The thing that strikes me about a lot of British actors is how much their speech patterns resemble each other -- not just the accent, but the cadence and delivery, the rhythms and intonations and pitch changes as they speak. It's like they're doing impressions of each other -- or all doing impressions of the same person. Sir Patrick Stewart and Michael York, for example, have astonishingly similar deliveries. I've often wondered if there's some specialized training for British stage actors that drills them into a particular way of speaking and delivering lines, even beyond just mastering Received Pronunciation.
Or maybe it just says that her show airs on a major network at 9 p.m. EST in the U.S.That said, swearing isn't really class specific, but the fact that she'd use a polite euphemism rather than something more blunt, says she's more used to polite company even under duress. That to me says Grammar School or Nuns with wooden rulers. Or both.
Or maybe it just says that her show airs on a major network at 9 p.m. EST in the U.S.That said, swearing isn't really class specific, but the fact that she'd use a polite euphemism rather than something more blunt, says she's more used to polite company even under duress. That to me says Grammar School or Nuns with wooden rulers. Or both.![]()
All this talk of accents reminds me of something I noticed a year or two back. Whenever British or Australian actors use an American accent, their voices are almost always deeper than when they use their normal accents. Apparently there's something about American accents that causes you to use a deeper voice.
Seriously, though, it did come off as being something of an "accent-slipping" moment as I recall.
Uh, Peggy is not upper class. Her accent and what I recall of her background is that of a decidedly middle class grammar school girl.
Accents don't deterime the classes, the Manchester born Michael Caine raised himself to high class status. Really outside of a dead grandmother we know very little about Carter's family. Since she as an officer during the war it's fairly certainly to guess that her family has connections.
Clearly, you have no idea what you're talking about mate.
I know this may be difficult for a non-Brit to grasp, but Michael Caine is working class. The bank balance, the fame, even the knighthood, none of it can change that. It's not about where you are, it's about where you're from. It's not about how much money you have, it's about how much money your ancestors had. It's heritage and it's cultural. You can up or downgrade you standing in society, but it doesn't change your class.
In Britain in the 1940's, '50's and even into the 60's, your accent said everything about you. It said where you're from, what your background is and whether you were born into poverty, comfortably well off or with a silver spoon in every available orifice.
An accent can be a badge of pride or a mark of shame depending on which circles one aspired to. People would (and still do in some cases) try to suppress their accent if they don't want to let on they're from poverty. All those snooty English butlers you see in movie and TV? Most of them are put on. For the knobs, it's not the done thing to have a servant with a common accent in front of guests. Remember how Parker in Thunderbirds would have the snooty accent when addressing Lady Penelope, but would slip into cockney the second he spoke to one of his old mates? True to life, believe it or not.
To give you an idea on the level of stigma that could be attached to it; Until the late 60's/early 70's you'd almost never expect to hear a regional accent on TV or radio outside of a broad caricature.
As for her Rank: that's something she would have earned through her education and proven aptitude. The most educated woman in those days (and mostly these days too if I'm honest) are middle class woman. Working class women generally had to work young and couldn't afford to go to school and the upper class for the most part didn't bother because they didn't have to.
For further reading on the British class system, I refer you to The Two Ronnies.
Whatever background they decide to make up for Peggy after the fact, Hayley Atwell is quite clearly playing her as a very middle class, grammar school girl.
And yes, Jarvis is almost certainly middle class too.
I often watch all the alien invasions on Doctor Who and wonder if the alien intel that they use to decide where to invade Earth is actually decades or centuries out of date.
Someone could try asking Haley Atwell what her intention is on Twitter. She replies to fans a lot.
Of course, since the sixties any British accent at all means that you come from a country whose world empire has faded and has yet to come to terms with its growing insignificance to the global community.
I often watch all the alien invasions on Doctor Who and wonder if the alien intel that they use to decide where to invade Earth is actually decades or centuries out of date.
I often watch all the alien invasions on Doctor Who and wonder if the alien intel that they use to decide where to invade Earth is actually decades or centuries out of date.
In the Doctor Who universe, Britain is still a globally important nation, having its own active space program in the '70s (or whenever the UNIT era happened) and pioneering many breakthrough technological advances. Perhaps partly because the Doctor has always hung around there so often, having more influence than he realized. Or maybe the Cardiff Rift was a factor in drawing alien interest to the British Isles, which became self-reinforcing as more and more aliens had more and more effect on the history of the region, left their artifacts lying around, etc.
(Also, in the Who universe, the President of the United States is called "the President of America." That one kind of annoys me.)
Someone could try asking Haley Atwell what her intention is on Twitter. She replies to fans a lot.
She also famously tweeted "Peggy loves Angie" on there so she likes to give random/weird answers to things as well. Not sure how accurate they're going to be.![]()
Niether Russia nor Great Britain are continents though.
And Coleman as the president-elect made no sense for that matter.
And Marvel hasn't set everything in New York for decades.
Niether Russia nor Great Britain are continents though.
Yeah, well, the inhabitants of the United States have long since laid claim to the use of the word "America" to describe their country, and we got dibs on it because we were the first people in North or South America to declare independence. Americans are not about to start calling themselves something else, and they're not about to start referring to their country as something other than America (except when they use "United States" or related terms).
And Coleman as the president-elect made no sense for that matter.
No, it didn't. I think Russell T. Davies just heard the phrase and didn't understand that it meant "person who has been elected president but who has not yet taken office." But it's what Winters calls himself, so I tried to find a scenario to justify it. A popular president-elect deciding to use his informal political power to persuade/strong-arm an outgoing (and likely very unpopular) president into letting him represent the U.S. at First Contact seemed the best explanation.
Alternately, you can just go with, "He was President and ignore the 'elect' part."
(RTD's script for "The End of Time, Part One" also indicates that he was under the impression that the U.S. President is protected by the FBI rather than the U.S. Secret Service.)
And Marvel hasn't set everything in New York for decades.
This is pedantic. "Everything Happens in [Wherever]" is a trope that describes a tendency to set works of fiction in a particular location familiar to audiences and/or artists at a disproportionate rate. It doesn't have to be universal for its point to be valid.
And between Spider-Man, the Fantastic Four, Daredevil, Dr. Strange, the Avengers, Luke Cage, Jessica Jones, and all their related characters, it's pretty clear that Marvel is still very NYC-centric.
Also, it's the actual name of the country: United States of America. So it can be shortened to United States, the States, America, USA or US.Niether Russia nor Great Britain are continents though.
Yeah, well, the inhabitants of the United States have long since laid claim to the use of the word "America" to describe their country, and we got dibs on it because we were the first people in North or South America to declare independence.
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