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unusual facts about voice artist



Breehn Burns

Breehn Burns is an American screenwriter, director, voice artist, producer and illustrator.

Ewan Bailey

Ewan Bailey (born 1966) is an actor, writer and voice artist located in Central London, best known for writing and performing in The Sunday Format, BBC Radio 4's satire of British Sunday newspapers, Funland, BBC Three's darker than dark comedy set in the English seaside town of Blackpool, HBO's recent epic series Rome and the recent, highly acclaimed bio-pic of "Kenneth Williams: Fantabulosa!".

Marnie McPhail

Marnie McPhail (born July 4, 1966) is an American Actress and voice artist who is known for playing Maria Wong in Braceface, Annie Edison in The Edison Twins, and Peaches in JoJo's Circus.

Voice-over translation

A typical voice-over translation is usually done by a single male voice artist.


see also

1997 in animation

March 18 – Ciara Bravo, American actress, voice artist, singer, and comedian

Avalon Code

In the Japanese-language version of the game, Tia's spoken lines were performed by acclaimed voice artist Mamiko Noto.

Bruce Lanoil

Bruce Lanoil is an American actor, voice artist, puppeteer for The Jim Henson Company, and a Muppeteer for The Walt Disney Company, who frequently works with puppeteer David Alan Barclay and hails from Brooklyn.

Colm Ó Foghlú

Colm has also worked as a TV presenter with TG4 on Tóin le Gaoith, and also regularly works as a voice artist on their cartoons.

Electric Lunchbox

Steve Shanahan also works as a voice artist with credits including Tracey McBean, Bottle Top Bill, Ageing rock Dad 'Gene' in CJ the DJ with his latest credit being the voice of B1 in the animated series of Bananas in Pyjamas for the ABC Kids.

Helen King

Helen King (1 March 1972 in Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland, United Kingdom) is a Canadian actress working in theatre, film and TV as an actor, voice artist, puppeteer & singer.

Identity Within

It was performed entirely by Chris Barrie, who is himself a professional voice artist and voices both his character, Arnold Rimmer, and the rest of the cast.

Joe Alaskey

Joseph "Joe" Alaskey (born May 26, 1949) is an American actor, comedian, and voice artist, credited as one of the successors of Mel Blanc in impersonating the voices of Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Sylvester, Tweety and other characters from Warner Bros. cartoons, such as Plucky Duck on Tiny Toon Adventures from 1990-95.

Lobster Wars

Executive Producer Thom Beers narrates the show in the US whereas voice artist Bill Petrie narrates it in the UK.

Marissa Stott

Marissa is also a skilled voice artist who has done numerous radio ad campaigns and does regular voice work for La-Z-Boy.

Rajesh Vedprakash

Rajesh Vedprakash (Hindi: राजेश वेदप्रकाश, born as Rajesh Vedprakash Maingi राजेश वेदप्रकाश मैंगी on October 7, 1968) at Pataudi, India) as an Indian voice artist who can speak English, Hindi and Urdu.

Ron E Sparks

Sparks has also made a name as a television voice artist, and has provided voice overs for several Australian television shows, such as Wheel of Fortune and Hot Streak.

Sebastian Fuchsberger

As a tenor and "voice artist", he has worked with the Arnold Schönberg Choir and the choir of the Vienna State Opera, as a soloist in the Burgtheater, with the Inn District Symphony Orchestra, as well as with the bands Mnozil Brass, Global Kryner, Pro Brass, Alegre Correa, and Gansch & Roses.

That's My Line

Notable moments included voice artist Mel Blanc having a contest with an audience member on who does voice acting the best (the "audience member" being his son Noel) and magician James Randi contesting James Hydrick's psychic abilities.

The Duck Factory

Other Duck Factory employees seen regularly on the show were man-of-a-thousand-cartoon voices Wally Wooster (played by real-life cartoon voice artist Don Messick); comedy writer Marty Fenneman (played by real-life comedy writer Jay Tarses); artists Brooks Carmichael and Roland Culp, editor Andrea Lewin, and business manager Aggie Aylesworth.

The Legend of Frosty the Snowman

Narrated and sung by Burt Reynolds, with veteran actor/voice artist Bill Fagerbakke in the role of Frosty, this new chapter in the saga revisits Frosty many years after he shouts out his signature phrase “Happy Birthday!”, for the first time when he appears in a little town where magic, silliness, and nonsense of all kinds are strictly against the rules.