Paul Meier is a leading dialect coach for theatre and films. This is his best-selling stage-dialects manual for actors. With 350 pages and 12 accompanying CDs, this teaches the Afrikaans (South Africa), American Deep South (Mississippi/Georgia/Alabama), American Southern (Kentucky/Tennessee), Australian, Cockney, "Downeast" New England, French, General American, German, Hampshire, Indian, Irish, Italian, Liverpool, New York, Northern Ireland, Russian, Scottish, South Boston, Spanish (Castilian & Colonial "Spanishes"), Standard British English (Received Pronunciation), Welsh, Yiddish, and Yorkshire. Coaching many famous actors (Tobey Maguire, Tom Wilkinson, Jonathan Rhys-Meyers, etc.), Meier has also taught dialects at RADA, LAMDA, Webber-Douglas, the North Carolina School of the Arts, and other famous schools. In addition to his easy-to-follow practice material, for each dialect Paul coaches you in two monologues (one male and one female) from a well-known play or film, and links you to the hundreds of online recordings of native dialect speakers on his International Dialects of English Archive (IDEA). Further enhancing the value of the book are his interactive IPA phonetics charts, unique "show-specific" dialect CDs for hundreds of plays and musicals, custom CD-recording, and phone-coaching services. Easy enough for the beginner, rigorous enough for the experienced professional.
Paul Meier is a dialect coach for theatre and film; a voice-over artist with many commercials and audio books to his credit; and a theatre professor specializing in voice, speech, accents and dialects, and heightened text. Paul also works with clients on accent reduction. This has been his calling for over 35 years, in his native London, in the United States where he is now based, and all over the world.
Using this for a play that I'm dialect coaching and have found that after using a different text for 4 years for the dialects class I teach, that I would like to use this one! It is modern, it teaches the dialects in 7 easy to understand steps, and it utilizes IPA, which , I feel is imperative for any actor to learn!
This is not the sort of book one ever finishes reading, because one is always picking it up again for consultation and further practice. If your vocation requires you to use your voice, you should be learning from this book. It is an indispensable part of my own training and pursuit of improving my voice and use of accents for my podcast and my future plans to narrate my own audio books.
It wasn’t in depth as the last book I read on accents and doesn’t break down the technicalities.
It was only 28 pages in total which is nowhere near enough to break down the process of learning an accent (in this case, General American). Quite a few of the pages were of the author selling his products/services.
It does have an accompany CD which was quite good, it included a few tracks such as the kit list, certain sounds, and a couple of monologues.
If you wanted to learn about accents, I would suggest getting ‘How to do Accents’ by Edda Sharpe & Jan Haydn Rowles