Thursday, November 18, 2010

Directing Voice Talent II

Director prep: First, you need to understand the script and what you want the voice talent to accomplish. A way of clarifying this for yourself is to listen to a performance from a commercial, film, video or TV show that you'd like your actors to emulate in feel, tone and attitude. That gives you a target to aim at. Determine in advance how you'll direct them to achieve that. This will vary depending on your actors' skill, experience and your relationship with them.

Secondly, make sure the voice talent understands what needs to be accomplished. Let your actors in on those little secrets: who is the audience? Are they eavesdropping on a conversation? Listening to a voicemail message? Are they being spoken to directly? How do we want the listener to feel?

Don't ask the actor to produce a feeling or you'll get something forced. Tell them what you'd expect the listener's reaction to be - to cry, to laugh, to reminisce, to be energized, etc.

What thought do we want to leave the listener with? What action do we want them to take? What's the underlying attitude and agenda of the person speaking? Often it's in contrast to spoken words and can add great interest to the spot.

Describe the character(s) physically, psycho graphically and sociologically. Give your voice actors information, so they can understand where each character is coming from.

If you're directing dialogue, explain the "back story" - the relationship and history to the participants. Are they coming into this scene after a fight, or after making love? After a life-threatening experience or a spiritually uplifting one? Have the voice talent emotionally experience the moments before we enter the scene, either by imagining themselves there, or by pulling the appropriate emotions from their own experience, so they're in character from their first breath. Have them ad lib or "read into" the scene. Even the tag reader should hear what's gone before to understand how to read the tag.

If the final commercial will be produced with sounds in the background, often it's helpful to play those sounds over their headsets while they record. If they hear the traffic, or the sounds of a mountain stream, or the fireworks, or the loud music at the club, it will help put the voice talents "on location" so they'll speak with the appropriate volume, projection or intimacy.

Remember that you're doing radio. The audience will only see the characters your actors are creating in their mind's eye. Try doing the same thing. Close your eyes and listen to your talents' delivery. That way you won't base your direction on the way they look, their facial expressions or physical movements. It's kind of like listening to... the radio.

Written by Jeffrey1
Listen to Jeffrey1's Demo
www.VoicesOnlineNow.com

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Directing Voice Talent

Whether you're a writer, producer, actor, or director, developing directing skills will make a world of difference in your commercials.

Directing is...inspiring, coaching, encouraging, cheerleading, getting inside the psyche of a voice actor and planting seeds so that that voice actor will bring to life words on a page. Good directing not only improves the final production, but it improves the skills of the voice talent being directed.

The result is a more believable commercial. The audience, the client and the station will are the beneficiaries.

Listen to how people speak. The pitch changes that occur when they're happy or depressed, the audible tension when they're under stress, the sound of an angry person speaking with a tight jaw, are all reference points for a good director to have. As your voice talent moves through the commercial, keep asking yourself, "Is this how a person in this situation would sound?" That's the mark you should be aiming for and nudging your voice talent toward.

A common mistake is to ask the voice talent or voice actor to emphasize too many words. This can make it should too much like a pitch or announcer voice and not like a conversation. Sometimes just a small rise in the pitch of a word will make it stand out. Remember, your listener is participating in the conversation. Involve their imagination by not having the voice actor give it all away in the delivery.

Believability starts with the casting. Find the best voice actors you can afford. This will make your job much easier. Instead of telling them how to read the script, tell them why you wrote it the way you did. Let them bring their experience to it. You may be pleasantly surprised.

Be confidant of the performance you're anticipating, so you don't confuse and frustrate your talent by changing direction after each take. However, you may also get interpretations you hadn't planned for. Be open to changing your preconceptions and going with the new direction if it works better than what you had in mind.

Try to make the session fun and keep your voice talent relaxed, even if you and the client may not be.

Written by Jeffrey1
Listen to Jeffrey1's Demo
www.VoicesOnlineNow.com

Thursday, November 4, 2010

ESPN College GameDay Comes to Utah


ESPN's "College Football GameDay" is coming to Salt Lake City this week and fans are encouraged to attend all of its shows in Rice-Eccles Stadium.

On Friday, Nov. 5, the ESPN "GameDay" crew of Chris Fowler, Lee Corso, Kirk Herbstreit, Desmond Howard and Erin Andrews will broadcast segments for "SportsCenter," "College Football Live" and other ESPN shows from the set in Rice-Eccles Stadium from 10 a.m. until around noon.

On Saturday, "College Football GameDay" will begin airing before a live crowd a 7 a.m. The show last for three hours (until 10 a.m. MT), with the first hour on ESPNU and the remaining two hours on ESPN.

Written by Robert Jackson
For full article visit www.DeseretNews.com