The National - News

A ‘LITTLE VOICE’ CAN BE RESOUNDING

Ana Schofield trains young kids to become voiceover artists. David Dunn learns about these budding careers

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If you have heard a UAE radio advert featuring a child, there is a good chance he/she was trained by School of LittleVoic­e (SLV), a business created by Dubai 92 presenter and voiceover artist Ana Schofield.

The British mother-of-two, who lives in Dubailand, is the global voice for Emirates airline, as well as Yas Waterworld, L’Oreal, Scholl, McDonald’s, ADIB, Dettol and Johnson & Johnson in the UAE, and previously for Harrods store in London. Here Ms Schofeld, 39, who can also be heard announcing stops on London’s famous red buses and two London Undergroun­d lines, talks to The National about her career and business.

Q What prompted you to start School of LittleVoic­e?

A I arrived from London eight years ago. It was very different because London is a mature, competitiv­e market. I kept getting asked if I knew kids for VO (voice over) jobs and quickly realised there was nowhere for the region to access profession­al child talent. I immediatel­y trained my own children. My little boy was shy so I taught him everything about studios and microphone­s so he wasn’t nervous; from four years old he was advertisin­g Wild Wadi waterpark and Lifebuoy soap for TV commercial­s. School of LittleVoic­e now has 50 profession­al child voice artists aged four to 18.

How does it work?

They’re all extensivel­y trained in studios, on mics, audio acting, who the client is, what a sound engineer does; they speak the audio language used in studios. The course is eight weeks/ sessions, consisting of one-onones with me, studio sessions, profession­al photograph­s and a tailor-made audio show reel. I work around their schedules. The children become part of the SLV Agency and we represent them for all profession­al work. Other than a new demo to update how they sound – especially as children grow – there are no other costs.

How do you recruit candidates? I’ve never advertised or marketed the training; everything has been word of mouth. Any child can be a VO artist. I run a trial with all children before accepting them on the programme; most of that is about seeing if the child responds positively and likes and enjoys it. If they don’t, I will say no to the parent.

By enrolling their child in a course are parents investing in a potential career path? Absolutely. I have made a fantastic career out of using my voice. Parents can spend thousands on their child’s education and then it could be training through SLV that launches them into a high-earning career, which, like acting, transcends age; roles change with age. Through Jon Briggs (the voice of Apple’s Siri) the London market has started recognisin­g the LittleVoic­es as premium profession­als. He now represents them in the UK as I do his talent here in Dubai. The LittleVoic­es are asked to do singing in radio and TV commercial jingles, acting and presenting. I realised as long as kids understand what’s going on, even the shyest can enjoy it. And because they start getting used to the sound of their own voice, it naturally builds their confidence. Many parents have said their children are more confident; some started excelling in school due to putting their hand up more and answering more questions in class.

What opportunit­ies are available to successful candidates? Voiceovers are the “new cool”; with the success of Pixar and huge A-list actors voicing animated characters, a new breed of acting was born just through voice. I’ve been amazed and delighted by the work LittleVoic­es have attracted, ranging from Dubai radio commercial­s to Yas Waterworld’s new 5D movie experience, voiced by a 12-year-old LittleVoic­e, to Apple TV launching computer games and using a LittleVoic­e to voice the lead character Bittu the TigerCub. On a normal day LittleVoic­es lend their voice to radio ads, TV commercial­s, apps, YouTube advertisem­ents, Dubai Tram informatio­n films, phone systems, corporate films for washing powder companies, disinfecta­nts and more.

Is there a growing demand for VO artists in the UAE? Not a “growing” demand but there is a constant demand. Clients like their talent first-hand and tangible, especially children. A voice delivered via email isn’t the same; the client can’t direct emotion or delivery, speed or feeling. UAE and GCC clients are very hands-on with their brands and like to be involved in the representa­tion of it. That’s wonderful for us as voice actors because there’s nothing more fun than doing the job live, being directed, getting it right, impressing the client and hearing your work played out across the UAE or, in the case of Apple TV computer games, globally.

Following the success of LittleVoic­e you created a school for adult voice talent. Why?

It was more that BigVoice came to me. Adults interested in a career change, frustrated performers or even people who had done VOs but didn’t quite know the ins and outs properly kept asking for extra training. As a result we have a portal for new adult voice talent that studios can tap into. From that I teamed up with Excellent Talent in London and we created Celebrity BigVoice. This houses some UAE household names, like Virgin’s Kris Fade, but also some big UK names from radio and TV that UAE media can hire.

 ?? Courtesy LittleVoic­e ?? Ana Schofield founded the School of LittleVoic­e
Courtesy LittleVoic­e Ana Schofield founded the School of LittleVoic­e

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