Jobs & Education2 mins ago
Impersonations
How would I go about learning to speak like someone else? Is it something you are born with the ability to do, or is there a knack?
Specifically I would love (and this is where is is linked with film and tv) Peter Lorre. And Ian Paisley, but I didn't think this question was fitting to News.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I can mimic and i guess it's a knack i've always had as no-one has ever taught me. I'm not a voice coach but i tend to look at the vowels in any accent - for example -the 'rev' Ian Paisley has a very strong accent. i sounds more like a or aye, but when you say it your tounge curls at the back of your throat. I think mimicing is more about listening than talking. Just like trying to find a note on a piano, listen to the person you want to mimic and keep trying to match it.
Also, some impersonations are easier if you take on the characteristics. I do (if i do say so myself) quite a good bridget jones, but i have to pull the face while i'm doing it.
Peter Lorre would be tricky to get accurate because of his hybrid accent - born in an area of Hungary that is now part of Slovakia, brought up in Austria, and with an added hint of American inflection (only a hint, mind). Just practice saying "Yeeessss, master" a lot in a vulnerable-yet-sinister way :-)