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A Personal Portrait of My Mentor ![]() You will need Progressive Network's RealPlayer 4.0 or higher and a 28.8 modem to listen to all sounds. |
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He also co-wrote and voiced many of Stan Frebergs greatest comedy records. He went on to write and voice countless television and radio commercials and voice now-classic characters for Tex Avery, Hanna-Barbera, Walter Lantz, Jay Ward and others. The successful characters he voiced are staggering in number: Yogi Bear, Huckleberry Hound, Quick Draw McGraw, Baba Looey, Mr. Jinx, Dixie, Super Snooper, Blabbermouse, Augie Doggie, Snagglepuss, Hokey Wolf, Fibber Fox, Loop de Loop, Wally Gator, Lippy Lion, Peter Potamus, Chilly Willy, Elroy Jetson, Mr. Cogswell, Henry Orbit, Cap'n Crunch, Hair Bear, and on and on...
As if Daws's successes in the world of acting and writing were not enough, he also was a superb teacher, conducting a weekly workshop for actors and writers. I was blessed to have studied with Daws Butler for over 12 years. He taught me nearly everything I know about acting. So that I may pass some of it on to others, I have compiled here for the first time a collection of Daws Butlers thoughts on acting and his career.
What follows
was transcribed from my personal archive of audio taped conversations
I had with Daws between 1975 and 1988. In addition, I have interspersed
one conversation Daws had with animation expert and author Milt
Gray. The first half of this collection focuses on Dawss
career. In the second half, Daws "teaches" the art of
voice acting and demonstrates technique. Since what follows was
transcribed from audio tapes, I have marked in italics any sections
in which Daws was speaking in a character voice or dialect. Some
of Daws's demonstrations are linked to sound clips. Click on the
highlighted links to hear Daws speak! ![]()

I never really
thought of it as doing voices. When I was a kid, when I was in
high school, I was very shy, very inhibited, withdrawn. And I
was sort of a playground clown. I was a funny guy for the guys.
Afraid of the girls. But they looked at me as being somewhat of
a comic and I was doing little impersonations. I wasn't even aware
of the fact that I was doing impersonations. I was just taking
off people who were very prominent on radio and the guys got a
kick out of it and laughed and it alleviated some of my shyness.
But it didn't help me when I was in school because I was really
too embarrassed to get up and give aural recitations and I lost
a lot of credits that way. So I sort of just stumbled into acting
or doing voices I think to get the attention of my peers. I was
short. I was at that time probably very aware of my size. I haven't
been since I broke through... through my talents but I like to
write and I was very good. That was my first love really, writing
and drawing, doing cartoons. I wanted to be a cartoonist when
I grew up. And I was writing poetry and funny little sketches
when I was in grammar school. The acting came much later. ![]()

I went to see Johnny Burton at Warner Brothers Cartoons, when it used to be on Sunset Boulevard, just a block east of Gower. I walked into his office one day, just cold -- because I'd seen cartoons, and I thought it'd be a kick; I'd never done any. This was about 1946, or maybe '47, somewhere in there. I auditioned right in the front of him, at the desk, and did about 25 different characters, every dialect and character I could think of. He seemed impressed; he said, "Gee, that's great, but Mel does everything. But I tell you what -- why don't you call a guy at MGM named Tex Avery, and tell him that I suggested you go out there and see him." I didn't even know who the hell Tex Avery was. I knew who Mel Blanc was; that was about it. And barely that, because I hadn't seen that many movies when I was in the service, and Mel hadn't started that many years before.
I did go out to
see Tex at MGM. He entered a little studio theater, and I went
into what they had for a control room -- it was like a storeroom,
with stuff piled all over. He sat in the theater, and I got on
mike, and I must have worked for 40 minutes, doing everything
I could think of. I was ad-libbing. Four or five different types
of English characters -- Scotch, Irish, cockney, Russian, Polish,
Southern, old men, little kids. When I came out he seemed suitably
impressed, and the next morning I got a call for a cartoon. I
wasn't even a member of AFTRA, which covered radio. So I called
up the Screen Actors Guild, and said I had a firm commitment for
a job, and went down and paid my dues, or whatever, and went out
to see Tex, on the big recording stage at MGM, and did my first
cartoon. ![]()

Tex loved my Southern voice, and tried for a year to come up with a character for it. He finally did; it was a wolf who looked very menacing, and he played with the three little Droopys. We may have had only six lines in the whole cartoon, but each one was a blockbuster. It was like Three Little Pigs, and you see the wolf start out at the beginning with the net, and the car with "dogcatcher" on the back , and a mean look on his face; and you've seen the little (Droopys) before, and they've built there little house, and (the wolf) goes up to the house, and pounds on the door- just pounds, no voice, no dialogue as yet- and finally he's pounding with a battering ram, shoots cannon balls against it- nothing. His first line- and it was (in a voice) different from Huck, (although) Huck was an outgoing of that- was, "Man, I wanna tell you somethin' right now, that thar's a well-built doghouse." They were going to make a whole series of "wolf" cartoons but then MGM (the cartoon studio) went under.
Tex was a marvelous guy to learn the business with. He was the first brilliant (director) I ever worked for, and he's such a fussy man. This was before they had tape, and everybody was afraid of wasting film, so he would rehearse me, until I wouldn't have any voice left. There would be yells- he loved yells. I don't know if he invented the gag, but he sure used it a lot, where the guy hits his thumb with a hammer or something, then looks up and it says, "Hospital Zone- Quiet," and he runs over hill and dale, into the distance, and goes YEOWW! A yell is a yell, and I do pretty good yells, but he would have me do about eight of these, then he'd say, "Gee, that's close." Then he'd say, "Well, let's lay one down," then we'd do one on the film. Then he would always throw in a couple himself, just for protection.
Tex would always
rehearse, rehearse, rehearse. (The film on which the dialogue
was recorded) should have been running all the time; then you
could have gone back and gotten some beautiful readings. Like
with the wolf, each time I'd do it would have a different flavor.
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Bill Thompson had done Droopy, and done it very well, (but) he was in New York, or was out of town, or wasn't available when they wanted to do something, and so Tex said, "Do you know anybody who can do a voice like that? Could you do it?" I said, "I could hold my cheeks, and could approximate it, but I do know a guy who can do it very well, and his name is Don Messick." I'd meet Don at one of the radio schools. Don went out and did Droopy's voice, and they liked it, so Don just took over and did the Droopys whenever they had them. He did other characters for Tex, and I think Bill and Joe used him. When it came time for Hanna and Barbera to leave MGM, they called me, and they called Don Messick, because we were what I call thinking, inventive actors. They called us to do a show they were planning called Ruff and Reddy.
(The Ruff and Reddy segments) were three and a half or four-minute cartoons, interspersed with a couple of old Columbia cartoons- the Fox and the Crow, things like that. Bill and Joe wanted to get their own cartoons, because they weren't too fond of the available old timers, and thought they could better them. So, they came up with the idea of Huckleberry Hound, who was based on my Southern character.
An Art Carney
dog I had done a couple of times for Bill and Joe became Yogi
Bear; of course, I went far beyond Art Carney- the extended vowels,
the expansiveness, exuberance, diaphragm control, ebullience,
and the bigness, the massiveness of a bear. Another voice, a nebbish
type thing, became Mr. Jinks, and Pixie and Dixie were Don and
I. That started the ball rolling, except that Kellogg got wind
of this. We were doing Ruff and Reddy for Post Cereals and Reddy
was a dog, with a Southern accent, as was Huckleberry Hound. Kellogg
wanted to make a star of Huck so there was a kind of a tiff between
the two cereal companies. It finally ended up where Post just
bowed out of the picture, and Kellogg became the giant. ![]()

I've always loved Jinks; whereas a lot of people might like Yogi Bear, just because he was a bigger character. But to me Yogi is a good example of a "cartoony" character.

We did cartoons for five years, with three shows, The Huckleberry Hound Show, The Yogi Bear Show, and The Quick Draw McGraw Show. They were (in) prime time; they had big audiences. There was sharp writing; Mike Maltese was writing them and Warren Foster, the old Warner Bros. guys. Don and I were really funny, well-developed character actors, because they had to depend about 80 percent on the voice; there was no animation, really. It was a very affluent time, and, to me, the Golden Age of limited animation, because of the good writing, the good voices, and what animation was affordable.
Then Jay Ward came along about the same time, with Fractured Fairy Tales and Aesop and Son, with Charlie Ruggles and Edward Everett Horton; and those were classics. Bill Scott was writing, and Allen Burns, who's the producer of the Mary Tyler Moore show. We would break up, just on our cold readings.

It was so beautiful the way it used to be. Like, Tex would call me out, and he'd say, "This is the character," then you'd go over and do it. You didn't have 30 people to audition with, to get the part (as is common today). With Bill and Joe the same way. Maybe they'd call you the day before, and you'd see the script, and you'd do it the next morning, or something like that. You might start out on a little character, and the director would say, "How would that sound if it was just a little bit textured?" And you'd start talking with your lips, and get a textured sound. "How about if his voice kind of breaks, what would that do?" But you built it, you've constructed it right there, with (the director's) ideas, and yours, and hit or miss, maybe you come up with something.

|
Daws Butler and Joe Bevilacqua |
I want my students to learn to a certain extent by doing what I do. There's nothing wrong with that. In other words, I started out as an impersonator and I learned to be an actor by observing very, very carefully what the stars did. And when I say "stars" I don't mean "movie stars"... I mean "actors" like Paul Muni and Edward G. Robinson and George Arliss. Comedians like Jack Oakey, Joe E. Brown, Ned Sparks, Charlie Butterworth (who I later confiscated for Cap'n Crunch). But this is the way I learned. I studied there body action, how they moved, the structure of their face. If I could assume the structure of their face, the voice would follow, and in many many many many cases it did. So my theories were sound. |
The things I'm
teaching in my workshop now, I was doing as of kid of 17 and 18
years ago, more years than I like to remember. I didn't realize
it then. I was just lucking out. I just had this natural ability
and I thank God for it. I take credit for polishing it, for making
it better, but basically He just gave me a hell of sense of observation.
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The
voice means nothing. The voice is nothing. Nothing, nothing, nothing.
Lionel Barrymore years ago said something which I heard as a kid
and I never forgot. He said that the voice to an actor is incidental.
It's what he does with the voice, the thought, the word shaping,
the believability of the voice. I don't think there is any limit
to the number of characters I could do, but I am subject to the
writer. The things that I write for myself or for my workshop...
(LAUGHS) I have to audition just like everybody else even though
I wrote it. because when I put the lines down I have to interpret
what I said and what I'm driving at and in many cases I'll find
meanings after going through a script three or four times that
I wasn't even aware of the first time. Just because I wrote it,
doesn't mean I know that character inside and out; I don't. I
keep finding new truths, new values.
I would say the
thing you want to work for in characters is subtlety, and phrasing
and timing and believability. I have a thing that I say with my
workshop, about, I want you to understand the words, I want you
to taste the words, I want you to love the words. Because the
words are important, but they are only words. You leave them on
the paper and you take the thoughts and put them in your mind
and then you as an actor, recreate them, as if the thoughts had
suddenly occurred to you. It's Stanislofskyian concept. ![]()

If I was doing a British character, I do not hurry on from one word to another, or a phrase. Sometimes I'll use an "illesion". You must feel the new word come in as if you're thinking it.
If you are doing a character like a French man, there is a rhythm, a music that should go with it, not just imitating some Frenchman that you heard, whether it's Maurice Chevalier or Charles Boyer or whoever, there is a rhythm, there is a something. You will sound more French in your dialect than a man that comes over here from France and learns to speak our language. He picks up our cadence. That's the first thing a foreign person does. They pick up our rhythm. The average American rhythm, especially the Midwest or the East is pretty deadly. It just goes ahead on a monotone. Whereas the Europeans, the Continentals, the English go up and down on the scale; their not afraid to do it. There not afraid of abusing or hurting their masculine image.
(AS A FRENCHMAN)
Say, I was to do a Frenchman, I would say anything that comes
to my mind. I phrase.
I would say everything that comes to
my mind, da da da...it's like a triplet.
There is something about them, the
way they taste the words.
(CHANGE TO ITALIAN) Which is very different from say, Italian. Which is more like when I talk to you, I want you to understand that is important to express myself. To say to you, with this little "stop" you don't say... "Hey whatsa matta wit you? Donta tell me whatta you going to do!" No, thats not it. Thats a cartoon of an Italian.
(CHANGE TO
IRISH ACCENT) And if you are doing an Irish accent, you don't
over do it. Youve got certain sounds, certain sOunds, sOunds.
You almost
feel the word inside your mouth like it is like a little pear.
I say I feel certain sOunds and I'm sort of feeling the roof
of me mouth is a little rounder than when I'm doing American talk.
And there is a rhythm and a music to it, and I go up in the head
tone, you see
and I come back to a sort of a, what you would
call it?
a sub-tone, like in a clarinet. So you can talk
down deep, and then you can raise your voice when you get excited
but the hard thing is done with the tongue. The tongue is very
active in the Irish. The jaw doesn't move too much, not the
jaw, but the jAW. I tink I'm going to tAlk to somebody, I tink,
not I think. They don't put the tongue between the teeth.
I tink I'll talk
to that person,
pErson. so there is a plosive
on the "E" pErson.
(switch to German accent) If you are doing German, there is also a wonderful up and down cadences. And you talk very much in the front of the mouth.
(SWITCH TO MEXICAN) If you are doing Mexican, you dont say "I TEENK I do THEES. I DO THAAAT" sounds like Mel Blanc. What your doing when your doing the Mexican is being very soft. You talk very much in the front of the mouth the nerve endings on the lips are very sensitive and you use the tongue. Very much in the roof of the mouth. And you say the cadences and the sounds very much like this, I'm not paying attention to the words I'm using, this is not important. What I'm trying to tell you is words and the sound, this is the way the Mexican says.
There are interesting similarities in dialects too, like the Japanese, they do things like the Italians do.
(SPEAKS WITH
JAPANESE ACCENT)
I musa talk in a little triplets, ana hurry up ana stop and
spread vowels once in a while. You see whad I mean? But this
a very much in the front of the mouth. You almost put your teeth
on your lower lip, and this a make it difficult for you to say
certain sounds, like a "L". You say "Aw"
much a more simple. ![]()

(CHANGE TO HIGH VOICE) But a lot of people when they do a women
characters, they have a tendency to ride on a tone. But I do a
character, an English actress. Her name is Dame Edith Evans.
A woman doesn't have a natural falsetto. It is very difficult
for some women to do a falsetto. Dame Edith would come
the closest and yet I'm exaggerating her. You probably have seen
her in many English movies. But she talks something like
"Uh,
yes, I am Dame Edith Evans and I am trying to do a feminine
character now. But I am getting certain highs and certain lows
because there is a masculine quality in the way she speaks. But
that is how you might do a woman. ![]()
Now to do a younger woman (IN A TINY SOFT HIGH VOICE) you have to use very, very little voice, and you have to carry the sound as if it is coming from behind your eyes. Which is ridiculous because it is coming from your throat. (GOES UP EVEN HIGHER IN HIS VOICE) And that would be the way you would do a little girl also. But you see, you talk as if you are at the very top f your vocal cords.
And when you do a little boy... (IN
A YOUNG BOYS VOICE) you have to talk in the upper part of
your register; it's not a falsetto; it's really true voice.
But you gotta, you know, "think" like a kid does and
their not usually too secure. And um, they don't know exactly
what they are going to say. ![]()
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When you do an old man you don't just do a sort of a Gabby Hayes type thing. You have to feel whether he is wearing false teeth, whether his mental processes are not what they used to be and he can't remember things. But a lot of it is mainly when a person gets very old they can't remember things and they have to keep grasping at ideas. There is a calcification of his jaw, because he didn't have the best diet when he was growing up. He might have grown up in a poor situation. The tongue is not as active as it was.
(AS AN OLD MAN) So when you do an older fella, and he is ...uh... eh... trying to... uh er ah... think what he's going to say...it's a kind of eluding him... because, uh.. his thinking process are not as lucid... as they were... say, twenty years ago or even two years ago. Badly fitting plates in his mouth which give a hollow sound and he doesn't have the breath control that he did when he was younger, so... he has to suck in more breath and he squeezes out the words..... and sometimes is unable to finish a sentence... (BREATHS)... without taking in another breath.
When you are doing an emotionally concerned person, who maybe has some bad news. His diaphragm collapses. He feels phlegm rising in his throat. He feels the tear ducks in his sinuses aching as if tears are going to flow. He can not control his diaphragm. His speech comes out in little jerks and patterns. When a child cries, that's what happens with them.
(AS A LITTLE KID) When a little kid cries... I... I... I didn't ...do it... my sister... did it... I didn't really do at all.
Or if it's an older person, he'll say, (IN HIS NORMAL VOICE, BUT HOLDING BACK TEARS) Well um... what happened was... I was uh... just standing by the side of the road and I was pitching horseshoes... with my friend... uh... I uh... I didn't notice... I didn't notice the little dog... being around at all.. .and I uh... I let fly with the horse shoe... and uh...it hit him right in the head... and killed him on the spot. And I know it's your dog... and I'm awfully sorry... because I love animals... and all I can do is apologize.
So that's the
kind of an exaggerated idea of what I'm telling you, but they
have to be motivated by your body. You can't just do a thing with
good breath control all the way through, and say "This is
an old man; this is a lady; this is a little kid; this is a girl;
this is a woman." It has to be motivated by the body. A woman
has much shorter vocal cords than we do; that's why their voice
is higher, a child the same way. So you got to make that same
thing in your voice and by doing a littler voice you use less
of your own bottom, very little of your chest quality, for instance.
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Q:
Howdy, I am Quick Draw McGraw, the
world's fastest gun and dooooon't you forgit it! ![]()
B: And I am Baba Looey, his sides-kicks.
Q: I'll do the thinin' around here!
B: Uh, Draw?
Q: Yeh?
B: I din't say nothin' about thinin'.
Q: Uh, well, what did you say?
B: I jus' said I am Baba Looey, your sideskicks.
Q: Oh. Uh, well, then what I said was a misnomer.
B: A what?
Q: A misnomer.
B: I don't know her.
Q: Know who?
B: Miss Nomer.
Q: N, Baba Looey! Uh, (LAUGHS) I'm getting to cerebral
B: Well, Quicks Draw, all I want to say is I'm friend and you are my favorite sheriff. (SOFT, BUT CLOSE TO THE MIKE) He's the only sheriff I know.
Q: (OFF MIKE) What was that?
B: Um, you're the favorite sheriff I know!
Q: Oh, well, yeh, I guess that's true. (LAUGHS) I'm the only sheriff you know.
B: Oh yeh, I never thought of that!
Q: Well, think of it.
B: I thought you said YOU was going to do the thinin'?
Q: Uh... yeh. (LAUGHS) Well, that's right.
Another aspect of two characters, just two characters, not ones I'm known for, that's you'd recognize, but just two little guys talking:
HIGH VOICE: Hi ya, h-how are ya, how-how-how are you, how are ya, ya-ya-how are ya, how ya feel, ya feel OK, uh, wa-wa-how are ya?
DEEP VOICE: Uh, yeh, I feel OK. I'm uh just sitting here, you know, and uh I gotta leave very quickly though. I have an appointment.
HIGH: You have an appointment?
DEEP: Yeh, I have an appointment.
(PAUSE)
HIGH: You going to tell me who the appointment is with?
DEEP: Well, it's wit' my dentist.
HIGH: Oh... yeh.
DEEP:
Yeah,
my dentist, you know, is a midget. ![]()
HIGH: What?
DEEP: I say my dentist is a midget.
HIGH: You got a midget dentist?
DEEP: Uh, yeh. (BEAT) A little disconcerting you might say. he knees in my lap when he's fixing my teeth. Takes all the crease outta my pants. (LAUGHS) I can't even read a magazine.
Well, that's a
relationship between two characters. And you get the interest
of one to the other. You want to do a lot of pausing, introspection.
Have one character say a line and let the other one ponder it
a little bit before he has a rejoinder. ![]()

When you're doing a routine, you've got to remember to frustrate an audience is to please an audience. Hold away the strongest word of a sentence that has the punch line. Make them wait for it. Make them hunger for it. Make them wait for the enjoyment that laughter can give them, the release.
For instances, I'll tell you a little story that I think it is good example of timing:
This little Jewish woman, she's about eighty years old and she's walking down the beach in Santa Monica and she's got her little grandson by the hand and she's shuffling along and she's very arthritic... and all of a sudden a big wave comes in and just pulls him right out to sea... and she falls down on her knees and she says:
(IN JEWISH
WOMAN'S VOICE)
Oh mine God!
Don' take mine grandson! Dat's de apple of mine eye!
(CRIES) Don' take mine
grandson! I couldn't face his mother an' father when I go home
with out him! Dey trusted me! My son is a rabbi and his prays
in the temple everyday! "I" pray in the temple! I will
go on my knees for the rest of mine life!... if you just bring
back mine little grandson!
And a big wave comes up and deposits him on the beach again. And she picks him up tenderly in her arms and she looks up toward the sky and she says:
He had a hat!
Now this is better visually because when I do this I act out like the little old Jewish grandmother and I have a look on my face when I look up, before I say the punch-line, as if I'm going to say:
Tank you God! Tank you for bringing back mine grandson.
But instead of that, the joke is that I look up with this beautiful look AND the pause and I say:
He had a hat!!!
See, all acting
is music. And, if you do a character which is a middle European,
there is a way that you taste the words. You see. You don't
say: "there is a way that you taste the words." It
becomes much more believable to ME if you say... there is a
way that you taste the words. You make the words very much a part
of your own particular... uh... psyche. These words belong to
YOU, no one else. It's the way YOU say them that makes them important
a-a-and believable, you see. A-a-an-and that is short of a...
uh don't worry if if if if if you, if you stumble a little bit
or stutter or stammer. That becomes a part of the person you're
doing who very frenetic, very nervous, not sure of his, uuuh,
English language and the words that he's saying some-some-sometimes
he's SEARCHING for the... ub-ub-ub-ub-the proper... uh word, you
seeeeeee. (SIGHS) ![]()

If you do an impression it doesnt have to be very broad. With Peter Lorre, for example, you don't have to really go that far, or do that much. The thing to do with Peter Lorre is this feeling of excitement; that's more important than what you do with your voice. It's a very frenetic, nervous character, who is looking over his shoulder as he talks. And he wants to be sure that no one is going to hurt him; if anybody gets hurt, he's the one does the hurting.
And if you do a character like a John Wayne, not even an imitation but just that cadence:
Well, ya gotta get the feelin' not only of uh how he talks but the chest quality as somethin' insid-a him. And you go up and down in soma the phrases. Phrases. (UP INFLECTION) And then ya shorta jus' chop it up. But the jaw is doin' all the work in a case like this. The lips aren't doing a heck of a lot. It's the jaw goin' up and down gettin' that sort of a monatanous quality that uh ya do when ya caricature John Wayne.
(SWITCHING
FROM JOHN WAYNE TO JACK BENNY)
Jello again,
this is Jag Benny!
Now Jag Benny is a VERY
good person to impersonate. Person to impersonate? He's a delightful
thing to say. Gee Dennis, I thought you were going to SING, but
if you're not going to sing, well, DON'T! I mean Don Wilson'll
be here any in minute. Now, I'm not really doing as good a Jag
Benny as Rich Little or some of the others, but I'm getting the
JUICES of the way Jag Benny talks. Ya see what I mean? It's PHRASES
and TRIPLETS and I say "PHRASES"...
It's like the word goes out; it's an expulsion of sound.
Dennis! Whatta
ya talkin' about? Don Wilson is the fattest guy I EVER saw. He's
a delightful person but he's very FAT. ![]()

(IN A SOFT
BRITISH) You can do a very quiet Englishman with a great feeling
of narration... (BREATHS) and thoughtfulness. Try to get the feeling
when you do a character that you're thinking. (BEAT) Sometimes... it can be by
dwelling on a particular word. Like I said "sometimes".
Sometimes... you
think of something and you SAY it.
Then of course...
... there the fast-talking character where he says:
Now listen I walked in here the utter day I talked t' dis girlfriend a mine you know she's very short. Well I'm very short too you know but I mean I'm taller 'en her and I where de elevator shoes so it's not too noticeable. (UP) Lotta people think I'm taller 'em her. I'm not really taller 'em her. (VOICE GETS HIGH PITCHED) I'm abou' the same size you know but very very short. BUT if "she" wore elevator shoes and "I" wore elevator shoes then dey would think we were both short because we'd be the same size you know.
And I'm talkin' very fast but I'm also doing things like I'm spreadin' vowels once in a while and I'm doin' an illesion. You know, an "illesion". I'm not talkin' in the same tempo. What you don't wanna do when you do a fast talker is it all an equal emphasis... like...
(VERY FAST WITH NO EMPHASIS) I walk down to talk to this guy hes a very nice guy but I don't think he likes me as much as I like him you know what I mean because he he he always say n-n-nasty things and I never say nasty things to him...
(BACK TO MORE CHANGE OF TEMPO) ... so it's more fun if you get a little nit of legato once in a while. He's a fast-talkin' guy see... and ya stay in the chest tone once in a while; den you go up in the nose like this ... 'cause when I person gets excited their voice goes up... and that's what happens naturally... and that's what you wanna do with acting.
And try to stay away from doing throaty voices because they're very hard on your voice and they're difficult for ME to do, and if I kept it up, it would make me cough. (SWITCHES TO DEEP THROATY VOICE) You don't wanna get into the throat all the time or do something that's controlled 'cause its hard to get change of pace out of that.
(BACK TO HIGH
FULL TEMPO VOICE) So I what I want you t'do is uh when when you're
doin' a New Yorker or a character like dat ya-you're not too uh
pa-cikalar abou' how ya sayin' sounds, how ya sayin' sounds. Ya
wanna make it artic-a-late so people'll know what you're talkin'
about but uh you slurrrr. ![]()

(IN QUICK DRAW VOICE) Quick Draw Mc Graw is a dope character. "Howdy, I am Quick Draw Mc Graw"... and its very hard palletted... and I am sort of keeping my jaw very tight and making the jaw do was little work there is to be done. In other words, the tongue inside of my mouth is doing a lot of articulating and basically the lips are doing most of it really. "I am Quick Draw Mc Graw"...
(IN HIS NORMAL VOICE, BUT TIGHT JAWED) And I'm forcing out the articulation. If I was just talking naturally as Daws Butler, that's the way I'd be doing it, so the lips and the nerve-endings are doing all of the hard work, all of the "journeyman acting". The jaw is being held in almost a half opened position and that's it.
(IN HUCK VOICE)
With Huckleberry Hound, I'm doing a Southern character. I mean
that's what Huck is. He's based on all (awl) the Southern
people I saw in my life. But I say he's based on all (awl),
and I
just have a loop going through that three letter word "all".
It's not a dipthong, all (awl)
it's
almost a diphthong
all
I did (Di-id)
that's a dipthong.
I did (Di-Id).
The
Southerners use them quite a bit. For instance, I have gag for
Huck where he says
and this is supposed to be believable
it's something that he feels
he's a self-effacing little
dog; he doesn't like to hurt anybody or hurt their feelings
so he says, "Now when I was a little old puppy dog, my
Moma always gave me grits. Well now, I like grits a little bit,
just a little bit. There is no mark on a ruler small enough to
show how much I like grits, but I like grits, a little bit. With
the Southern, you kno-Ow. You jus' kinda slur along and say words
but you wanna be absolutely certain everybody kno-Ows what you're
sayin', see. Everybody kno-Ows, kno-Ows... that's a dipthong...
it is too... it's a dipthong.
|
Daws and "Friend" |
(IN YOGI VOICE)
Yea-eah-eah! That's a dipthong! Yogi Bear is a lot of diaphram
and ya get a big feeling of uh tone control in the chest... because
he's a big animal... he's a BEAR! Ya get a big sound. Yea-eah-eah!
(IN SNAGGLEPUSS VOICE) |
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