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Lynne Darlington

Voiceover & On Camera Talent

Voiceover

September 3, 2020 By Lynne Darlington

Filmmakers Global Network: Spotlight on Lynne Darlington

Lynne Darlington Headshot
Lynne Darlington

CURRENT PROJECTS:
I am a voiceover and on-camera actor/spokesperson. I have a VO studio with Source Connect, which allows me to conduct remote recording sessions from anywhere in the world with internet access. Not all of my projects are over Source Connect; some of my clients send me copy, and I record and email the audio directly to them. I have been working on various commercial spots, a United Nations video, and will be recording the names of high school students for their virtual graduation next week. Unfortunately, COVID19  has shut down most recording sessions in NYC at the moment.

My last on-camera booking was as a spokesperson for a corporate video just before everything was halted in March. Since then, on-camera work has been nonexistent as the industry is working on new protocols to keep everyone safe on set.  I have noticed on some of the casting sites that the new trend for projects is for talent to self-record. Creative teams are looking for talent to submit auditions and virtually shoot projects with any 4K resolution phone. I am hopeful, as is everyone in the industry, that next month traditional production will begin again!

CREATIVE PROCESS:
Over the course of a day, I receive an average of ten VO auditions from my various agents and clients. They run the gamut in emotion, tone, delivery, audience, etc… Chameleonic VO talent are the busiest.  I try my best to deliver on “conversational, real, warm, reassuring, corporate, CEO, girl next door, serious, wry, ‘with a wink’, upbeat, bright, heartfelt, not too young, not too mature, in the middle of that sweet spot, informative with a touch of genuine emotion, matter of fact and pleasant”… and the list goes on. Each script has to be broken down to connect to the audience, and the point of view of the character. Is this playful? Am I a storyteller? Who are we talking to? Is it radio or TV? The mediums have subtle differences. After a couple of reads, I know where I want to take the script. I step into my booth, trust my instincts, and let it rip. The more clever the copy, the more fun the process; a good copywriter is my best friend. As an actor, I have learned to submit it and forget it – took me a couple of years, but this is a crowded space with intense competition. You will win some and lose some – all part of the game.

For an entertaining and comical look at the VO industry watch Lake Bell’s 2013 American comedy film, In a World…

CHALLENGE AND SOLUTION:
A while ago, I was working with a well-known politician in my studio for a radio spot. I gave him the script, and he immediately started changing lines, and knocking out words. This was radio, where every word is necessary for a :30 or :60 buy. As he was rearranging the meticulously-crafted script, I made the decision to let him do what he wanted and we would get creative in post. Since the script was from his point-of-view, I did not feel comfortable correcting him; it was going to be more heartfelt in his own words. The spot was a success – his delivery was smooth and believable. We added lines to my script to compensate for the lost time.

VOICE OVER TIPS:
Take acting and improv classes, stay current with the recording software and technology, watch commercials and listen to what is trending, make friends with other VO talent, vet all VO coaches and demo producers, believe in yourself, and enjoy the ride!

https://networking.studentfilmmakers.com/profile/29926

https://www.lynnedarlington.com

https://www.facebook.com/lynnedarlingtonvoiceovertalent/

https://twitter.com/LynneDarlington

Posted by Jody Michelle Solis, Editor All Posts

Filed Under: Animation, Casting, Documentaries, E-Learning, Female VO, Hire VO Talent, Source Connect VO, spokesperson, Student Filmmakers Community Spotlight, VO, VO Announcer, VO Client, VO Talent, Voiceover Tagged With: cable vo, experienced vo, experienced voiceover talent, female VO, global voiceover talent, hire vo talent, narrator, promos, television vo, VO studio, voice talent, voicegal, voiceover, Voiceover Talent

June 5, 2019 By Lynne Darlington

Female Voiceover Talent Self-Inflict Own Wage Gap – A Client’s Perspective

‘Hi Lynne, I have an upcoming project, can you audition and provide a price quote?  Here are the specs…’  I read a direct invitation email sent from an online voice casting website. The invitation was from Diane Cricchio, President of Timeline Video, a digital and broadcast media production company, whom I had met in a project meeting years before.

Timeline Video was seeking auditions from men and women for a particular TV project.  I booked as the woman and we had our scheduled recording session. After our session, we began to chat and it was clear Diane wanted to share something she learned through the online casting process.

FEMALES ASKED FOR LESS MONEY

She told me that there was quite a discrepancy along gender lines regarding the price quotes she received. The majority of women were quoting $200 and some quoted as low as $50! The men’s average quote was within acceptable industry standard compensation – between $ 500 and $800 for this TV project.  She was in absolute shock with the lowball offers she received from the women vs. the men for the same project.  The national gender wage gap crisis is certainly not late breaking news. It has been an issue for decades, but a self-inflicted wage gap?!?  The women’s average quote was well below market standard and in her words ‘insulting to our gender’.  

IGNORED ‘LOW BALL’ QUOTE AUDITIONS

Diane said was unmotivated to listen  to the lowball auditions because if these women did not value themselves how could she consider hiring them?  She never announced that the lowest offer would get the gig.  The low bidders did not feel like professionals to her.

SELF-SABOTAGING THEMSELVES

The Institute for Women’s Policy Research states “Women are the sole or co-breadwinner in half of American families with children. They receive more college and graduate degrees than men. Yet, on average, women continue to earn considerably less than men. In 2017, female full-time, year-round workers made only 80.5 cents for every dollar earned by men, a gender wage gap of 20 percent.”  I began to wonder – why are women self-sabotaging themselves professionally? 

I asked Diane if I could share her experience and her thoughts.  I felt that hearing a client’s take on low quotes would be valuable information for our VO sisterhood.  She chose to share her experience to help other women.  She said “we women have to support and encourage one another.” 

START WITH RATE GUIDES

I have found the Global Voice Acting Academy’s Rate Guide to be a helpful resource.  It is bookmarked on my computer and I refer to it often. These compensation figures are reasonable starting points for negotiation.

Backstage also has an interesting article written by casting director Kate McClanaghan:  What to Charge as a Voiceover Artist concerning how VO lowballing can present inherent dangers, and why it is a poor idea.

I understand there will always be newbies and those just happy to book, as well as producers with slim budgets, but please, I implore my low balling colleagues, know your worth and how it is perceived!

Filed Under: Animation, Audiobook, Casting, Documentaries, E-Learning, Gender Wage Gap, Medical Narration, Museum Tours, Narration, On Camera Actor, online VO casting, political VO, Promos, Self-inflicted wage gap, spokesperson, VO, VO Announcer, VO Client, Voiceover Tagged With: gender wage gap, lowball quotes, online casting, recording booth, self-inflicted wage gap, VO client

November 16, 2016 By Lynne Darlington

How to Abandon Ship

The How to Abandon Ship exhibit is currently running at our United States Merchant Marine Academy Museum in Kings Point, NY on the north shore of Long Island through March 2017.  It tells the story of the American freighter Robin Moor which was steaming from New York City to Cape Town, South Africa on May 21, 1941.  Before dawn, a Nazi German U-boat stopped the American ship (the US had not yet entered World War II) and gave the crew and passengers a few minutes to launch the ship’s lifeboats.  They then torpedoed and shelled the hapless freighter, leaving four lifeboats with some eight passengers and thirty-eight merchant seamen to fend for themselves in the middle of the ocean.  After fourteen grueling days, the survivors of three lifeboats were taken to Cape Town, South Africa. The fourth lifeboat was picked up after eighteen days and taken to Recife, Brazil.  Remarkably, nobody died in the incident, although one young mariner tragically committed suicide while on his way home.

The Exhibit gets its name from the book, How to Abandon Ship, co-authored by John Banigan, the Robin Moor’s third officer who skillfully navigated his lifeboat almost to the coast of Brazil. The exhibit endeavors to tell this story, both in its historical and human dimensions.  It uses a specially-commissioned ship model, painting and a small book entitled Outrageous and Indefensible to explore these dimensions.  It also uses photographs taken by survivors in the lifeboats, recreated radio broadcasts from 1941, a detailed journal by Berta Cohn of New York City who relates both the good and the bad in her empathetic but honest account of survival at sea.

My Contribution.  I was hired to oversee and voice two audio projects for this exhibit.  Working from the transcription of the 1941 South African radio broadcast of 5 of the survivors, I cast the 5 survivors and a South African radio broadcaster.  Casting VO actor Adam Behr as the South African (his home country) broadcaster, along with myself, I cast VO actors Alan Sklar, Michael Schoen, Tom Dheere and Andy Danish to play the survivors interviewed in the 1941 South African radio broadcast.

Additionally, I had the honor of narrating the often heart wrenching diary of New York City resident and survivor Berta Cohn.  Recounting her thoughts during her experience for this exhibit was powerful. What must it have been like to be adrift at sea in an open boat, with your husband, 18 strangers, no GPS, and meager provisions?  As Berta’s fate remains unknown, she tries to remain positive, keeping hope at arm’s length, and tempers in check.

The USMMA museum is pleased with the projects, thanks to my talented and seasoned cast! I would like to also extend a special thank you to USMMA’s Dr. Joshua Smith and Clayton Harper for their vision, oversight and execution of this captivating exhibit.

Please visit the exhibit before it closes the end of March 2017.

American Merchant Marine Museum
300 Steamboat Road
Kings Point, NY 11024
(516) 726-6047
Free admission and open to the public:
10:00 am - 3:00 pm, Tuesday through Friday and by appointment.

Lynne Darlington
lynnevoiceover@gmail.com
www.lynnedarlington.com

Filed Under: Animation, Casting, Documentaries, E-Learning, Medical Narration, Museum Tours, Narration, On Camera Actor, online VO casting, spokesperson, VO, VO Announcer, VO Client, Voiceover Tagged With: ben cohn, berta cohn, How to Abandon Ship, museum exhibit, museum VO, museum voiceover, SS Robin Moor, USMMA

December 8, 2015 By Lynne Darlington

My Visit with WCBS News Anchor Michael Schoen

My friend Michael Schoen recently invited me into his WCBS 880 newsroom/studio to see firsthand how he anchors WCBS 880 Newsradio. WCBS 880 is a leading news station that we here in the NY metro area rely on to hear weather and traffic ‘on the 8s’ as well as sports and late breaking news. After spending time with Michael on the job, I can certainly tell you how he does it – effortlessly and seamlessly!

He gets to work a couple of hours early and meets with his producer to find out the leading stories of the moment. He then researches the top stories and writes news pieces about them to share LIVE in 2 – 2.5 minute segments. Sometimes these stories have to be abbreviated on the fly because of time constraints. He also reviews his program log sheet to see what ads will be running.

Once on air, Michael commandeers 4 computer screens, 3 mice and a digital audio control console, which many would find most intimidating. News is on one computer screen, commercials are on a separate system and there is a touch screen that controls the news sound. He smoothly transitions to the weather guy (accu-weather at Penn State University), cutting live to the traffic and sports reporter (out of Rutherford, NJ) to his own news and time updates. His updates on the day of my visit went from terrorism, to the weekend movie box office numbers to the financial market and beyond.

On Sundays (a day I visited), he and fellow news anchor Tanya Hansen alternate hourly news coverage from 1 – 9 pm. These two are so relaxed that they enter the studio and assume their anchor chairs sometimes a mere 1.5 minutes before they are on air.

As I drove home that evening, I found myself listening to the remainder of Michael and Tanya’s 880 broadcasts. Thankfully, the traffic piece was not important to me. I pictured how they were conducting their broadcasting symphony with the beautiful view of the Hudson River as their backdrop.

Thank you Michael for your generosity of time and spirit. As a voiceover actor, I was interested in learning how a live program is managed and executed. You made it look so easy, but then again, isn’t that what a professional is supposed to do?

About Michael Schoen
Michael, a college communications major, has been in the news business for over 30 years. He is an experienced broadcast journalist and voiceover actor who has covered some of the most exciting and even dangerous stories of our time. You can learn more about him here: http://newyork.cbslocal.com/personality/michael-schoen/ and here: http://www.michaelschoen.com/

Filed Under: Voiceover Tagged With: commercials, Michael Schoen, news broadcast, news radio, talent booking, voice talent, voicegal, WCBS 880

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Lynne Darlington Voiceover & On Camera Actor

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