You’ve got a character voice. You’ve got some text. Now what?
In this video I walk through a 3-step process for taking lines — e.g.a script, a speech, a roleplay intro, whatever — and really getting them into your body as a character, not just as words you’ve memorised.
This is a voice lesson. I use a real example: learning a line in Portuguese (badly) for a clown show I’ve got the next day, and running it through a character voice from my toolbox — a very particular kind of Sergeant Major energy.
I talk about things like:
* Tips to learn lines better in the first place.
* What “breaking the voice” means and why it’s a good thing.
* How to use physical games to take your lines (and voice) to the next level.
* What vocal “anchors” are and how to find yours for a specific character voice
* The link between physical tension and character voice — and why releasing unnecessary tension has to come first
If you want to apply for Character Voice Lab, here’s the link: https://alexowenhill.co.uk/character-voice-lab/
If you’re not sure where your character voice skills currently sit…
🎠Take the free 5-minute Improv Character Voice Scorecard
20 quick yes/no questions + instant personalised report.
Here’s the Character Voice Scorecard 👉 https://alex-i1ob4dyf.scoreapp.com
00:00 The problem: voice meets text
01:15 Step 1 — Learn the lines (without the character)
03:00 Step 2 — Throw games at it
05:30 Finding your anchors
08:00 The whispering game
11:00 What breaking your lines tells you
13:30 Step 3 — Building a three-dimensional character voice
#charactervoice #voiceacting #voicecoach #improv #dnd #roleplayaccount #vocaltraining #actingprocess #clown #voiceover

