By Connie Terwilliger
Being able to breathe naturally and deeply gives you endurance for long copy reads – and calm when you feel the creep of anxiety entering your voice. These exercises will help.
1. Inhale slowly and deeply through the nose. Exhale slowly through the mouth. Repeat.
2. Inhale slowly and deeply through the nose. Exhale slowly, making the sound “ahhhhh.” Use your diaphragm.
3. Inhale deeply. Exhale in short, explosive bursts (huh! huh! huh! huh!)
4. Inhale slowly and count aloud, clearly enunciating each number until you run out of breath. This is also a good warm-up for articulation exercises.
5. Read the following sentence as many times as you can on one breath. This sentence is filled with words that use air:
He hid at home and sobbed when his sister seized whatever he had on top in the thin five-shelved closet.
6. Take a deep breath and see how far you can read through this grouping of words. Make each word come alive as you say it. Don't just race through – interpret!
collecting and projecting, and
receding and speeding, and
shocking and rocking, and
darting and parting, and
treading and spreading, and
whizzing and hissing, and
dripping and skipping, and
hitting and splitting, and
shining and twining, and
rattling and battling, and
shaking and quaking, and
pouring and roaring, and
waving and raving, and
flowing and going, and
heaving and cleaving, and
foaming and roaming, and
moaning and groaning, and
dropping and hopping.
Well, how did you do? Keep practicing these exercises. You'll improve over time, and greatly enhance your voice-over abilities.
Connie Terwilliger is a veteran voice-over talent, coach, spokesperson and actor based in San Diego. She is also a producer/writer, and teaches a college-level course on voice-overs in San Diego.
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