San Francisco Chronicle

Characters come to life in his voice

- By Edward Guthmann

At various moments, Simon Vance is an ingenue, a pompous Dickensian headmaster, the vampire Lestat or Anne Boleyn.

Vance, 57, is an audiobook narrator who in 30 years has recorded more than 600 books. He doesn’t commute to a studio but works at home: recording his narration in a soundproof booth, editing his own work at a digital-audio workstatio­n.

Anative of Brighton, England, Vance came to the United States in 1992. He has two sons, 18 and 23, from a past marriage, and lives with his wife, Cynthia Bassham, in Concord. He has six Audie Awards, an annual prize given by the Audio Publishers Associatio­n.

There’s a great art to narrating an audiobook. It’s much more than just sounding good. You need to have an actor’s sensibilit­y: the ability to empathize with the characters you’re reading about. To inhabit them.

You’re not just reading the words off a page, and if that’s all you think it is, then you’re deeply underestim­ating what’s needed.

Acommon mistake beginning narrators make, because they hear this on the radio, is to emphasize too many words. I call it sportscast­er intonation. It should be conversati­onal, very gentle. You need to back off and not get between the pictures the author created and the

pictures you want the listener to have.

I record three to four hours each day. I’m normally in the studio by 8:30 or 9 o’clock. I record for an hour and a bit, then take a break where I bring the file into the office and edit. I’ll read the paper a bit, answer e-mail. Come back and do another hour. Then another break, and an hour of recording in the afternoon.

I read off an iPad and record in a soundproof booth with double-wall insulation. The window in that room has triple glazing. My microphone is a Neumann U87, which you’d find in any profession­al sound or music studio. There’s a pop screen to soften the p’s and protect the microphone. I always wear headphones, one ear on and one ear off so I can hear the atmosphere in the room.

I generally do about one book a week. With days off for other acting jobs and obligation­s, that’s probably 40 a year. The average book takes anywhere from eight to 15 hours to record. “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo” was 18 to 20. “The Count of Monte Cristo” was 45 hours.

One of the advantages of recording at home is that if I make a mistake, it’s on my time and no one else’s. I used to occasional­ly be called into New York studios to record, but it’s cheaper for them if I do it here. And they know that I’m a good self-director.

I began 21 years ago in the audiobook industry. Before that, I was reading books for the blind at the Royal National Institute for the Blind in London. In the early days of the industry, that’s how just about all the audiobook narrators got started.

My first recording studio was in the corner of a garage in Walnut Creek, using two cassette decks. I did the editing by stopping the tape, running it back and then dropping it into Record. It was primitive. I went from that to a digital audiotape machine, and then in the mid-’90s I started recording onto a hard drive on the computer.

In 2001 the business exploded with MP3s. The digital-download revolution changed everything. That was when it was possible to make a good living in the business. I was finally able to buy a house.

Preparatio­n can be the most time-consuming and least-rewarding part of the process. There are several parts to it. Comprehend­ing the story. Understand­ing the writer’s style: does he use a lot of big words, long sentences or paragraphs, a lot of sub-clauses? And of course checking for pronunciat­ion of words.

I’d rather be performing. But, like acting on stage, you need to be familiar with the story before you stand up and present it.

With nonfiction, I generally don’t read the entire text. Sometimes I even sight-read, which is a skill I developed as a BBC newsreader. With fiction, especially mysteries or thrillers, it’s essential to have an understand­ing of who the good guys and bad guys are.

The book I’m about to embark on is a light murder mystery in the Agatha Christie style. There’s a rather complicate­d family structure in a classic English upper-class home. So I’m going to draw a family tree — with servants, as well — so that I can picture where everybody stands.

Nearly all the books I narrate are fiction. For the vast majority, I’m the solo narrator. But I also do multiple-voice production­s, with other actors playing different characters. On “Dracula,” I’m one of nine narrators including Tim Curry and Alan Cumming.

Recently I was asked where I get character voices from. I get them from watching and listening. TV shows, radio. And just the fact that I always played. My dad gave me a tape recorder in the ’60s, and I started doing silly voices into a microphone and never stopped. I’m still doing that.

 ?? Paul Chinn / The Chronicle ?? Simon Vance says narrators must be able to empathize with their characters.
Paul Chinn / The Chronicle Simon Vance says narrators must be able to empathize with their characters.

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