Toronto Star

Turning up the volume on voice talent

Demand for the skill has risen with popularity of animated TV series

- NEAL JUSTIN

The most gut-wrenching challenge of Maile Flanagan’s long acting career was playing a boisterous teen ninja coming face to face with his long-lost mother, just a week after the actress had lost her mom in real life.

“It was the hardest thing to do and one of the best things I’ve ever done,” said Flanagan, a former Minneapoli­s-based comedian whose credits include Grey’s Anatomy and The Station Agent.

The performanc­e wasn’t captured on a movie set or stage. It happened in a sound booth while Flanagan, 53, was overdubbin­g English dialogue for Naruto Uzumaki, the Japanese anime character who’s starred in six films, 700 TV episodes and 42 video games.

Voice-over artists such as Flanagan are being heard like never before, leading to more work and more respect. Anyone who thinks voice acting is child’s play deserves a swift kick in the head from Flanagan’s most famous character.

“For Naruto, I may have to kill somebody, grieve over it, and then be funny in the next scene. That’s never going to happen in a half-hour sitcom,” she said. “I’m a middle-aged actress. I’m never going to be Nicole Kidman. But in a cartoon, I can play sexy. It’d be a sexy woman with a raspy voice, but I could do it.”

In the past, Flanagan split her time evenly between animation and live-action roles. This year, she expects to spend 75 per cent of her schedule doing voiceover work. Demand has risen sharply, thanks largely to the rapidly expanding population of Toontown, as new animated shows pop-up on streaming services.

Netflix, which offers the critically acclaimed series BoJack

Horseman and Trollhunte­rs, hopes to debut 30 Japanese anime series this year. Harvey

Street Kids, based on the gungho girls of Harvey Comics, debuts June 29. Hulu’s most streamed program of 2017 was Comedy Central’s long-running South

Park, which helps explain why the company just inked a deal with DreamWorks Animation, with new series debuting in 2020. “There’s more animation work now than ever,” Chris Prynoski, president and owner of L.A.-based animation company Titmouse, told Variety magazine last year. Half of the company’s assignment­s are for streaming shows, including Amazon’s Emmy-winning Niko

and the Sword of Light and Netflix’s Big Mouth.

Actors who think they can take advantage of this deluge of work by rolling into the studio in their pyjamas and getting home in time for Judge Judy are in for a rude awakening.

“You start to get these jobs and you feel cocky, like, ‘I am great at this,’ ” said Saturday Night

Live veteran Bobby Moynihan, who broke into the animation business by contributi­ng to Pixar’s 2013 film Monsters Univer

sity and now has a leading role in DuckTales, Disney XD’s reboot of the 1980s cartoon.

“Then you look at someone like John DiMaggio (Bender on

Futurama) or Mark Hamill ( Batman: The Animated Series) — I could talk about his Joker for hours — and you realize, ‘I’m nowhere as good as these people.’ ”

“On camera, I can make a tiny little eye movement and convey what I’m feeling. You can’t do that in animation. It has to come through solely with your voice. It’s an amazing skill.”

Alyson Stoner, better known as Isabella in Disney Channel’s

Phineas and Ferb, sometimes does more research for her voice-over duties than for liveaction roles.

When she was reinterpre­ting a part from a Japanese video game, she poured hours into studying the subtle difference­s between that language and English, trying to maintain the integrity of Japanese culture while striving to please representa­tives from both countries who were judging her throughout a 12-hour session.

“On camera, the crew is far away from you. But in voiceover, the executive is staring right at you from the other side of the glass, giving you feedback at a rapid-fire pace. And if you don’t do it correctly the first time, you’re replaced,” said Stoner, who also starred in the Step Upand Camp Rock movies. “I honestly don’t think everyone can do it.”

Hank Azaria has made it look easy for 30 years as the voice of the bartender Moe and other characters on The Simpsons. But the actor, who appears in the flesh in IFC’s Brockmire, said that’s far from the truth.

“It might surprise you how much energy it actually takes to do a vocal performanc­e,” he said. “You have to sort of act with your whole body or else it doesn’t come out good. ‘You do the Hokey Pokey and you turn yourself about.’ That’s really what it’s all about.”

You also have to be willing to make a fool of yourself.

“You can’t be afraid to look silly and try things,” said Better Things star Pamela Adlon, who started doing voice-over work at age 9 and played Bobby on King of the Hill for 13 seasons. “You have to be willing to be crazy and fail. That’s a huge discipline.”

Finding just the right “crazy” can be as challengin­g as casting a live-action series. Seth MacFarlane, who conjured up Family Guy and The Orville, said he often prefers sketch comedians such as Alex Bornstein to veteran voice-over artists, because they’re more likely to offer fully developed characters.

“I’m always looking for something a little more than a funny voice. I’m looking for a person,” he said. “The Simpsons really redefined the approach. Homer is a whole personalit­y.”

In the early days of animation, actors who specialize­d in threedimen­sional characters used to take a back seat to studio pros such as Blanc, the voice of Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig and Barney Rubble. That all changed when Robin Williams signed on as the Genie in 1992’s Aladdin, a tour-de-force performanc­e that generated Oscar buzz. Big names including Tom Hanks, Cameron Diaz and Steve Carell have followed him into the sound booth.

“Almost all the people who are great actors are great at voiceover work,” said Simpsons executive producer Al Jean, who recorded Daniel Radcliffe, Glenn Close and Martin Short this past season. “You’ve got to do a little more work when they’re not actors. Elon Musk (a recent guest on the show) may be the smartest person in the world, but he’s not a great voice-over actor. But he was very nice.”

It doesn’t hurt that the payday can be enormous. Reese Witherspoo­n scored a reported $10 million (U.S.) for 2009’s Monsters vs. Aliens. Each principal cast member of The Simpsons pockets $300,000 an episode. Billy West, best known for Futurama and The Ren & Stimpy Show, has an estimated net worth of $35 million.

But the average voice-over artist can’t rely solely on studio work to pay the bills. According to Global Voice Acting Academy, an online school, session fees average around $1,000 for up to four hours. That’s a nice chunk of change — but only if you’re in steady demand.

“On camera, I can make a tiny little eye movement to convey what I’m feeling. You can’t do that in animation.” BOBBY MOYNIHAN DUCKTALES VOICE ACTOR

 ?? DISNEY XD/DISNEY CHANNEL PRESS ?? Saturday Night Live veteran Bobby Moynihan has a leading role in Disney XD’s reboot of the 1980s cartoon DuckTales.
DISNEY XD/DISNEY CHANNEL PRESS Saturday Night Live veteran Bobby Moynihan has a leading role in Disney XD’s reboot of the 1980s cartoon DuckTales.
 ?? COURTESY OF NETFLIX ?? Harvey Street Kids, based on the gung-ho girls of Harvey Comics, debuts on Netflix on Friday.
COURTESY OF NETFLIX Harvey Street Kids, based on the gung-ho girls of Harvey Comics, debuts on Netflix on Friday.

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