, and some people's brains just aren't wired that way, to be fair, you know?
Randall Ryan
They're not, but I will say this, in all honesty and fairness: if you are looking at this as a business person, which is part of what your career is, right?
Mara Junot
Right.
Brian Talbot
Absolutely.
Randall Ryan
You're not just artists, you are an entrepreneur who happens to be selling a creative artistic product.
Mara Junot
True.
Brian Talbot
So why would you not?
Randall Ryan
Right.
Mara Junot
Right.
Randall Ryan
And you don't necessarily have to say, I'm going to go to Full Sail and I'm going to learn to become an audio engineer. This is voice over.
Mara Junot
Right.
Randall Ryan
It is one microphone, it is generally one environment, and you really don't, in most cases, have to truly be an engineer. You can even pay somebody to come and set yourself up and just kind of leave it and go. To have that environment, you're now talking an investment in your career. You know, musicians, if you want to say, “all I want to do is play guitar. Somebody else should provide the guitar.” Who would ever say that?
Mara Junot
Right.
Randall Ryan
So I also think that the system that has been there in place so far has in some ways been a detriment, because if you learn something about what makes the whole tech work…and it doesn't have to get really deep,…we don't have to start getting in there and going to like, “should I get a dynamic Eq or should I get something that's a static EQ?” You don't have to go that deep. What's a good microphone? What's a good preamp? Is your environment good? How do you set your levels? Do you know what those levels are? That's what you need to know.
Mara Junot
Right
Randall Ryan
And also understand, in the same way as singer has to learn mic technique, you have to learn that, right?
Brian Talbot
Absolutely.
Mara Junot
Right.
Randall Ryan
How is that any less tech, really, when it comes down to it than, do you know where to set your preamp?
Mara Junot
Right.
Randall Ryan
You are doing the same thing. So, I, I also think that when I hear some actors say, “all I want to do is act” well, that's just great. I'm sure all you want to do is act, and you want your agent to take care of your business side of things, and your accountant and…No. You are an entrepreneur. You are a creative person. This is part of what you have to do. And by the way…
Mara Junot
Right.
Randall Ryan
…if you do learn that, the world, because of how technology has changed, is kind of opening up to you.
Brian Talbot
It opens up wide.
Randall Ryan
You can do projects…
Mara Junot
Right
Randall Ryan
…with people in Australia and Europe, and…
Brian Talbot
Absolutely.
Randall Ryan
Yeah, there are challenges with that, absolutely. But, there are also advantages of doing that. So,
Mara Junot
Right.
Brian Talbot
Yep.
Mara Junot.
So true. So, so true. Now it's, it's just kind of learning a language, you know, it's just, yeah, it comes with the territory.
Brian Talbot
You're so lucky because you get paid to talk.
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Randall Ryan
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
And, and, and, and engineer, and run a business, and market yourself.
Mara Junot
And interact, and market.
Randall Ryan
Well, no, but… I understand that and I do have sympathy for people who this has been thrust on. Because that's not the way the system has worked, there is a certain amount of, “wow, this is a lot to deal with, right at this moment in time.”
Mara Junot
Right.
Randall Ryan
And people are asking you for crazy things, and that's not right, either. But at the same time, just like any other business, this is the market. This is what you have to do…
Mara Junot
Right.
Randall Ryan
…and this is not the career you have to choose.
Mara Junot
Right.
Randall Ryan
So if you're going to do this…
Mara Junot
Right.
Brian Talbot
And I think it's just accelerated for some people. But I've had a home studio since the early 2000s.
Mara Junot
Right.
Randall Ryan
Right.
Mara Junot
Right. Same.
Brian Talbot
This should be nothing new to people.
Randall Ryan
Right.
Mara Junot
Right.
Brian Talbot
And with that said, I will also tell you, I recently went in for my first in-studio session in forever, forever. And it was wonderful. It was phenomenal to be sitting in a booth…
Mara Junot
Right.
Brian Talbot
…talking with the engineer and the client, you know? The client was actually remote, but just to have human contact doing a session and all that stuff, face-to-face with some people and stuff like that was phenomenal. So..
Randall Ryan
Absolutely.
Brian Talbot
I love that. I absolutely love that.
Mara Junot
Totally
Brian Talbot
And I missed tha. And it was so great to be able to do that. But at the same time, I think this is just the minimum bar.
Randall Ryan
Right.
Mara Junot
Yeah. And, I mean, now we're getting, too, into…especially in the world of video games…now, it's getting to the part that I dread: a lot of on camera technique, which I have none of. I know nothing about knowing my marks and lighting and all this stuff. But more and more, I'm seeing auditions where they want to, what they call it, the cowboy shot? From your hips up and all this and you got to do all this stuff and they want stuff off book… and I'm like, are you kidding me? And they want it like the next day. And I'm like, this is kind of, I didn't sign up for this.
Randall Ryan
Yeah.
Brian Talbot
Yeah.
Mara Junot
You know, I wanted to be a voice actor, not on camera, but sadly that's kinda changing too.
Randall Ryan
Well, we'll see how that goes. I mean, I'm not going to say that it won't, and if it does it's gonna happen over time, but I also think that some of the expectation…we'll see, right?
Mara Junot
Right.
Brian Talbot
Well, the bottom line is they can ask for it.
Randall Ryan
Rrrright…
Mara Junot
Well, and they'll get it. I mean, there's plenty of people who do both.
Brian Talbot
There are some people who can do it, right?
Mara Junot
Yeah.
Brian Talbot
And then there are other people who will specialize in in other areas and all that kind of stuff. That's the other side of it. Voice acting has changed so dramatically through specialization that it's insane. I mean, you can make an absolute killing of a career doing nothing but medical.
Mara Junot
Right
Randall Ryan
Right.
Brian Talbot
Right? If you do nothing else, except you're able to pronounce all those goofy, long, stupid medical words, right?
Mara Junot
(laughs) Right.
Brian Talbot
You can make a killer career out of that.
Mara Junot
Absolutely.
Brian Talbot
The specialization keeps getting deeper and deeper and deeper and deeper. Look at all the people that make an absolute killer living off of nothing but political.
Mara Junot
Right.
Randall Ryan
Right.
Brian Talbot
And you would think, oh, well that's every two years or every four years. Nope. no, no, no, no, no.
Mara Junot
Yeah.
Brian Talbot
It is a continual cycle.
Mara Junot
Oh, yeah.
Brian Talbot
It's a continual cycle, it never ever, ever stops.
Mara Junot
It’s so true.
Brian Talbot
So the opportunity is not that you'll do everything, but you can find the specialties that fit your niche.
Mara Junot
Yeah.
Brian Talbot
Right? And I think that that's really kind of a cool part of all this.
Randall Ryan
Mm hmm. Well, speaking of specialties, the thing that has always fascinated me that you have done that, I would love to hear more about and that is the whole live announcing thing. I know…
Brian Talbot
Ooh…that is a specialty.
Randall Ryan
…a small handful number of, of live announcers, but this is something that you started to do.
Brian Talbot
Yeah.
Randall Ryan
And how did that even come about? It just kind of came out of the blue, didn't it?
Mara Junot
Yeah. It really was just kind of a regular audition. I wouldn't even say it's a specialty of mine. I mean, I definitely…I'm fairly comfortable with it. I mean I'm extremely introverted, so the idea of having to, like, be anywhere near visible on a stage is a whole different shebang. But, my first big live announced gig was, oh my God, was that 2014?
Randall Ryan
Was it really that long ago?
Mara Junot
Oh yeah, I think it was 2014, it might have been 2013, but it was for the VH1 Divas Holiday Special…
Randall Ryan
Right.
Mara Junot
…in Brooklyn, and that was unbelievable. I mean, I'm talking literally some of the biggest divas were on the stage just a few feet away from me. I'm talking Mariah Carey, Patti Labelle, Shaka Khan…
Brian Talbot
Oh my. Gosh. How cool.
Mara Junot
Yeah. It really didn't even sink in until it was all over. I didn't realize I was kind of just in this trance of like, do not mess up, just go, just go with it.
Brian Talbot
Right? That's the hard part about live!
Mara Junot
Yeah.
Brian Talbot
You're sitting there and you're just, you're like wet your pants nervous…
Mara Junot
Yeah.
Brian Talbot
…about saying the wrong word or flubbing a pronunciation or everything!
Mara Junot
Well, and the best part two is I had done an AirBnB. I've decided I'm never going to AirBnB in New York City ever again for work, because I've done it in the past and I always regret it. This situation, we wound up in some lovely woman's apartment where the whole building, it was like, I don't know, 10, 12 story building. And,, let's just say four stories up or more, there was some smoke detector that was going off…
Randall Ryan
Mmm hmm
Mara Junot
on like the fourth floor.
Brian Talbot.
Ugh.
Mara Junot
But yet, you know, it's those old buildings, you know, like built in 1802 or whatever. So you can hear it just,…
Brian Talbot
Yeah, it’s just cardboard walls.
Mara Junot
Yeah! So you hear it throughout the entire building. So literally, approximately every, I think it was every 30 or 45 seconds..
Randall Ryan
(laughs) Oh God
Mara Junot
…from the time we got there, it was just like, BRRRT! GRRRTT! And so all night I could not sleep. And this is like, I have a big event, I don't do well with no sleep.
Brian Talbot
Ugh.
Mara Junot
And this is my first big life announced for Viacom VH1 and I'm like, you gotta be kidding me. I'm not gonna get any sleep.
Randall Ryan
(laughs)
Mara Junot
So, all night we're just fighting the chirp. I'm like burying my head in pillows. I literally had like three pillows over my head. I'm putting in ear buds, trying listening to brown noise and just BRRTTT! BRRTTT! all night. Of course, you can’t get comfortable because like…oh and the radiator didn't turn on. We figured out how to turn the radiator on like at five a.m.
Randall Ryan
Oh, jeez.
Mara Junot
(laughs) Or something, so I'm just freezing, I'm hearing chirps every 30 seconds, I can't sleep. Then the best part. So we finally like get a couple of hours. Like okay, got time to get ready to go for a rehearsal,because we have to do like a little quick rehearsal of a few things. Just kind of how the board's work and, and all this stuff…and we get locked in. I've never been in a situation…
Randall Ryan
Locked in?
Mara Junot
…where somebody can get locked inside an apartment! But this is what happened. Apparently, there were two doors in her apartment. One was covered up with shoes. She had this lovely shoe collection…
Brian Talbot
(laughs)
Mara Junot
…and she covered up the second door with this big curtain and all of her damn shoes!
Brian Talbot
Because, why would you need a door? (laughs)
Randall Ryan
(laughs)
Mara Junot
I'm like, I'm like, who designs this crap? So she somehow, I guess she had left a note in the instructions. Like make sure you don't…
Randall Ryan
look behind the shoes? (laughs)
Mara Junot
Yeah, I don't, I don't know. So we had no idea there was a second way out. But somehow we managed to like, we twisted the lock and we shouldn't have, and next thing you know we can't open the door from the inside.
Randall Ryan
Oh my gosh.
Mara Junot
It was bolted from the inside, and we don't have a key and the owner is not answering her phone ,and I've got to be at rehearsal in like (laughing) an hour and a half, and we have no idea if and when she's going to answer her phone, if and when I'm going to make it, and how I'm going to explain to my agent that I flew all the way from Colorado to Brooklyn only to get locked in my AirBnB…
Brian Talbot
That is perfect.
Mara Junot
(laughing)…and not be at the actual event.
Randall Ryan
Wow.
Mara Junot
Um, so luckily we were able to figure out that there was a second door. We threw all her shoes on the floor, sorry; bill us whatever, clawed our way out the apartment and like, booked it to Brooklyn. But it was absolute madness.
Randall Ryan
Oh, gosh.
Mara Junot
So just the fact that I was running on no sleep, crazy, frantic frame of mind. It was a whole blur for me, the fact that I got it done. And it really wasn't until I did the last announcement and walked out…the audience is kind of leaving and I'm looking around and I look up at the building and I just realized what had just happened. And I'm like, I just did that, I just made it work. I don't know how I did that, but it happened and it worked.
Brian Talbot
That's fun.
Mara Junot
(laughs) It was an adventure.
Brian Talbot
Of course, the creepy voice of the Saw character coming and going…
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
“Welcome to the luxury apartment, Mara”
Mara Junot
Oh my God, it was a moment, it was a moment of panic. (laughs)
Brian Talbot
you can get out, but you have a decision to make first.
Mara Junot
Live announce, It really is a lot of fun if you want to kind of push yourself into a new uh, I don't know if you're just getting a little bored with sitting in the booth, self-directing yourself, there's nothing to charge your batteries, like…
Brian Talbot
See that's why I do production though. That's, that's the hard part for me. I do production so I can do it over and over and over again…
Mara Junot
Right.
Brian Talbot
…until I get it exactly the way I want it to sound.
Mara Junot
Yeah. That's the beauty of it, right?
Brian Talbot
And any time I get put into a live position again…I came from radio a long, long time ago and all that kind of stuff, but…I've always gravitated towards production.
Mara Junot
Right.
Brian Talbot
Because the live thing, I just, man, I just, I get tense, I get uptight, I can't relax, I can't enjoy it.
Mara Junot
Yeah.
Brian Talbot
I'm just, I'm always on edge. But God bless those people who can do that and do that comfortably all the time.
Mara Junot
Right, right.
Brian Talbot
It's a different skill.
Mara Junot
It is a different skill.
Randall Ryan
How much did that spur just being able to do more live announcing? It's like, well you've got this very high profile thing under your belt.
Mara Junot
You know, it's a good question, because I have to say, any time I've done any sort of live announce thing, nobody's necessarily said, oh, I saw your reel or whatever this and that.
Randall Ryan
Mm hmm.
Mara Junot
Um, and fortunately a lot of the things that I've done have actually been prerecorded, like I've been the opening announcer 2…3? 2 years in a row, for sure, for NBC New Year's Eve.
Randall Ryan
Mm hmm.
Mara Junot
And that I'm able to record in L.A. You know, a few days before the event. And I'm literally sitting on my couch in L.A. watching myself…
Randall Ryan
Right.
Mara Junot
…”live announce” from New York.
Randall Ryan
I wonder what I'm going to say next!
Mara Junot
Right! (laughs) So it's a lot easier…
Brian Talbot
Hey, 20 bucks says I say this!
Mara Junot
Right!
Randall Ryan
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
(laughs)
Mara Junot
And in fact, just a few weeks ago I got to be the announcer voice for the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Awards, the Gladd Awards, the 32nd annual. And again, got to do that from my home studio and we recorded that I think a week before the event. So yeah, fortunately most of my quote unquote live events have not technically been live, which works out great for somebody like me who needs a little prep time.
Brian Talbot
Right?
Randall Ryan
I just thought of a great party trick: invite a bunch of people over to watch an award show..
Mara Junot
Right? (laughs)
Randall Ryan
…and just when you're getting ready to say, excuse me, I've got to go to my booth and just go wander in there…
Mara Junot
(laughing)
Randall Ryan
…and say “No, no, if anybody's in there watching me, I can't do this.” And just take it like it's live.
Mara Junot
That is brilliant! That’s brilliant!
Brian Talbot
(laughs)
Mara Junot
I'm so going to do that for the next one. (laughs)
Brian Talbot
Either that or just sit on the couch and watch people, and let them hear the voice and go, “wow, that that sounds like you!” Really?
Randall Ryan
(laughs)
Mara Junot
Somebody's gotta die! (laughs) Who is that?
Brian Talbot
That's interesting. Really? You think that sounds like me? No, that doesn't sound like me.
Randall Ryan
That would be another great angle to do it.
Mara Junot
(laughing) Oh, I like yours, Randy.
Brian Talbot
Live announcer parties.
Mara Junot
That’s hysterical.
Randall Ryan
No, no, but you can't come in and watch me. I will completely freak out if anybody's watching.
Mara Junot
Right! (laughs!) And then I just walk out with a whiskey.
Randall Ryan
Yeah, some popcorn or something in there.
Brian Talbot
Yeah, and just keep getting more and more sloshed through the night.
Mara Junot
(laughing) Right?
Brian Talbot
So that by the end, you’re “(drunk) I gotta do one more of these,” and you walk away, you come back and like, “how in the hell did she do that? She sounds so sober, but I know how hammered she is! Oh, my God!”
Mara Junot
(laughing) Exactly. Oh, God.
Brian Talbot
(laughs)
Mara Junot
Genius.
Brian Talbot
Kids don't try this at home,
Randall Ryan
(laughs)
Mara Junot
Do NOT try this at home. Oh, my gosh.
Brian Talbot
This is a seasoned professional.
Mara Junot
(giggles)
Brian Talbot
Oh my God.
Randall Ryan
You mentioned earlier that you are a musical person.
Mara Junot
Oh yeah.
Randall Ryan
This is a running theme that we have with a lot of people that have gotten into voice acting, that they have a musical background. What is yours?
Mara Junot
Well, I guess…I guess you could say I have some formal background. I mean, I was in Band, you know, when I was younger in middle school and things like that. I played the flute. But I always had a really strong musical ear. I wouldn't dare say I have perfect pitch, ‘cause I've met people who can just, the note comes out and they're like, that's a C sharp, you know.
Randall Ryan
Right.
Mara Junot
Whatever. Like, I can't do it like that, but I guess I'm more like a relative pitch person? Like..
Randall Ryan
Mm hmm.
Mara Junot
I can find my C and then, you know, work my way up in my head. So I need a couple of seconds. But,
Randall Ryan
Mm hmm.
Mara Junot
For the most part, I do find that if there is a song that I like, usually more often than not I hear it still in my head in the original key.
Randall Ryan
Mm hmm. Right.
Mara Junot
Or maybe half a step off. But I'm always very, very close. So, my mom said I was always like that with music and stuff. I mean, I learned that I could play keyboard by ear and I was like, I don't know, maybe 12, 13. She was like, “yeah, you would hear a song and then you would be playing it back pretty quickly in like a couple of takes.” She makes it sound a little more dramatic than I think it was. I don't think it was quite that good, but I absolutely can pick up on exactly
Brian Talbot
Hey take it; she’s your mom, right?
Mara Junot
Exactly.
Brian Talbot
(laughs)
Mara Junot
Your biggest fan, right?
Brian Talbot
There you go, there you go.
Mara Junot
But I don't want people to think like I'm some sort of (laughs)
Brian Talbot
Prodigy.
Mara Junot
Right! I mean, uh…
Brian Talbot
Mara Junot, musical prodigy.
Mara Junot
(laughs) Exactly.
Brian Talbot
Here she is.
Mara Junot
It's just not that serious.
Brian Talbot
Actually, though, that's got to be what helps you be able to voice match and do all those kinds of things.
Mara Junot
Absolutely, no, I mean..
Brian Talbot
‘Cause it's all the tonal qualities and inflections and…
Mara Junot
Yeah.
Brian Talbot
Patterns and and everything else and that's all music.
Mara Junot
I think this is kind of one of the unspoken things about voiceover, you know. People will have tons of wonderful websites: how can I get into voiceover? How can I be a better business person in voice over? how can I this, how can I that? But what I really don't see a lot of people mention, and this is a controversial opinion, but I stand by it. I don't believe that an ear can be taught. I've had some people say that it can, but I have yet to meet anyone in my life who was like, I had no musical ear whatsoever.
Randall Ryan
Right.
Mara Junot
Now I can, I haven't heard of that happening. I think maybe if you have a decent ear, you can certainly strengthen it, but I don't believe that you can come from a place and you just don't have any musical sense, I don't think you're gonna get as far as you could in voiceover compared to somebody who has a strong musical ear. I just don't. Because like you said, it is a form of music, whether you're talking about a demo and trying to keep people's attention and making sure that
Randall Ryan
Yeo,
Mara Junot
You know, every spot kind of flows a certain way, like a big song. I kind of see demos, like a big, oh God, what sort of music that we have in the seventies with like the rock operas and stuff?
Randall Ryan
Yeah, a rock opera. Right.
Mara Junot
Yeah, it's kind of like a rock opera, like you want to grab their attention right away with who you are and you want to keep them on that ride and with a lot of shifts. You know, it's like a suite. And that's all musical production.
Brian Talbot
Sure.
Mara Junot
And the same thing, whether you're doing a video game and trying to be some big orc. Just for the sake of maintaining the character, for goodness sake, If you can't hear in your ear that you're slipping out of character, or know how to get yourself back quickly because you don't have that music locked in your head in terms of their age, in terms of the pacing. You know, if they're older, they're going to probably talk a little bit slower or have a certain cadence, especially if you're doing sort of soundalike work, where you're trying to mimic an existing character.
Randall Ryan
Mm hmm.
Mara Junot
You really need to have a sense of what is their rhythm? You know, how do they tend to, what is their speech pattern like? And, and then of course commercials and promo, it's nothing but timing. I mean, you better get that down in five seconds, 15 seconds, 30 seconds, 60 seconds.
Randall Ryan
Right
Mara Junot
And if somebody asks you “can you shave two seconds off?” you need to be able to have that skill in your head to know how to do that.
Randall Ryan
Yep.
Mara Junot
And that just is pretty intimidating for a lot of people. I don't think people really, when they think about getting into this business, they're like, “oh, people tell me I have a great voice.” And people may even be great with computers, but then you have to take it to the next level and okay, now can you hear? Because not only do we have to be mind readers and try to be interpreters of whatever the hell the writers wanted in the first place, we have to be able to keep it all straight in our head.
Randall Ryan
Mm Hmm.
Mara Junot
When, you know, somebody says, give me an ABC, that next set of ABCs, if you have to do a second set or a third set or fourth set or a twentieth set, which is going to happen inevitably in a session, you need to be able to remember all those other takes and figure out how to give the next one a fresh set of variety.
Brian Talbot
Yeah.
Mara Junot
And so many people just can't do that. God bless. It's a challenge. So that's just something I like to put out there. Nobody wants to hear it. Don't shoot the messenger, don't get mad at me. But I just really think, you know, it’s important.
Brian Talbot
No, I couldn't agree more. Being musical is really important. I mean, a little known fact about me. I was part of the Bay City Rollers.
Mara Junot
Yeah?
Brian Talbot
S A T U R
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
D A Y night! I don't know if that brings back any memories…
Mara Junot
(laughing) Oh, yeah.
Brian Talbot
…but that was me. That was me so
Randall Ryan
Well, except he was part of the Bay City, Michigan Rollers.
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Randall Ryan
So they didn't, they were a little more regional.
Brian Talbot
We used to sing before the roller derby.
Randall Ryan
Yes.
Brian Talbot
S A T U.R. D.A Y night!
Mara Junot
(laughing) Oh my God.
Randall Ryan
Yeah, it was. But you know, but in Bay City they were the 3rd most popular band there. So,
Mara Junot
Yeah!
Brian Talbot
You know, we were like the Michael Stanley band in Cleveland.
Randall Ryan
The Michael Stanley Band! Right. Well they were more popular, you know? They were…
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
Well in Cleveland they were. They were but they weren't popular anywhere else.
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Randall Ryan
They were… no now come on now. You were in Bay City and they knew who Michael Stanley was there. He had played…
Brian Talbot
But they weren’t as popular as S A T U R…
Randall Ryan
Oh, now that’s true.
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
…D A Y Night!
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
I can still, I can still go into Bay City Michigan and do that and people ask for my gosh, darn autograph.
Randall Ryan
That’s very cool!
Brian Talbot
I kid you not. I kid you know it's very cool.
Mara Junot
That’s amazing.
Randall Ryan
That is cool.
Brian Talbot
Yeah. So…
Randall Ryan
I like that.
Brian Talbot
So well um so this has been really incredibly cool but um, I think we're gonna have to go because it is S.A.T.U.R.
Mara Junot
(laughs) D A Y
Brian Talbot
NIGHT!
Randall Ryan
Hey, I do want to add one thing before we do that just because of what you did just say, Mara.
Brian Talbot
Yeah.
Mara Junot
Yeah.
Brian Talbot
Sure. Oh you're gonna bring it back serious again, aren't you Randall? Damn you. Damn you.
Randall Ryan
You don't know what I'm gonna say. So you don't know if I am.
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Randall Ryan
You are just making… you are making a supposition….
Mara Junot
He just wanted a chance to damn you!
Randall Ryan
You're projecting your self and your ideals…
Brian Talbot
I know. I am. I am.
Randall Ryan
…onto me yet again. I'm not sending you that audition to replace me. I'm taking you out of that pool. You’re not getting the audition to replace me.
Brian Talbot
I have a perspective.
Mara Junot
Uh oh.
Brian Talbot
I am a talent with a perspective.
Randall Ryan
(laughs)
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
S.A.T.U.R.D.A.Y. Night!
Mara Junot
Oh my God.
Brian Talbot
(laughs) Oh my God. Okay I'm sorry. Go ahead Randall. Please.
Randall Ryan
(coughs) I digress.
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Randall Ryan
So you mentioned about the music thing and how people need to be able to understand,: can you shave those seconds off?
Mara Junot
Right.
Randall Ryan
Do you understand timing? Nobody bats an eyelash at that. I mean they may; they may say “I don't know if I can do that” but they accept that. Yet…
Mara Junot
Right.
Randall Ryan
…what we talked about earlier with understanding mic technique…
Mara Junot
Yeah.
Randall Ryan
…what a preamp does and everything else. Why is that actually any different? It's all something above and beyond just opening your mouth and talking.
Mara Junot
Exactly.
Randall Ryan
It is part of the skill set.
Brian Talbot
It's part of the job.
Randall Ryan
Some people are better at one aspect of the skill set than another. You don't have to be 100% great at all of it. “I really am good with characters, I'm not good with accents.” Okay.
Mara Junot
Right.
Randall Ryan
That's okay. But you have to at least have some knowledge of accents, right? Even if you say like well I can't really hold a British accent, or I'm not really good with regional accents. But sometimes just to even really get into a character, you at least have to know how to manipulate that voice…
Mara Junot
Right.
Randall Ryan
…to be something other than just you.
Mara Junot
Right. And sustain it. Remember it. And also sustain it because some people just slip in and out of character or they'll do another character. It's like no, you need to sustain that one character.
Brian Talbot
That’s the trick.
Randall Ryan
Yeah 30 seconds at a party does not mean you've got a great Irish accent.
Mara Junot
Right. (laughs)
Brian Talbot
Yeah. You want to be really good at doing characters? Go ahead, create a character and then stay in that character all day, and sing a song in the character voice without bringing your own voice into it.
Mara Junot
That's the hardest thing.
Brian Talbot
That's one of the hardest things to do. Yeah.
Mara Junot
The hardest thing for me, I've seen actors who can do it when they're like, I'm playing a character who's Impersonating another character.
Randall RyanOh, jeez. Right.
Mara Junot
You know, like Homer Simpson trying to do Spock, you know what I mean?
Brian Talbot
Yeah. Yeah.
Mara Junot
That blows my mind. (laughs) I cannot!
Randall Ryan
Yeah, that's a skill.
Brian Talbot
Yeah, for me, the more basic test is always, can your character sing?
Randall Ryan
Mm hmm.
Mara Junot
Yeah, totally.
Brian Talbot
Can you make yourself sing as the character? Not as you.
Mara Junot
That one’s tricky for me, too. Yeah. I have to say. It is tricky.
Brian Talbot
It’s hard!
Mara Junot
It is hard.
Brian Talbot
It is a lot of practice. It's a lot of work.
Mara Junot
It is.
Brian Talbot
And it's a lot of focus. And if you can get to that point, that's kind of where you need to be able to be if you're gonna do characters or whatever.
Randall Ryan
Mm hmm.
Brian Talbot
There's musicality in all of it. And I think the musicality becomes even more and more important as we separate the people who work versus the people who say, I've got a good voice.
Mara Junot
Yeah, right. (laughs)
Randall Ryan
Absolutely.
Mara Junot
A good voice will only get you so far, but, you know, can you sustain a career? That's gonna take a whole lot more.
Brian Talbot
Exactly.
Randall Ryan
Yep. Yep.
Brian Talbot
We really appreciate the time you've given us.
Mara Junot
Likewise. Thank you guys.
Brian Talbot
It's always fun talking with you.
Brian Talbot
We could talk for hours and hours and hours, but we must be respectful.
Mara Junot
Oh, I understand, I understand. I agree. This was such a blast. So good to hear you guys’ voice.
Brian Talbot
This has been really great. So um, Randall?
Randall Ryan
BT.
Brian Talbot
Mara?
Mara Junot
Hey!
Brian Talbot
Welcome to the club!
Mara Junot
(laughs)
Brian Talbot
Until next time. Thanks!
Randall Ryan
Take care!
Mara Junot
Thanks! Bye!
Randall RyanA
Let's talk Voiceover is hosted by Brian Talbot: actor and all around creative guy. And me: Randall Ryan,
owner of HamsterBall Studios, delivering the world's best talent virtually anywhere. If you have comments, questions, ideas for other show topics you'd be interested in hearing, or you just want to let us know what you think, reach out by sending us an email to BT, for Brian Talbot, bt@letstalkvoiceover.com. Check out our website at www.letstalkvoiceover.com, or find us on Itunes, Stitcher, Spotify, and you know, just about anywhere else you get podcasts. Thank you for listening. We'll talk again real soon.
Thursday Sep 02, 2021
Let’s Talk Voiceover - Episode 34 - Chuck Campbell
Thursday Sep 02, 2021
Thursday Sep 02, 2021
Chuck Campbell has been a working voice actor for a very long time. If you are in the voice acting business, you need to understand what Chuck already knows. It’s a business, first and foremost. For more than two decades, Chuck has been in front of the camera and behind the mic, including thousands of tv and radio commercials, training and corporate videos for Fortune 500 companies, 55 audio books, and the film, “Ides of March” with George Clooney, Ryan Gosling and host of other great actors. Not bad for a guy who took a chance and walked away from a steady paycheck 20 something years ago to invest in himself.
So how do you keep a voice acting business thriving while keeping a 4 handicap? I want to know. Let’s Talk Voiceover, Chuck Campbell.