My favourite British accent by an American actor

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  • Опубликовано: 3 фев 2023
  • ...and it was in a film with no British characters! PLUS extra mystery accent!
    If you want to speak British English clearly and confidently, I recommend this course from accent coach Luke Nicholson:
    info: improveyouraccent.co.uk/engli...
    sign up: course.improveyouraccent.co.u...
    Picture credits
    Dominic West by Peabody Awards
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    Idris Elba by DFID - UK Department for International Development
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    Hugh Laurie
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    Damian Lewis by Sean Reynolds
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    Christian Bale by Harald Krichel
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    Robert Pattinson by Maximilian Bühn
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    Andrew Garfield by Sony Pictures
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:An...
    Tom Holland by Gage Skidmore
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    Mille Bobby Brown by Gage Skidmore
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    Charlie Heaton by Greg2600
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    Joseph Quinn by France RC - Roster Con
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    Daniel Kaluuya by Universal Pictures
    Benoit Blanc by Netflix

Комментарии • 2,8 тыс.

  • @thegoodgeneral
    @thegoodgeneral Год назад +3764

    Brad Dourif in “The Lord of the Rings.” Convinced the actor he shared a lot of screen time with (actual Brit Bernard Hill) that he was English. Dourif kept up the accent during the shoot, even off-camera-when filming concluded, he returned to his native West Virginia accent and Hill commented, “that’s the worst American accent I’ve ever heard.”

    • @theothertonydutch
      @theothertonydutch Год назад +371

      TBF I meet Americans all the time at my regular pub in Groningen, Netherlands, and there is no such thing as an "American Accent", because the US is too darn big and nobody from the US wants to sound "too" American. It's a really weird thing (They're either from Texas, Pennsylvania or Michigan).

    • @SamAronow
      @SamAronow Год назад +62

      @@theothertonydutch Maybe those are the three states where all the people from Groningen immigrated to.

    • @policesquad
      @policesquad Год назад +135

      @@theothertonydutch That's not exactly true, most cannot tell the difference between Canada and the United States' accents, to many it is the same. Of course, there are different inflexions, depending where you are, how certain words are pronounced, like the Canadians really empthise the 'OU' such as Out, (oww-t) about (a-bow-t)however, the overall tone is mostly the same, with only one significant notable difference are those are the Southern States.
      Then look at Britain, where you have Manc accent(Manchester), the Scouse accent (Liverpool), Brummie (Birmingham), Cockney (London), Midlands, Geordie (Newcastle), Cornish (Cornwall), etc. I'm missing quite a few but I have made my point and that is just in England, we haven't even mentioned, Scots, Glasweigian, or Doric and there is the N. Irish accent which differs from Republic of Ireland's accent, although both are noticeably Irish (as are most of these in their respective areas) and an honourable mention for the Welsh, which I know very little about but I am certain there will be a few there too.
      What there isn't, is a "British accent." Yet, it is said far more often than not. Then you consider that the British Isles is smaller than Texas, that is quite a lot.
      _Note; I am certain you could probably switch out many of the examples of "ACCENTS" I have used with "dialects," I have found it hard deceiphering which is which, so I used accent for the sake of ease._

    • @trashtrash2169
      @trashtrash2169 Год назад +202

      You are seriously underestimating how many accents the us has, just the east coast alone has probably 20 distinct ones, and california has multiple too. There isn't just one southern accent. Don't get me started on the midwest, a minefield of slight variations from person to person, who knows where an accent begins or ends. Then there's the northern bits too, which get inspiration from Canada. The us probably has hundreds of accents. Not saying that europe, or even just the few mentioned countries don't have a compareable or larger sample, I simply don't know, but don't think that it's so cut and dried.

    • @trashtrash2169
      @trashtrash2169 Год назад +95

      There are multiple accents in new york alone, I think.

  • @NR-fg2qc
    @NR-fg2qc Год назад +3944

    When you said a film from 40 years ago, I automatically thought you meant the 50s 😭😭😭

    • @DrGeoffLindsey
      @DrGeoffLindsey  Год назад +904

    • @lecturermasoodahmad4116
      @lecturermasoodahmad4116 Год назад

      Kindly give me your contact number/WhatsApp ,I am also work on phonetics

    • @grybnyx
      @grybnyx Год назад +200

      I know what you mean.

    • @sakaridis
      @sakaridis Год назад +377

      Damn! I get the same thing too! Whenever I hear 40 years ago, my mind immediately goes to the 1950s. Thirty years is the 60s, 20 for the 70s, etc... And then I realize that the early-mid 90s was 30 years ago and I get slightly depressed.

    • @sail2byzantium
      @sail2byzantium Год назад +83

      @@sakaridis
      I'm with you. I have the same issue and reaction . . . Hard to beleive the 1990s was 30 years ago . . .

  • @shells500tutubo
    @shells500tutubo Год назад +937

    I remember when Hugh Laurie first starred in "House". There was a commenting section on the IMDB website, and there were so many Brits talking about how horrible his American accent was, while the Americans didn't even know he was British, lol. Even the casting director during the audition (to his discredit) didn't know who Laurie was and thought he was just another American actor.

    • @cacogenicist
      @cacogenicist Год назад +124

      He sounded American to me ... but not from any specific location in the USA. I've spoken to people who went to American schools abroad, particularly the American School in Japan, who also sounded completely placeless. He sounded a bit like that.

    • @cacogenicist
      @cacogenicist Год назад +42

      @MF Nickster - I find the increasingly frequent use of "overexaggerated" interesting. Is there a proper amount of exaggeration?

    • @holliswilliams8426
      @holliswilliams8426 Год назад +27

      @@cacogenicist I think so. Like in Arabic, there is a sound ع which you must say in exaggerated fashion to sound ''Arabic'', but if you said it too exaggerated it would sound a bit weird depending on the region.

    • @empathy591
      @empathy591 Год назад +15

      It’s because we can hear the ‘English’ coming through.

    • @WGGplant
      @WGGplant Год назад +73

      British ppl tend to think of the american accent of harsher and nasallier than it rly is, just how Americans think all Brits sound like posh cartoons.
      British ppl think that the "american r" sound is more growley and lower than it often is in practice. Americans think that British ppl talk with all their muscles in their jaw completely relaxed and open.
      When Brits heard what they already knew was a fake accent, and it didn't fit their image of an American accent they noticed it right away.
      Americans don't know nor care where an actor came from (if they aren't already a popular american actor) so they had no expectations for a fake accent before hand. The thought never even crossed their minds while watching the show. But they probably would have noticed if he had a stereotypical British-American accent.

  • @Cchogan
    @Cchogan Год назад +549

    My favourite UK accent done by US actors were the band members of Spinal Tap. I worked in music studios at the time in Central London, and was already working in voice production too, but to me, they sounded like half the London bands that we saw every week. I simply didn't spot that they were Americans. And their accents even took in the supposed schooling of the various characters. It was quite brilliant.

    • @ednicholson7839
      @ednicholson7839 Год назад +29

      Christopher Guest has his British background to help him with that accent. I'm guessing he helped the others with theirs too.

    • @bvfckyou
      @bvfckyou Год назад +15

      michael mckean is a great actor. love him in clue

    • @elizabethanthony3916
      @elizabethanthony3916 Год назад

      👍👏👏👏👏

    • @faeembrugh
      @faeembrugh Год назад +14

      If you ever see a Jeff Beck interview the accent is right out of Spinal Tap - or vice versa.

    • @louism3643
      @louism3643 11 месяцев назад +13

      The moment I read Spinal Tap I smiled. That was just brilliant, funny, and clever.

  • @lukasm6905
    @lukasm6905 Год назад +610

    I can’t believe the 80s are no longer 20 years ago

    • @belleooo
      @belleooo Год назад +17

      I don't believe how outdated and old some 80s stuff appears on screen. It makes me feel so old lol.

    • @info781
      @info781 Год назад +8

      @@belleooo Whenever someone uses any kind of phone in a movie it is jarring because it is so outdated.

    • @stephanieyee9784
      @stephanieyee9784 Год назад +13

      I know! How did that happen? When did that happen?
      My sister and I were born in the 60s and she turns 60 in a few days time.
      What?!

    • @macgrad1
      @macgrad1 Год назад +15

      My husband and I were born in the late 1940s/early 1950s, respectively. Imagine how ancient we feel when someone refers to "forty years ago" or "the last century," and we realize how old we actually are.

    • @ntal5859
      @ntal5859 Год назад +2

      I have been watching Magnum pi (80s) its wonderful as never watched it much as a kid, so its like new episodes and its 80s..

  • @zacharyferreira2469
    @zacharyferreira2469 Год назад +590

    The reason Hurt avoided weak forms was precisely as you said: to give his character a vaguely non- native air: he was playing a Muscovite, so SSB + a hint of foreignness was a good symbolic way of signaling his Russianness to audiences.

    • @PortMay
      @PortMay Год назад +69

      Exactly, and as someone who first studied English in USSR - that pronunciation is exactly how we were taught in schools back then.

    • @RilianSharp
      @RilianSharp Год назад

      +

    • @smithryansmith
      @smithryansmith Год назад +58

      Yes, that's what I thought as well. He's not doing an SSB accent but acctually miming a technique of high-level non-native speakers by avoiding contractions and being too exact in his annunciation. It is by far the best interpretation of someone giving an impression of speaking in a laguage other than English while avoid stereotypical accents. I wish all hollywood performances adopted this idea.

    • @grimmWednesday
      @grimmWednesday 10 месяцев назад +11

      That’s what I’d always assumed too-somehow made him seem more Russian. Really sold the character.

    • @smithryansmith
      @smithryansmith 10 месяцев назад +7

      @@grimmWednesday A great legacy from Hurt. All actors should have to study this technique when doing a similar role.

  • @FrenkTheJoy
    @FrenkTheJoy Год назад +116

    If William Hurt was going for a sort of "Russian who attended school in the UK and has been training himself to get rid of his native Russian accent and his learned British accent but he's still working on it" thing, it worked beautifully. I have a neighbor who has a hard-to-place accent because she was born in The Netherlands but grew up in Germany and has been living in the US for 20-30 years so her accent is sort of like William Hurt's - it ALMOST sounds like one accent but has just enough differences in it to make it hard to pin point an origin.

    • @MrJeffcoley1
      @MrJeffcoley1 7 месяцев назад +5

      I was thinking this explanation could have worked well for the British soldier in Inglorious Basterds. In the bar scene his cover is blown when a native German speaker tells him his accent is off and demands an explanation. He should have said he was born in one place, grew up in another, and was schooled in England. That would not only explain his weird accent but also why he uses the English "3 fingers" instead of the German "3 fingers" gesture. But, the script needed it so the rest of the movie can happen.

    • @MikeP2055
      @MikeP2055 3 месяца назад +5

      Your comment just reminded me of something: I've worked in the Utah tourism industry my entire adult life and became obsessed with accents and deciphering particular languages. I spent 15 years working in a shop in the SLC International Airport and was chatting with a gentleman during a lull in business one night. Out of the blue I blurted out, "Are you from the Netherlands?!" He looked at me stunned, then broke into a huge smile. He replied, "I've lived here for seven years and you're the first person who has ever guessed my accent correctly." It's a silly little triumph, but I was so proud of myself, haha.
      I always asked people with a particularly distinct accent if they were from South Africa. They almost always told me that most Americans thought they were Australian. Victory again! Another silly triumph came when I asked a family of three if they were speaking French. (They were.) I followed that up with, "But you aren't from France, are you?" They all smiled at me, probably baffled by my questions. Eventually I said, "I don't think you're Swiss . . . Are you from Quebec?" I don't know who was more surprised, them or myself. I was right, they were French Canadian. I should also mention that I don't speak a word of French!
      I'm still trying to get the hang of differentiating between Aussie and New Zealand accents, haha.
      Thank you for indulging me and my lengthy reply. ✌️😎
      Guten nacht!

    • @ajs41
      @ajs41 2 месяца назад

      That's interesting, but I think he was doing pretty much what Geoff was saying in the video, which was trying to sound as "place-less" as possible. And it worked brilliantly.

    • @UnYin99
      @UnYin99 Месяц назад +2

      I was born on a military base in Indiana, at one year old moved to germany until i was 7, then moved to New Mexico, then Texas, then back to my parents origins in Brooklyn NY, then New Hampshire, now Alaska. It's fun when people try to figure out where I am "from" when the answer is nowhere.

  • @johnrigorti5866
    @johnrigorti5866 Год назад +89

    This one's a little more niche, but Daniel Davis as Niles in The Nanny. He's from the state of Arkansas and speaks with a strong southern accent, and his accent was so accurate, many people at the time were surprised to find out he wasn't actually English haha

    • @MrJeffcoley1
      @MrJeffcoley1 7 месяцев назад +13

      I once met a man from Georgia. He had a beautiful Southern accent but occasionally would slip into what I can only describe as a posh English accent. He said he lived for several years in London where he picked it up. The amazing thing was how subtle the shift was between the two.

    • @MrJeffcoley1
      @MrJeffcoley1 7 месяцев назад +15

      Going way back to the 1980's John Hillerman's accent as Higgins in Magnum, PI is also said to be excellent. Hillerman is from Texas.

    • @moniqueleigh
      @moniqueleigh 7 месяцев назад +9

      Whaaaaaat? I had no idea! I adored him as Niles. I'll have to go look up interviews to hear his native Arkansas!

    • @Runningtaco
      @Runningtaco 3 месяца назад +4

      really no way?! that is definitely new information to me 😆

    • @ticketyboo2456
      @ticketyboo2456 Месяц назад +8

      Yes. I only know him as Professor Moriarty from Star Trek TNG. The Nanny wasn't aired here in the UK. His accent is impeccable as well as his overall performance. I was stunned to find out he is actually from across the pond.

  • @onlyasuggestion
    @onlyasuggestion Год назад +766

    As an Irishman I'm used to seeing the Irish accent massacred in movies, where they often don't even try to do a real Irish accent. The best I've heard is Charlie Cox. I remember seeing him in Boardwalk Empire after watching Daredevil and thinking he must actually be an Irish actor, not American as i had thought. (He's actually Welsh)

    • @irish66
      @irish66 Год назад +7

      I always liked Robert Mitchum in Ryan's Daughter.

    • @DerringerHK
      @DerringerHK Год назад +20

      Joseph Gilgun did a pretty decent Irish accent for Preacher, and Mark Strong's more educated Irish accent in Siege of Jodotville was actually better than whatever Jamie Dornan was trying to put on lol. Why studios don't let him keep his NI accent, I don't know.

    • @niallh4194
      @niallh4194 Год назад +2

      Charlie's accent in Kin is fucking class

    • @kevinprzy4539
      @kevinprzy4539 Год назад +3

      Got any examples? the only accents I hear in movies done by Americans that is similar to the Irish accent is the Irish American accent but that's simply an Irish American accent not an Irish one.

    • @BP-or2iu
      @BP-or2iu Год назад +15

      @@kevinprzy4539 What is this “Irish American accent” you speak of? Been living in the States for 40 years. Never heard of such a thing.

  • @BruceLeedar
    @BruceLeedar Год назад +430

    Hurt was serious about his accents, regardless of the region. I remember an interview where he talked about studying/creating phonetic breakdowns of accents using IPA notation.

    • @BroughtCat
      @BroughtCat Год назад +13

      No way that's so cool.

    • @jamesgraham814
      @jamesgraham814 Год назад +16

      He appeared as a Welshman in another little known film and certainly didn’t pull that one off well!

    • @thefantasyreview8709
      @thefantasyreview8709 Год назад +19

      @@jamesgraham814 Though... Welsh is a really hard accent to do. Not many can.

    • @jamesgraham814
      @jamesgraham814 Год назад +11

      @@thefantasyreview8709 yeah, many Americans sound more Irish than Welsh when they try to tackle it. I know Robert Downey Jr. was poked fun at for his attempt at the accent in Doctor Doolittle, but as a Welshman, I was impressed!

    • @baronmeduse
      @baronmeduse Год назад +1

      Also speaks very creditable French. I saw an interview on Canadian TV.

  • @ridzz
    @ridzz Год назад +198

    Gillian Anderson has a good English accent i think. She spent her childhood in England and had to "learn" the American accent when they moved back to America. So now she tends to speak in an English accent when in England and American when in the states. You can check out her interviews in the UK vs US. She uses different accents in both and I find that fascinating

    • @cdeford
      @cdeford Год назад +9

      A lot of actors who started out here and went to hollwood can slip back into an English accent very easily and sound completely English, e.g. Angela Lansbury, Cary Grant.

    • @bernadmanny
      @bernadmanny Год назад +35

      She's bi-dialectal, also check out John Barrowman's Scottish accent when he speaks to his parents

    • @erinm9445
      @erinm9445 Год назад +7

      Similarly, I understand Gwenyth Paltrow has an impeccable British accent. Her parents are both British so she grew up hearing it, and it was probably her first accent before she went to school.

    • @cdeford
      @cdeford Год назад +6

      @@erinm9445 Yes, she's been in a couple of things that called for an English accent and her's was impeccable.

    • @erinm9445
      @erinm9445 Год назад +6

      @@cdeford Yep, although I just learned I was wrong about her parents being British, no idea why I thought that!

  • @idontknowyouthatsmypurse
    @idontknowyouthatsmypurse Год назад +69

    I will forever be in love with Christopher Guest’s perfect performance in Spinal Tap. He NAILED that particular accent.

    • @green4black
      @green4black 10 месяцев назад +5

      I love it too though when I learned about his family history and childhood - his dad is British and of noble heritage, and Guest spent parts of his childhood in England - it made much more sense how well he was able to slip into an English accent.

    • @ros8986
      @ros8986 2 месяца назад

      I should HOPE that Baron Haden-Guest could speak properly.

    • @mezzoca8110
      @mezzoca8110 9 часов назад +1

      Agreed I thought they did the English accent brilliantly I thought they were British. All the spinal actors were good. If you knew guys who were in English bands then it is exactly how they were…. lol

  • @robertpearson8798
    @robertpearson8798 Год назад +237

    Many people were surprised when they learned that Christopher Plummer was Canadian and not British. He was trained in an era when many were taught a Mid-Atlantic or Transatlantic accent for acting, a contrived accent designed to be halfway between American and British.

    • @PenneySounds
      @PenneySounds Год назад +26

      There is also an older style of Canadian accent that isn't heard much anymore that also sounds quite formal. Donald Sutherland speaks with it, as did illusionist James Randi.

    • @joonaa2751
      @joonaa2751 Год назад +31

      Actually, the claim that it was ”designed to be halfway between American and British” is entirely a myth, which gets endlessly repeated in various poorly researched web articles.
      First of all, none of the prescriptivist material of the time refers to it as ”Mid-Atlantic” or ”Transatlantic” (which are more recent terminology for it), but rather ”Eastern Standard” or ”Standard American”.
      Furthermore, the said accent is in no way passable as this supposed 50/50 mixture Conservative RP and Conservative GenAm, but is indeed a variety of near-RP with some minor differences. None of the prescriptivist guides of the time make any mention of trying to teach you such a mixture, or indeed any artificial accent at all; Rather, they claim to be codifying an already existing ”speech of an educated American” into phonetically teachable form.
      It was the accent of the old money US East Coast aristocracy (such as the Roosevelts), the existence of which predates its use in Hollywood. The eatliest speakers who use it in audio recordings were born as far back as the 1850s, and it’s not reasonable to assume these people time-traveled forward to the 1930s and snatched back with them a copy of some prescriptivist book for actors.

    • @robertpearson8798
      @robertpearson8798 Год назад +1

      @@joonaa2751 Interesting. Could you recommend some of the source material for this information so I can do some research myself?

    • @AnHebrewChild
      @AnHebrewChild Год назад +2

      Maybe someone on this thread can help me out? What is the "accent" of Alexander Scourby in his 1960's reading of the King James Bible? It can be searched here on RUclips. Is it TRANS-ATLANTIC?
      It doesn't sound exactly British... (He's not British). But it certainly isn't anything standard American either.
      If anyone can help me here, thanks in advance.

    • @sananton2821
      @sananton2821 Год назад +2

      @@joonaa2751 THANK YOU
      The most commonly repeated claim with zero authentic backing. It's outrageous how confident people feel in spreading it.

  • @mike747436
    @mike747436 Год назад +354

    Chris Pratt's impersonation of 'The only way is Essex" on the Graham Norton show 7 years ago is hilarious and absolutely spot on!

  • @maestralala3379
    @maestralala3379 Год назад +45

    James Horner (known by all throughout the 1970's as "Jamie") was a classmate of mine for 4 undergraduate college years in Los Angeles. There was never a hint of a British accent and he never mentioned having ever lived in England. He presented as a shy "Valley Boy" from Encino, a composition major writing exclusively contemporary classical concert music. I performed on his Senior Composition Recital - an atonal string quartet piece reminiscent of Arnold Schoenberg. At some point after graduation, Jamie studied in London for 18 months and returned to LA as "James" with a mysterious British accent and surprising English mannerisms (e.g. speaking of "quavers" and "crochets", which is English, instead of "eighth notes" and "quarter notes", which is American). The eminent film composer David Raksin ("Laura," "The Bad and the Beautiful") gave James his start in Hollywood, but the curious British accent and mannerisms became a permanent feature of James's persona, despite Hollywood's being full of college classmates of Jamie's who remembered him as a guy from Encino without a British accent.

    • @MikeP2055
      @MikeP2055 3 месяца назад +3

      That's awesome. I play a few instruments, but I've always marveled at score and orchestral composers.
      My very good friend moved from Utah to Houston, TX 10 or 15 years ago and now speaks with a southern twang. Another friend moved to Australia and picked up some of their inflections and region-specific slang and idioms. It's wild! Same thing happened to me when I moved to Boston. You don't even realize it's happening until your friends from back home start teasing you for saying things like "packy," (liquor store) "statie," (highway patrolman) and "I'm wicked ti/ə/ed." (I'm exceedingly tired) Hahaha

    • @marinakaye8284
      @marinakaye8284 Месяц назад +2

      Yes. Madonna also slips in and out of the old UK dialect, too.

    • @futatorius
      @futatorius Месяц назад +1

      @@marinakaye8284 And it's comically bad when she puts it on.

    • @futatorius
      @futatorius Месяц назад +3

      And by contrast. I'm an American who has lived in England for almost 20 years and still have the same accent as when I first arrived-- though in some rare cases, I do use local idioms and pronunciations in order to be better understood. For example, "have" and "half" have different vowels here, and I maintain the contrast if ever required to order a half-pint, even though there's no such distinction in my native accent. I also use British spelling and word choices when writing anything at work. But it's not important to me to signal that I've assimilated English mannerisms or to pass as English. I normally get on well with English people, I respect many aspects of the culture, but I don't feel the need to become one.

    • @polytheneprentiss1534
      @polytheneprentiss1534 Месяц назад +2

      Oh my gosh, that’s actually hilarious and kind of mental. The fact that he spent 18 months in London and came back as the English “James”. 😂

  • @linusfotograf
    @linusfotograf Год назад +60

    The best British accent by an American must surely be Keanu Reeves in Dracula.
    /s

    • @robotikempire
      @robotikempire 10 месяцев назад +15

      No no no, Kevin Costner in Robin Hood. also /s

    • @nlb1138
      @nlb1138 10 месяцев назад

      MEWsic?!

    • @targetpractice2351
      @targetpractice2351 10 месяцев назад

      LOL

    • @targetpractice2351
      @targetpractice2351 10 месяцев назад +1

      He grew up in Toronto and his default accent is Canadian as is his citizenship. FWIW he knows it was cringe but it was a paying gig.

    • @linusfotograf
      @linusfotograf 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@evanwu1737 Britain has 40 different dialects though. The one he did in Dracula is atrocious

  • @PsychoSavager289
    @PsychoSavager289 Год назад +470

    James Marsters as Spike in Buffy the Vampire Slayer actually did a pretty convincing British accent. I'm British and he fooled me for a good few episodes. I think it helps that he doesn't lose the accent when he shouts, which a lot of accent-borrowers do.

    • @brentwalker3300
      @brentwalker3300 Год назад +52

      Never crossed my mind that the actor playing Spike might have been American. Impressive.

    • @sib9769
      @sib9769 Год назад +13

      Emma Watson always looses it in an emotional scene.

    • @floradiamonds
      @floradiamonds Год назад +1

      ​@@sib9769 I don't think I've seen her with an American sound. What films were those, please?

    • @WouldYouKindlyWatch
      @WouldYouKindlyWatch Год назад +10

      @@floradiamonds perks of being a wallflower.

    • @sergeantbigmac
      @sergeantbigmac Год назад +34

      @@sib9769 Yes finally someone has said it! Emma Watsons American accent sticks out like a sore thumb whenever she attempts it, and usually my go to example for "See! Not all Brit actors can pull an American accent!"

  • @dcanmore
    @dcanmore Год назад +162

    Love the Spinal Tap guys, even slipping into 'mid Atlantic' at times which seems fitting for international jet setting rockers from the 80s.

    • @zoyadulzura7490
      @zoyadulzura7490 Год назад +6

      Yes!

    • @leewhite2195
      @leewhite2195 Год назад +9

      Not really accent related but I was amazed when I found out the fella who played David St Hubbins (?) is the same actor who plays (better call) Saul's brother.

    • @suzp2265
      @suzp2265 Год назад +7

      Great example! Probably gets overlooked because it's comedy, I remember being staggered when I found out the actors were American. The accents are so good and of course crucial to the comedy so even more pressure.

    • @DrGeoffLindsey
      @DrGeoffLindsey  Год назад +7

      @@leewhite2195 Me too!

    • @tomcarl8021
      @tomcarl8021 Год назад +7

      Michael and Harry are American. Christopher is British/American.

  • @FrenkTheJoy
    @FrenkTheJoy Год назад +98

    My favorite British accent by an American accent was Cary Elwes before I learned he was actually British. I thought he was just really good at doing British accent, turns out he's actually good at American accents.

    • @leefreak
      @leefreak Год назад +9

      What! Cary Elwes is British! This is the most surprising reaction I've had to any of the suggestions here. (I'm British)

    • @fourstarfuel9702
      @fourstarfuel9702 Год назад

      😂

    • @Frankie5Angels150
      @Frankie5Angels150 10 месяцев назад +18

      In Mel Brooks’ “Robin Hood: Men in Tights” Elwes cracked the line “Unlike other Robin Hoods, I am actually British!”

    • @gchecosse
      @gchecosse 10 месяцев назад +3

      Since he always played comedy English people and his serious characters were American I also assumed he was American, but no.

    • @md_vandenberg
      @md_vandenberg 8 месяцев назад +17

      @@Frankie5Angels150 "Because, unlike some other Robin Hoods, I can speak with an English accent."

  • @TNGxBerzerker
    @TNGxBerzerker 10 месяцев назад +9

    Michael C Hall in safe - no American comes even close to that. Not just pronunciation but the undertones and rhythms of an English accent. Flawless

    • @hydrogen3266
      @hydrogen3266 Месяц назад +1

      He is SO underrated, especially as an accent performer

  • @scaredyfish
    @scaredyfish Год назад +353

    I didn’t know William Hurt had passed away. Very sad, he was one of those actors who was always enjoyable to watch.

    • @majorbonkers
      @majorbonkers Год назад +4

      ....who WERE always enjoyable to watch!

    • @scaredyfish
      @scaredyfish Год назад

      @@majorbonkers ikr

    • @julietardos5044
      @julietardos5044 Год назад +12

      @@majorbonkers One...was
      Why is that wrong? Genuinely curious.

    • @egbront1506
      @egbront1506 Год назад +3

      @@julietardos5044 Both are grammatically correct but enjoyable, in this case, clearly refers to actorS rather than just WH, otherwise why even mention them?

    • @julietardos5044
      @julietardos5044 Год назад +5

      @@egbront1506 It's not possible for both to be grammatically correct. "One" seems to be the subject of "was," but majorbonkers disagrees. I don't see it.

  • @lucyelstonsoprano
    @lucyelstonsoprano Год назад +72

    The guys in Spinal Tap were fantastic.

    • @nickmoore385
      @nickmoore385 Год назад +9

      Micheal McKean in particular. Totally spot on.

    • @gregthebaritone
      @gregthebaritone Год назад +4

      Christopher Guest's father was a UN diplomat and a member of the House of Lords.

    • @floradiamonds
      @floradiamonds Год назад +1

      One day I plan to watch it, it's been on TV so many times but there's always something else going on. Has it dated much since being made?

    • @lucyelstonsoprano
      @lucyelstonsoprano Год назад +2

      @@floradiamonds I think it's still very relevant!

    • @floradiamonds
      @floradiamonds Год назад +1

      @@lucyelstonsoprano Thank you. I'll watch it next time it's on.
      I'm hoping that I haven't already heard all the best bits, the same way that other films have been spoiled for me because the quotes are out of context, but time will tell. 😀

  • @lepetitenellie
    @lepetitenellie Год назад +4

    I remember an interview with Michael Caine and he was asked who was the best American actor to do a cockney accent he ever heard (I think the joke prior was about Dick Van Dyke in Mary Poppins). Caine said it was young Forrest Whitaker in The Crying Game. He said it was so good he thought Whitaker was the new it-kid in British film and TV to watch and was shocked he was American. And yet Whitaker keeps coming up on forums as bad-Brit accents by Americans. But I think Forrest Whitaker is a fantastic actor who dives in so well into accents & speech pattern from real (Last King of Scotland) to made up (Star Wars) - I hope you do a dive into his accents someday!

  • @uclakirk
    @uclakirk Год назад +8

    Im curious what you thought of John Lithgow’s Churchill accent. Actually I’d just love an analysis of Churchill’s speech patterns in general!

  • @20bluelilies
    @20bluelilies Год назад +91

    I don't know any of the correct terminology, but I always assumed that where William Hurt sounded a little off, a little stilted, it was because he was trying for a Russian element in his speech, and I personally thought it worked.

  • @dcthomas8959
    @dcthomas8959 Год назад +63

    The actor John Hillerman, a Texan from the original series of Magnum PI, playing the character of Higgins does an absolutely outstanding job as a WW2 British officer. Also the guys from Spinal Tap are brilliant and really can't be faulted.

    • @ntal5859
      @ntal5859 Год назад +2

      I have been watching Magnum pi (80s) its wonderful as never watched it much as a kid, so its like new episodes and its 80s..

    • @dcthomas8959
      @dcthomas8959 Год назад +1

      @@ntal5859 They made some good shows in the 80s

    • @tiltingwindmill
      @tiltingwindmill 10 месяцев назад

      @@horacesheffield7367 well, perhaps not THE most... But, certainly a few are among the many other international cities of America.

  • @thefartydoctor
    @thefartydoctor Год назад +82

    James Marsters as Captain John Hart in Torchwood is the best "British" accent I've ever heard from a non-native. It's just unbelievable. And then when he did the audio dramas for Big Finish Productions, his accent was just as good.

    • @kreeve0
      @kreeve0 Год назад +30

      His character on Buffy for many years was also British which probably helped

    • @simdivya
      @simdivya Год назад +14

      HE'S NOT ENGLISH??

    • @holliswilliams8426
      @holliswilliams8426 Год назад +1

      @@simdivya He doesn't sound remotely English.

    • @krikorajemian8524
      @krikorajemian8524 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@kreeve0There's a great scene in one episode of BTVS where he is in disguise (sort of) and speaks with a bad American accent: "Oh, I'm just a frrriend of Xanderrrr's" (leaning hard on the Rs like a Texan, not rolling them like a Scotsman).

    • @LiamMonticelli
      @LiamMonticelli 4 месяца назад

      ​@@simdivya"Bloody just do it" gave it away for me 😄

  • @sergeantbigmac
    @sergeantbigmac Год назад +17

    Id love to hear your breakdown of the accent performances in Spinal Tap, which ive always considered some of the best done by Americans.

  • @iainbowie3945
    @iainbowie3945 Год назад +171

    I think Renée Zellweger’s Brigit Jones and Maggie Gyllenhaal in Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang are very convincing with their British accents.

    • @MattBrunton1965
      @MattBrunton1965 Год назад +21

      Came here to mention Renee Z. Also Angelia Jolie in The Tourist is pretty good.

    • @MrGalpino
      @MrGalpino Год назад +18

      Renee Zelwegger sounds like she studied how to sound convincing and did too good a job, ending up sounding not quite right.

    • @nicoc6387
      @nicoc6387 Год назад +33

      Yeah, i thought Renée Z. not only got the accent down to a tee, but even the facial expressions and body language were so middle-class 1990s southern English it was creepy!

    • @dasmysteryman12
      @dasmysteryman12 Год назад +28

      Renee's accent was so good in Brigit Jones I thought she was originally British

    • @artmarkham3205
      @artmarkham3205 Год назад +20

      @@MrGalpino I agree, it's almost too impeccable. She sounds British and not at all American, but like a posh Brit who's been to some kind of old-fashioned finishing school to be taught how to speak absolutely correctly.

  • @sakaridis
    @sakaridis Год назад +184

    William Hurt was a giant! One of the greatest actors of his generations and I feel that, sadly, he never really got the recognition he deserved, despite the four Academy Award nominations (with one win).

    • @jekw23
      @jekw23 Год назад +17

      Yeah, he was so natural it never really felt like acting. No theatrics. Shame as his skill meant you didn’t see the actor but the character. Agree he wasn’t really recognised as he should have been

    • @GlennTillema
      @GlennTillema Год назад +7

      Hurt was incredible in everything he did but I was introduced to him in Altered States and that always stuck with me. That and The Doctor and Broadcast News.

    • @lindahandley5267
      @lindahandley5267 Год назад +7

      I liked him in 'Body Heat'.

    • @gregthebaritone
      @gregthebaritone Год назад +12

      William Hurt was huge during the late 80s and early 90s. He was the go-to Oscar-bait movie male lead and was quite well recognized at that time. Then, for some reason, it was like he fell off the map. F. Murray Abraham was huge after his Oscar for Amadeus and The Name of the Rose and then disappeared even more quickly. Julian Sands disappeared off the A-list around the same time, but I thought that might have had something to do with the controversy surrounding Boxing Helena. I've always been fascinated by how famous people disappear from sight and become practically forgotten. Sometimes it could be political, sometimes personal. Mira Sorvino lost her career standing up to the likes of Harvey Weinstein. I always wondered if maybe Abraham had enough money and just wanted to be a theater actor? Sometimes the actor fits the style of the time and the styles change.

    • @jekw23
      @jekw23 Год назад +9

      @@gregthebaritone it is strange. I never felt Hurt fell off the map just that he never got appreciated as he should. Compare him with the likes of Hopkins or Freeman who essentially just play themselves. Hurt was too subtle for his own good. I put him and Jeff Bridges together in terms of really versatile actors who aren’t recognised.

  • @DeLorean4
    @DeLorean4 Год назад +8

    The best British accent to me was Christopher Guest in "This is Spinal Tap". I didn't learn until much later that he was an American actor.

  • @CornishCreamtea07
    @CornishCreamtea07 11 месяцев назад +7

    Sean Astin had a very convincing accent in LOTRs, maybe it was the west country accent, which I assume was where a lot of early settlers to America came from. I actually thought the actor was eitehr English or Scottish when I first heard his performance.

  • @raptor4916
    @raptor4916 Год назад +229

    Youll always have my favorite british accent Geoff

    • @GlennTillema
      @GlennTillema Год назад +6

      I knew Hugh was a Brit because I saw him in Blackadder and A Bit of Fry and Laurie but to hear him as House completely blew my mind.

    • @raptor4916
      @raptor4916 Год назад +8

      @Glenn Tillema yeah the only british actor who in my opinion came close is Damien Lewis in band of brothers, the only problem with Lewis's accent is that its too generic house actually sounds like he comes from somewhere.

    • @StevenAlwine
      @StevenAlwine Год назад +14

      @@raptor4916 Lewis adopts a convincing southern Pennsylvania accent, which matches the origin of his character, Dick Winters of Lancaster, PA. It's a very neutral "general American" accent, which speaks as much to his middle class educational background as his place of origin. He doesn't sound like he's from anywhere specific because he was already from a place with a pretty subtle accent, and he attended a school that would not have encouraged a more affluent mid-Atlantic accent.

    • @raptor4916
      @raptor4916 Год назад

      @@StevenAlwine oh thats good to know.

    • @invisiblek5783
      @invisiblek5783 Год назад +6

      I'll go to bat for Martin Freeman. Fargo (TV series) and Marvel movies, he's exceptional!

  • @jeanette-emt
    @jeanette-emt Год назад +122

    Greetings from Sweden! When I saw William Hurt in "Gorky Park" back in the 80s, I was a schoolgirl learning English, and I was convinced that Hurt was a native Brit with an admirably beautiful accent, both soft and clear at the same time.

    • @roadie3124
      @roadie3124 Год назад +6

      I'm native English. I worked with a couple of Swedish people in the mid 1970s. One of them spoke beautiful English. When he came to England from Sweden for a week's work, he started off sounding very slightly Swedish. Within a few days, he sounded 99.99% native English. When we then went to the USA, he continued to sound English for about a week. After that, he started to sound a bit American. A linguistic chameleon.

  • @northernlights6459
    @northernlights6459 Год назад +3

    William Hurt had a very pleasing English accent, crisp but but not mannered. I think he did a fine job. I noticed the ‘t’ before you mentioned it. I like how you break everything down in a forensic way.Fascinating.

    • @ajs41
      @ajs41 2 месяца назад

      He sounded exactly like an English person who's spent a few years in North America in the film.

  • @Kjt853
    @Kjt853 Год назад +3

    I grew up just outside Boston. It’s quite common for Bostonians too to put an /r/ sound between a word that ends in a vowel and another that begins with one. Hence, law/r/office and law/r/and order (or should I say loranodda?).

  • @MacWhatley
    @MacWhatley Год назад +57

    I'd suggest Jennifer Ehle's Elizabeth Bennett in the 1995 Pride and Prejudice was pretty good for a girl from North Carolina.

    • @MrPotatoemouse
      @MrPotatoemouse Год назад +10

      Isn’t her mum English though, and I think she spent time here as a kid too?

    • @lwoods507
      @lwoods507 Год назад +7

      THat's a good one, I always forget she's not actually British!

    • @Princess_Zo
      @Princess_Zo Год назад +1

      Yess this one was convincing!

    • @paganpines
      @paganpines Год назад +9

      You’re right, I had forgotten about her! Her normal accent is American, but having a British parent (like Mike Myers) I think helps significantly.

    • @mrpositronia
      @mrpositronia Год назад +2

      Those costume dramas absolutely do not represent how people spoke in those days. It's all glammed up for the American audience.

  • @bengreen171
    @bengreen171 Год назад +144

    I seem to remember Maggie Gyllenhaal doing a good British accent in the tv drama "The Honourable Woman".
    Also - the accents in Spinal Tap are for the most part very 'natural' - even the odd slips can be put down to 'mid-atlanticisms' so prevalent in British Rockstars' accents of the 1970's and 80's.

    • @littleogeechee223
      @littleogeechee223 Год назад +2

      And she did a great on in Nanny McPhee Returns as well.

    • @bengreen171
      @bengreen171 Год назад

      @@littleogeechee223
      Not seen it, and to be honest, not likely to, but I'll take your word for it.
      I'm kinda curious though now.

    • @larsonfraud4156
      @larsonfraud4156 Год назад +17

      My English friend said the American actors in Spinal Tap did the British accent so very well.

    • @flybobbie1449
      @flybobbie1449 Год назад +9

      Especially as they were regional as well.

    • @marcraygun6290
      @marcraygun6290 Год назад +8

      Yup spinal tap hole excellent accent

  • @TheMadisonMachine
    @TheMadisonMachine Год назад +6

    William Hurt's out-of-time accent in The Village is one of the few things about that movie that's good. There's so many things he really nails, and his delivery of the line "It is too painful; I cannot bear it" is one of the funniest but best lines

  • @connorbowen8867
    @connorbowen8867 Год назад +6

    Amazed you highlighted James Horner! I'm a big time soundtrack fanatic and a huge fan of his. There are certain videos, one in particular where he's doing the score for Something Wicked This Way Comes (Just before Gorky Park I think!) where you can tell he's really trying to ditch the accent, but after so many years working with the LSO it seems to have become permanently installed!

  • @williamgeorgefraser
    @williamgeorgefraser Год назад +287

    I'm a Brit and love the original Magnum P.I. series. I was amazed to discover that John Hillerman was not British but even more so when I found out he was a Texan.
    By the way, as mentioned, I'm British (Scots) and studied French, German and Spanish at university. I love watching your videos as, even though I already know much of what you say, I keep discovering nuggets especially concerning pronunciation. The way you present each video is worthy of a university lecture and must be an enormous help to non-native speakers.

    • @Teun_Jac
      @Teun_Jac Год назад +29

      Higgins is Texan?!? I'm amazed to discover that too!

    • @mikespearwood3914
      @mikespearwood3914 Год назад +20

      I remember being surprised when I found out the actor who played the butler Niles in the 90's sitcom "The Nanny" was American.

    • @markiangooley
      @markiangooley Год назад +22

      Hillerman said that he was carefully trained to replace his native Texan accent with something more generically American but learned other accents at the same time. He plays Higgins’ half-brothers in some episodes, or I think in one case plays Higgins impersonating his Texan half-brother using his real accent. Also plays the Irish priest half-brother… can’t recall if there were more.

    • @grantwilliams8164
      @grantwilliams8164 Год назад +12

      American southern accents tend to be closer to older UK accents. Depends on the region and who settled and when. Appalachian English is closest to Ulster English, which makes sense, same people separated by an ocean and a few hundred years.

    • @BenMJay
      @BenMJay Год назад +6

      I thought Robert Downey Jr. sounded spot on in Sherlock Holmes. i also thought Johnny Depp was good in that movie about Jack the Ripper. Forget name.

  • @saoirsedeltufo7436
    @saoirsedeltufo7436 Год назад +144

    Impressive accent for sure, and despite the odd slip up a fair few are ones I've heard Brits use, especially with Americanisation. I do find it interesting that some people found the accent inauthentic - presumably Americans as you said - because this always seems to happen with Irish accents in American films (usually American actors but sometimes even Irish actors) - American audiences would prefer the accent they expect rather than a real Irish accent, especially a location accurate one

    • @MitchJohnson0110
      @MitchJohnson0110 Год назад +7

      There's also genuine Irish accents that developed in certain American-Irish communities and many Americans are more familiar with those.

    • @saoirsedeltufo7436
      @saoirsedeltufo7436 Год назад +12

      @@MitchJohnson0110 I'm not sure we can quite consider "Irish"-American accents to be Irish... though it would explain what Americans assume Irish accents should sound like

    • @MitchJohnson0110
      @MitchJohnson0110 Год назад +4

      @@saoirsedeltufo7436 Yes you can. Huge amounts of Irish-born people grew up in large communities made of first generation Irish immigrants in the United States and spoke to each other in their native accents.
      You don't stop being Irish the second you step outside Irelands borders.

    • @saoirsedeltufo7436
      @saoirsedeltufo7436 Год назад +15

      @@MitchJohnson0110 I never even implied you did...
      The bulk of 'Irish-Americans' are descendants of those immigrants who went over over a century ago, often because of An Gorta Mór, and the 'Irish-American' accent is an American one with some Irish influences, not the other way around

    • @cagneybillingsley2165
      @cagneybillingsley2165 Год назад +2

      the best brit accent is nigel tufnel lol

  • @AironExTv
    @AironExTv Год назад +45

    How delightful to find such a fine example. If I was to find placeless English accents, it would be Lord Of The Rings. I'll search around for a video on that. The two American hobbits did a fine job, which hopefully the two native speaking hobbits helped with :).

    • @GregJamesMusic
      @GregJamesMusic 9 месяцев назад +18

      Sean Astin deserves particular credit for attempting (mostly successfully, from what I've heard) a West Country accent instead of a generic RP or cockney. Very appropriate for his character.

    • @emkaydee6048
      @emkaydee6048 9 месяцев назад +12

      @@GregJamesMusicconfirmed. I am a spokesperson for the Westcountry People’s Republic, and I think he did a good job!

  • @rottensquid
    @rottensquid Год назад +9

    Regarding James Horner, it's something I've noticed that musically inclined people often have an ear for accents, and imitation in general. For instance, David Bowie can't get through an anecdote without doing the accents of the people involved. And famously, he took his entire singing style from Anthony Newly. Mick Jagger shifted to various accents, to greater or lesser success, when changing musical genres. That was common among British singers at the time. But it's not confined to singers. I have a friend who's a professional drummer, and when he tells stories of the famous musicians he's worked with (more famous, I mean-- he does have a Grammy himself), he does their voices beautifully.

    • @be8nice
      @be8nice Год назад +1

      I know what you mean. I lived in Germany for many years and was often complimented on my accent (in German), but people also remarked that singers and other musicians seemed to have an easier time with accents. (I was a singer.)

  • @rootkite
    @rootkite Год назад +144

    Mike Myers is a living legend in many senses, but due to his UK heritage his array of ultra-accurate UK accents is absolutely astonishing 🤩 As it happens, Seth Myers (no relation) also has a pretty nice comedic British delivery.
    This video of yours, as all your work, really speaks to me due to my background: I'm a bilingual Finnish person who grew up in London and attended international schools in Finland after age 9; my SW London accent switched to a General American one as a child (impacted by my classmates and teachers), which I still consider my natural dialect despite never even visiting the US or ever having spoken any form of English at home. I can emulate multiple varieties of spoken English to this day, including my original Wimbledon twang.
    I'm steeped in global Anglophone culture, and I work as a translator, linguist, and poet, so my identity is a sort of curated mishmash of linguistic and cultural influences :D
    Language acquisition, multilingualism, code-shifting, and novel or neologistic usage are fascinating to me as processes, in shaping our identities especially.
    Thank you so very much for your crisply informative, professional, and entertaining channel 💗 Rakkautta Suomesta!

    • @DrGeoffLindsey
      @DrGeoffLindsey  Год назад +13

      Very interesting! Kiitos paljon!

    • @chazwyman8951
      @chazwyman8951 Год назад +1

      He guilty of the dreadful Dick-van Dyke cockney. No one on earth talks like Austen Powers

    • @jaakkomantyjarvi7515
      @jaakkomantyjarvi7515 Год назад +6

      Holy moly, someone with a profile very similar to mine! (You wouldn't happen to be someone I know?)
      I'm technically bilingual in Finnish and English, being a native Finnish speaker but immersed in English-speaking countries for three years from preschool to 2nd grade. These days I speak with a British-slash-Transatlantic accent (I pass for a Brit in London but am automatically assumed to be American in Cornwall, for whatever reason), except that I revert to northeastern US whenever I visit the States.
      I'm a professional translator and composer, and the linguistic part of my career I owe entirely to my family's said relocation 50+ years ago.

    • @ColinGLogan
      @ColinGLogan Год назад +15

      As a Scot, I've always found Myers' much praised Scottish accent a lot more inconsistent than he gets credit for. It's near immaculate in So I Married An Axe Murderer, but I recall an SNL skit in which it's utterly atrocious, and parts of Shrek are dodgy too. Still far and away the best Scottish accent I've seen from North America, although the quality of competition for that title is very low.

    • @Cosmo-Kramer
      @Cosmo-Kramer Год назад +4

      @@DrGeoffLindsey The American actor whose name gets mentioned most frequently by Brits I've met over the last quarter century, is one, James Marsters, who played Spike the vampire on the hit TV show, "Buffy The Vampire Slayer". They all told me they were shocked to hear James speak in interviews, having just assumed he was 100% Brit born and raised. But nope, James is a California boy, who just happened to have a spot-on British accent. Not posh, either. Nor over-the-top cockney. Perhaps you could tell me which British accent he affects in the show? There lots of clips on RUclips.

  • @vintage0x
    @vintage0x Год назад +47

    3:09 "I am just a militia investigator" - weirdly, this comes out sounding incredibly close to DANISH english.
    thanks as always for the amazing video, Geoff. I value each upload so much.

  • @thefantasyreview8709
    @thefantasyreview8709 Год назад +15

    The British accent tradition used for certain cinema foreigners has a long standing tradition with the Romans, who would generally get British accents. John Wayne played a Roman in his broad Western/Californian accent, and everyone thought it was hilarious.

    • @MsFlamingFlamer
      @MsFlamingFlamer Год назад +2

      I remember that scene. My best friend and I were watching “The Greatest Story Ever Told” and laughed for about 10 minutes straight after the John Wayne scene.

    • @thefantasyreview8709
      @thefantasyreview8709 Год назад +2

      @@MsFlamingFlamer yeah, its like one of the most inappropriate accents for a character in the entire history of cinema!

    • @kevinputry5655
      @kevinputry5655 11 месяцев назад +2

      If you think that's hilarious you should watch Star Knight. It's got Harvey Keitel who's supposed to be a an English medieval knight but plays his role using his native New York Bronx accent!

    • @Somnogenesis
      @Somnogenesis 2 месяца назад +1

      @@MsFlamingFlamer That scene is also the source of possibly the greatest film accent-related anecdote I've ever heard. Reportedly, Wayne playing the centurion had several cracks at his one line "Truly, this man was the son of God", but it kept coming out a bit flat, so he was asked by the director to try another take but to "say it with awe".
      Everyone resets their positions. Camera rolls once more. The Duke fixes his gaze on the crucified Messiah and opens his mouth again:
      "Awww, truly this man was the son of God."
      It's _probably_ entirely apocryphal, but goodness it's a great story.

  • @thefantasyreview8709
    @thefantasyreview8709 Год назад +43

    Forest Whittaker in The Crying Game, is an early example of an American doing a non cliched British accent. I assumed he was British, as he wasn't that famous back then.

    • @pupface
      @pupface Год назад +2

      I think his accent is pretty poor

    • @uncroppedsoop
      @uncroppedsoop Год назад +4

      @@pupface well I think it's middle class

    • @jaysterling26
      @jaysterling26 Год назад +1

      ​@@pupface Pretty awful - file under 'dvd' of bad cockney accents.

    • @stevegordon5689
      @stevegordon5689 11 месяцев назад +1

      it was all over the place!

    • @pauldavisthefirst
      @pauldavisthefirst Месяц назад

      Checkout early Denzel Washington in "For Queen and Country", playing a sarf London lad back from Los Malvinas/Falklands ... when I found out he was American I was amazed, but when I returned to re-watch it a few years ago, it seemed pretty bad accent-wise.

  • @cassandrabriggs9133
    @cassandrabriggs9133 Год назад +37

    Would you consider discussing Angela Lansbury's hybrid accent? She lived in the US for such a long time that her American accent became totally natural and effortless, yet in TV and films if you listen closely, there's a very light sprinkling of words and phrases that are completely English. I always wondered if there was a pattern or science behind that. How lucky we all were to be entertained by that lovely lady during her long and varied career.

    • @johneyon5257
      @johneyon5257 Год назад +3

      Angela usually sounded a bit british - unless she used a southern accent (Manchurian Candidate - Blue Hawaii) - bits of pronunciation would slip thru - it was mostly heard in the melody of her speech - - in the same vein - Cary Grant and Roddy McDowall never quite lost their accents - tho Roddy could in later life if the role demanded it - Jean Simmons would take a while to lose her english accent - it was a surprise to hear Deborah Kerr's perfect american in From Here to Eternity - she was usually cast so her english accent didn't make a difference

    • @robgronotte1
      @robgronotte1 3 месяца назад +4

      I consider her to have the very old film acting "transatlantic accent" - a deliberate mix of American and British.

  • @ComicusFreemanius
    @ComicusFreemanius Год назад +84

    This episode was concise, I learned a lot in six minutes.

  • @AlystrZelland
    @AlystrZelland Год назад

    One of my favorite new channels. Thank you. Dr. Lindsey

  • @Rubicon1985
    @Rubicon1985 Год назад +1

    Thank you for this! Aside from it being a great film I can remember being really confused by his accent! It was so good, understated and natural sounding I thought he was British but there was the very occasional line that threw me. I can remember replaying them and trying to figure out what was going on. A credit to his performance that i thought he was a British actor who had spent some time in the US.

  • @samlasley798
    @samlasley798 Год назад +38

    It’s a kids film (a really good one) but Maggie Gyllenhaal’s accent in Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang is actually excellent. It’s midlands/south without veering into Received Pronunciation. She affects it very naturally and I think she’s underrated as an actor

    • @joelmontague5004
      @joelmontague5004 Год назад +3

      She is actually the best American I've heard doing a British accent but not for that role. Check out "The Honourable Woman" a mini series she did for the BBC about a decade or so ago. She actually plays an English MP and if i hadn't already known who she was going on, I would have sworn she was a native Brit based on that performance alone, that's how good her accent was.

  • @speedracer2841
    @speedracer2841 Год назад +16

    I am Brazilian, and I fell head over heels in love with William Hurt when he played Molina in the Kiss of the Spider Womam. I'm glad that you brought him up.

  • @mavrikmavrik3032
    @mavrikmavrik3032 Год назад +9

    The thing with James' accent is that it's his. He speaks and sounds as he does as a consequence of his life. It may be unusual but it's genuine. Working in a large international company I've run across this situation several times. It's usually surprising at first but then you learn about the life history of the person and realize the cultures and languages that shaped their English and accent. They are normally very interesting people.

    • @slicedtopieces
      @slicedtopieces Год назад +2

      As someone who's got a mixed accent (American/Australian), I'm always just a little bit foreign no matter where I go. (To Australians I sound American and to Americans I sound Australian.) It's got its positives and negatives.

  • @johnklekotka1028
    @johnklekotka1028 Год назад +13

    By far, the best is Dick van Dyke’s cockney accent in Mary Poppins! 😂

  • @charlesgaskell5899
    @charlesgaskell5899 Год назад +17

    Fascinating about James Horner!

  • @mcmage5250
    @mcmage5250 Год назад +74

    I have to say Niles from The Nanny is by far my favorite actor doing a British accent. I heard he was American? So I was kinda taken aback

    • @MariaPetalcorin
      @MariaPetalcorin Год назад +17

      Yes! I was thinking of him as well. Also Spike from Buffy. Even my British friend thought he was British.

    • @dncarac
      @dncarac Год назад +8

      Yes. He's from Arkansas.

    • @thefantasyreview8709
      @thefantasyreview8709 Год назад +6

      He's not doing a British accent. He's doing a transatlantic accent. His character is American.

    • @akg9991
      @akg9991 Год назад +7

      ​@@thefantasyreview8709 this is not true at all. Niles absolutely is British in the show..even pines he wishes he was a barrister and MP to Maxwell's mother

    • @thefantasyreview8709
      @thefantasyreview8709 Год назад

      @@akg9991 you realise he is Frazier's brother and Martin's son...and they are both American????
      Apart from that "Niles was born in Seattle, Washington, in 1957[5], to Hester Crane, a psychiatrist, and Martin Crane, a police officer. Like his older brother Frasier, Niles was named for one of his mother's lab rats.[6] Also like Frasier, Niles was an unusually sensitive child and a frequent target for bullies. As a result, he was quite close to his older brother, and at the same time fiercely competitive with him. Like Frasier, Niles prefers fine arts, music, and intellectual pursuits to physical activities like sports. He is also an established philanthropist. After attending the private Bryce Academy with Frasier, Niles's success in school led to matriculation at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, as an undergraduate, where he was a member of Phi Beta Kappa,[7]"

  • @OliKember
    @OliKember Год назад

    Love these film accent breakdowns! Fascinating to see forensically how close he came, and where he deviated.

  • @brianmessemer2973
    @brianmessemer2973 Год назад

    This is top shelf stuff. Totally fascinating and engaging. Thanks so much!!!

  • @hannahl8
    @hannahl8 Год назад +52

    Great video! I'd love a video on James Marsters as Spike from Buffy the Vampire Slayer. I know many Brits who thought he was a native Londoner.

    • @bjones8470
      @bjones8470 Год назад +2

      Wow I did!!!

    • @wapbamboogie7213
      @wapbamboogie7213 Год назад +1

      So glad you mentioned this! I started watching the original broadcast from the later series and just assumed he was British. His accent in series 1 and 2 is quite ropey though!

    • @IamLertimo
      @IamLertimo Год назад +8

      HIs (Marsters) accent was pretty decent, but I never once thought that he was a brit. With lines of any length, there'd usually be a 'tell' of some kind. Usually these came in the form of some bizarre pronounciations that were neither American nor British, but possibly sounded 'authentic' to US audiences based on some fictional version of cockney that sometimes crops up on TV over there (Dick Van Dyke has a great deal to answer for).

    • @stalfithrildi5366
      @stalfithrildi5366 Год назад +5

      Me and my brother love Buffy and have thought of Spikes accent as halfway to Van Dyking for years. Cannot agree on this one.

    • @speedking439
      @speedking439 Год назад +2

      He did a good job, i had him down as someone who had lived in the US for a couple of years and had adjusted his accent to get work.

  • @zedxx
    @zedxx Год назад +29

    James Horner and Gillian Anderson have something in common: Americans who grew up in the UK and retain their childhood accent

  • @hydrogen3266
    @hydrogen3266 Месяц назад +1

    “Good for an American” -a review of my SSB English accent from a Liverpudlian I met in college.
    (I’ve been practicing my English accent for years. I watch so much content about accents, and I consume a ton of media from the UK)

  • @franciscordon9230
    @franciscordon9230 10 месяцев назад

    Amazing analysis, thank you!

  • @ambertapping7919
    @ambertapping7919 Год назад +13

    One of my favourite British accents by an American is Alan Tudyk in A Knights Tale. It's not perfect but it's a very good estuary-english verging on cockney which as a native ssb speaker I assumed was genuine when I first saw it

    • @harrynewiss4630
      @harrynewiss4630 Год назад

      You're kidding. It's awful.

    • @Qboro66
      @Qboro66 Год назад

      He killed as King Candy in Wreck it Ralph...

    • @johneyon5257
      @johneyon5257 Год назад

      @@harrynewiss4630 - i find myself disagreeing with other americans about the success of british actors with american accents - the ultimate judge i suppose would be a dialectician like Dr Lindsey here - or a survey of the natives of that dialect

    • @catrionabean
      @catrionabean Год назад

      Yes! I was looking for this comment. I really thought he was English

  • @mcolville
    @mcolville Год назад +78

    If you compare his Gorky Park performance with him in Altered States, it seems like the avoidance of contractions is an actorly choice. I think it's something he's choosing to do to make his character seem smarter and more professional.
    Or it could just be that's how he talked? :D

    • @philroberts7238
      @philroberts7238 Год назад +23

      More formal and "Soviet" perhaps? (As distinct from putting on a pretend Russian accent.)

    • @theroadents1141
      @theroadents1141 Год назад +2

      Yes, I've seen that in his other movies.

    • @comradewindowsill4253
      @comradewindowsill4253 Год назад +1

      @@philroberts7238 there are very few things in Russian which can even be contracted to begin with-- especially since the verb 'is', which is the most common contraction in English, is completely absent in Russian. There are contractions of some words, but those are viewed as low-brow or bumpkin ways of speaking, mostly. I think it is a good way of giving the language of the character a syntactic nod, more subtly than just dropping every instance of the verb 'is' or any simple articles would be. Trying to do it like that would only result in a cartoony, brutish speech to the English ear.

  • @kojcelkelesh
    @kojcelkelesh Год назад

    Very impressive video, thanks for all the examples and the terms you've used, (I wasn't aware of the "intrusive R", and the others). I'm a foreigner who lives in England and learning the British culture and accent.

  • @mikechoe97
    @mikechoe97 Год назад +3

    I recently listened to the audiobook of Ernest Hemingway's "The Sun Also Rises" which was narrated by William Hurt, and his vocal performance is so impressive. The book features various characters with different accents, and he does all of them perfectly, including American, British, Scottish, French, Spanish and more.

  • @-yeme-
    @-yeme- Год назад +13

    for me, the best English accent I have heard from an American actor was Jennifer Ehle as Lizzie in the BBC adaptation of Pride and Prejudice

    • @orwellfan8662
      @orwellfan8662 Год назад +3

      Her mother is a famous British actress though, Rosemary Harris

    • @elijahsackville-glucksburg
      @elijahsackville-glucksburg Год назад +1

      she's also British so...

    • @catherinelw9365
      @catherinelw9365 Год назад +2

      @@elijahsackville-glucksburg No, she is American.

    • @egbront1506
      @egbront1506 Год назад +5

      Like Gillian Anderson, she was partly brought up in the UK so had a lot of exposure to British English.

  • @mattpope1746
    @mattpope1746 Год назад +7

    William Hurt sounds a bit like Alan Rickman to me in the scenes you played, which would tend to confirm that he did a good job. Although a far sillier movie, I was always thought Michael McKean, Christopher Guest and Harry Shearer were fairly convincing as British musicians in the hilarious “This is Spinal Tap.”

  • @tickbox_
    @tickbox_ Год назад +1

    Wow, didn’t know Malcolm McDowell had a youtube channel.
    I kid of course. Great video!

  • @katherineheasley6196
    @katherineheasley6196 2 месяца назад +1

    When you said "40 years ago," I thought you might be talking about Jonathan Hillerman, who played Higgins on the TV series "Magnum: PI" and fooled Brits into thinking he was one of them. I'd also nominate James Marsters, who played Spike on "Buffy: the Vampire Slayer." He got off to a rough start, but by the end of the series (and during his time on "Angel"), his accent was flawless. Of course, it helped that he had Anthony Stewart Head to coach him.

  • @Zederok
    @Zederok Год назад +27

    Heya Jeff, have you seen Peter Jackson's version of The Lord of the Rings? There is an American Actor named Brad Dourif who supposedly fooled the casting directors of the film as he spoke with a RP accent throughout the casting process, never breaking character. It wasn't till he was already cast they found out his normal speech was very American. Huge breakdown of it in the LotR extended documentaries.

    • @KindredBrujah
      @KindredBrujah Год назад +10

      I think all of the American cast in those films did an exemplary job (as indeed did every single person working on them in every department) of their accents.

    • @tonybennett4159
      @tonybennett4159 Год назад +1

      @@KindredBrujah Agreed. Any off-key accent intruding into the film would have taken us out of that world. It never happened.

    • @mikespearwood3914
      @mikespearwood3914 Год назад +9

      @@tonybennett4159 Viggo Mortensen slips sometimes. Sometimes sounds more US, sometimes more British. Elijah Wood & Sean Astin were flawless though.

    • @zoyadulzura7490
      @zoyadulzura7490 Год назад +3

      @@mikespearwood3914 Wait, Viggo Mortensen was doing a British accent? Sounded American to me. Agreed that Wood and Astin were 💯as was Dourif.

  • @mags102755
    @mags102755 Год назад +60

    I have always thought William Hurt an underrated actor. That was great to hear about James Horner.

    • @hd-xc2lz
      @hd-xc2lz Год назад +3

      Certainly wasn't underrated back in his heyday. More forgotten than ever underrated.

    • @duane8829
      @duane8829 Год назад +4

      Can we all please stop misusing underrated. He’s an academy award winner for best actor for god’s sake.

  • @fullmetalandtheflame438
    @fullmetalandtheflame438 10 месяцев назад +2

    Would love for you to review Oscar Isaac’s accent as Steven Grant in Moon Knight (a six episode Marvel mini series on Disney +). It’s also not RP although he has done RP in other projects. I’ve seen a lot of Americans say it’s bad, while a lot of Brits think it’s great. Because of the nature of that show and multiple characters he portrays, he switches between accents in the show, sometimes, even in the same scene. I think it’s incredible! Would love to hear your thoughts on it.

  • @ynysmones3816
    @ynysmones3816 Месяц назад +2

    My theory for James Horner's persistently English accent is despite having only lived there for a few years of his youth, having American family, and spending the rest of his life in the United States, is that he had Asperger's Syndrome. I have personally known a large number of Autistic spectrum people with unusual accent acquisition histories. As a Brit these have largely been young people who were quite insular as children and took on the accents of their favourite media - very often American voiced Anime or cartoons, despite often having never even been to North America.

  • @LolliPop2000
    @LolliPop2000 Год назад +17

    About avoiding contractions; I guess you're right about it being characteristic of non-natives learning English, but in this case it might be a hold over from the stereotypical "Russhian" accent employed by generations of Boris Badanov type actors.

  • @michaelparker1813
    @michaelparker1813 Год назад +71

    Many of my fellow Americans seem to have a very fake sounding British accent even to my ear. I can only assume we sound quite silly if not brutish to native speakers in England. But to be honest both Brits and Aussies have done remarkable jobs sounding like us. Most are incredibly competent in their portrayals of our accents. I think the only notable exception I have heard (I wish I had examples for you) is when British speakers try to do southern accents. Often they sound forced because they merge different regional accents into one. This isn’t only a problem of those from England. Many Americans do poor southern accents as well. Often their accents do not represent well the area from which their character resides. For example, the Waltons. Many of us grew up in this show. However the accent of Nelson County, where the show is set, is far different than that of the actors. Michaels is the one usually sited as being the closest to accurate.
    Btw though I am in no way a linguist I enjoy your show immensely. It is good to be stretched out of our educational comfort zone. I was a history major. My only real time of study in linguistics was Antonio Loprieno’s book on ancient Egyptian language. I failed miserably at trying to understand its complexities.

    • @DrGeoffLindsey
      @DrGeoffLindsey  Год назад +22

      What about the Brits in Gone With The Wind (if we can still mention that)? I never really bought Tom Hanks' Forrest Gump, but sometimes the performance overrides the accent.

    • @katebowers8107
      @katebowers8107 Год назад +14

      Brits (well, all actors actually) do a bad job with Boston accents. The only good Boston accent I’ve ever heard from a non-native Bostonian actor was Leonardo DiCaprio in The Departed. The other major actors in that film were all from Boston.

    • @saoirsedeltufo7436
      @saoirsedeltufo7436 Год назад +3

      @@katebowers8107 Doesn't Christian Bale do a Boston accent in the Fighter? Is that good or bad?

    • @katebowers8107
      @katebowers8107 Год назад +3

      @@saoirsedeltufo7436
      I had never seen that movie. I just watched a few clips. He’s doing a really good job.

    • @ravenlord4
      @ravenlord4 Год назад +2

      @@katebowers8107 The main actors in "Thirteen Days" did a really good job with Boston accents.

  • @BrianLockett
    @BrianLockett Год назад +1

    This was a very interesting and well-presented video that has widened my view into the world of speech.

  • @incaseofamnesia6380
    @incaseofamnesia6380 Год назад

    I love listening to your videos, they're always great!

  • @simonmeadows7961
    @simonmeadows7961 Год назад +6

    Though not by an American, I've found the most convincing southern English accent on screen was done by a Scot: Martin Compston in Line of Duty. It was the first thing I'd seen him in and had no idea what his natural speaking voice sounded like. He was as convincing a Londoner as a greengrocer at Deptford Market.

  • @paganpines
    @paganpines Год назад +10

    A bit off topic, but I remember watching L.A. Confidential, then seeing the cast members interviewed, and I nearly fell off my chair when Russell Crowe and Guy Pearce opened their mouths and these thick Australian accents came out. I had NO idea they were Australian at the time.

    • @johneyon5257
      @johneyon5257 Год назад +2

      the aussies were superb at speaking american - even back when the brits were still struggling

    • @exceptionvideo
      @exceptionvideo Год назад

      Australians make great Americans.

    • @kamau506
      @kamau506 Год назад

      Mel Gibson

    • @drs-xj3pb
      @drs-xj3pb 3 месяца назад

      @@kamau506Mel Gibson: American father, Irish mother, lived in the US till age 12 -- I'd say he does a pretty good Australian accent.

  • @francestsoiukalidis3713
    @francestsoiukalidis3713 Год назад +1

    Thank you for your analysis. We Australians are familiar with both American and British accents largely owing to films and television. In the past forty years, there has been a shift here in our accent to a more middle-of-the-road accent with the disappearance of what we used to call “educated Australian” and its counterpart, the broad Australian accent. And we hear more British regional accents now on the BBC I have noticed.

    • @erinm9445
      @erinm9445 Год назад

      Australians are THE BEST at American accents. I can't begin to count the number of actors I saw in movies with American accents and was later shocked to learn that they were Australian. As just one example, the movie The Patriot cracked me up. Here is a movie literally about historic American wars and patriotism, and it stars two Australians with impeccable American accents! (I knew Mel Gibson and Heath Ledger were Aussies by that time, but learning about each had been a shock once upon a time).

    • @nealjroberts4050
      @nealjroberts4050 Год назад

      Both Australians and Canadians seem particularly good at pulling both sets of accents off!

  • @simonmoore8776
    @simonmoore8776 Месяц назад +2

    Harry Shearer's accent in 'This is Spinal Tap' is spot on. Not just a 'British' accent but a genuine regional accent from the north of England.

  • @zzzzz77771
    @zzzzz77771 Год назад +10

    I'm English born and raised , and I agree, that accent is almost perfect. Superb.
    I find it almost impossible to tell he's not English.

    • @ajs41
      @ajs41 2 месяца назад

      I agree. In fact, he sounds like an English person who's spent a few years in North America, which is why very occasionally he sounds transatlantic.

  • @philallsopp42
    @philallsopp42 Год назад +7

    I was born & grew up in Brighton, UK. Emigrated to US in late 20s. Another actor who I mistook for an old college friend when I heard her voice on the TV while I was making a cup of coffee is Gillian Anderson (X-Files) in her role as DCI in “The Falls”. The other is Michael Hall (TV Series “Safe”) playing a British surgeon.

    • @seancassidy674
      @seancassidy674 Год назад +1

      Gillian is a dual citizen and split her childhood across both countries.

    • @harrynewiss4630
      @harrynewiss4630 Год назад

      @@seancassidy674 Yes again Gillian is one of us

  • @harrylane4
    @harrylane4 Год назад +5

    This has really driven home how much of the New England accents have in common with British ones. A lot of these features are common here, but those that aren’t completely change the timbre of the accent

    • @hydrogen3266
      @hydrogen3266 Месяц назад

      Totally agree. It’s interesting to note the small differences that add up. I tend to think here in New England our vowel sounds are brighter and more nasal than in British English. I feel like it’s what gives the New England dialect a more “American” sound.
      And what interests me the most is the regionalization of New England accents, which have quite a bit of variety if you know what you’re looking for. I’m also fascinated by the pervasive stereotype of the Southie Boston accent. I don’t naturally have a strong accent, but when I go to other places in the country, they know where I’m from and start doing the exaggerated Southie Boston accent

  • @a__guy
    @a__guy Год назад +3

    love your videos Geoff, could you do a video about the differences between "learnt" and "learned"?

  • @chrisjohnston3512
    @chrisjohnston3512 Год назад +10

    I've heard it said that Brad Dourif did an excellent British accent in The Lord of the Rings as Wormtongue, but me not being an expert, I wonder what do you think of it?

  • @farisisfat
    @farisisfat Месяц назад +1

    Lake Bell in Man up did such a great job I was shocked to find out she was American

  • @Ambienfinity
    @Ambienfinity Год назад

    You're right. It was a super performance, too. As a musician, Horner is one of my heroes -- I'd never thought about his accent until you highlighted it.

  • @jekw23
    @jekw23 Год назад +26

    It helps that Hurt is such a naturalistic actor you don’t even notice he’s affecting an accent.

  • @robbybobbyhobbies
    @robbybobbyhobbies Год назад +4

    The joy of discovering an American actor actually attempting to replicate straightforward British, well English, pronunciation! So many years of either "posh" (and posh from the 1920s) or Australian (occasionally with some mangled South African for good measure).

  • @sparkymularkey6970
    @sparkymularkey6970 Год назад

    This is fascinating! I had never heard of this movie, and now I want to give it a look!

  • @mariaj4883
    @mariaj4883 Год назад +2

    Funny how you said Americans were probably the ones criticizing an English accent. It genuinely wouldn't surprise me.

  • @ImCarolB
    @ImCarolB Год назад +3

    Have you ever analyzed Kelly Macdonald, the actress who played a rural Texan in No Country For Old Men? I was stunned to find out that she was Scottish.

  • @mootpointjones8488
    @mootpointjones8488 Год назад +4

    Gorky Park is a very dark film with excellent performances especially Hurt's copper and to see Ricki Fulton as a baddie is a delight! Thanks for the upload 👍

  • @howlingwolf7280
    @howlingwolf7280 Год назад +2

    William Hurt's British accent was solid. I find it hard, because of who he is, my knowledge of his work and his regular accent etc, to not pick up on the lilt / cadence of a lot of lines, but (and this is crucial for me) not to the detriment of the performance. His accent is solid to the point where I'm questioning his characters motives or agenda etc. I have seen it written a few places that it was a deliberate choice to be ever so slightly off because of who his character was in the wider narrative - something is supposed to be off, he's supposed to be unsettling at times. I can make my peace with that. Fantastic performance. Great movie. thanks for for great video.

  • @jimh3500
    @jimh3500 Месяц назад

    Dr. Lindsey I think you have a very pleasant accent and I enjoy listening to your voice in these presentations. William Hurt was one of my favorite actors. I think he had a very sensitive appreciation for the characters he portrayed. As far as voices and use of spoken language, well I do have so many favorites that it challenges the category of favorites. John Wayne, Humphrey Bogart and Lee Marvin have very distinct voices that I think enhances their performance - with the exception of Lee Marvin’s singing voice though the critics somehow disagreed with me when they awarded him the Academy Award for best Actor in Paint Your Wagon. Robert Mitchum, Orson Welles, and James Earl Jones also had (has) a captivating voice. I can’t think of more commanding voices than Richard Burton, Sir Laurence Olivier, Sir John Gielgud, Sir Anthony Hopkins, Sir Sean Connery, Sir Alec Guinness, Sir “Rex” Harrison, Robert Shaw, Peter O’Toole. Less than favorite but very interesting are Walter Matthau, Charles Bronson, Henry Fonda, Kevin Costner and Sam Elliott. All of these actors have unique voices in my opinion. Most unique of all could be Cary Grant.

  • @lucawilloughby2271
    @lucawilloughby2271 Год назад +31

    You should analyse Spike from Buffy the Vampire Slayer, as played by James Marsters - an American. His accent in the show is like a weird mix of...Essex, and just any place Northern where they do shallow vowels

    • @zoyadulzura7490
      @zoyadulzura7490 Год назад +3

      Yes! I'd love to see that.

    • @MacStyran
      @MacStyran Год назад +4

      The comment I was looking for.
      He even returned to his accent in Torchwood ... as Captain John. Acting British in a BRITISH show... THAT is impressive. Although Captain John was pretty much Captain Spike for me ...

    • @nickmoore385
      @nickmoore385 Год назад +2

      Yes I (as a Brit) assumed he was British.

    • @andymac4883
      @andymac4883 Год назад +5

      I remember him being pretty good, and assuming that he was a Brit (as a Brit myself) when he popped up with the same accent in Torchwood, but I feel like the few times I've heard him speak lately the accent has been more noticeably fake. Not _bad_ but not as good as I remember. That said, let us not overlook Alexis Denisoff's Wesley Wyndam-Pryce. While he may cheat a little by spending a lot of time living and studying in London, I was extremely surprised to hear his native accent in a behind the scenes interview, not least because he too did another role with a very good accent; Lord John Rossendale, in the TV adaptation of Sharpe.

    • @sib9769
      @sib9769 Год назад

      @@nickmoore385 really? I believe he’s from Texas