I know an American woman who married a Brit and moved to England. Their son was born and raised in England, so he has a British accent, although his mother has an American accent. Even in my own case, my mother has a Greek accent, but I have an American accent.Boy, that accent was so dumb, especially in the light of her mum speaking like a regular American.
There is no reason to believe that there are not different accents on Betazed (just like on Earth), so it certainly is possible for Deanna to have a different Betazoid accent as her mother.
My point was that there was no need for that fake whatever she spoke in. It didn't serve any purpose. It neither served the plot, not developed the character in any way - not to mention the fact that no other actor playing a Betazoid did this. She might as well have not bothered.
not wanting her to have a English accent, because Patrick Stewart already had one, and they didn't want two chracters with English accents.
everyone gets to keep their natural accents and no-one sounds needlessly ridiculous.
not wanting her to have a English accent, because Patrick Stewart already had one, and they didn't want two chracters with English accents.
But they don't even have the SAME English accent.![]()
Yea, many folks I know hear an Australian or Kiwi Accent and call it Britishnot wanting her to have a English accent, because Patrick Stewart already had one, and they didn't want two chracters with English accents.
But they don't even have the SAME English accent.![]()
It was 1987 American TV. Perhaps ( or perhaps not) Americans were savvy enough not to care about two British accents on the same TV show, no matter how different they were...
...but American TV studio executives probably felt Americans TV viewers were not savvy enough. They may or may not have underestimated the American TV audience, but the point is that they thought Americans wanted a mostly American-sounding cast -- i.e., they felt that Americans would see one Brit accent is charming and sophisticated. However, two characters with accents may make those Americans think it's partly a British TV production, such as, for example, Space: 1999 -- and they probably didn't want that.
Besides, the fact Sirtis and Stewart have different British accents is irrelevant in this case. If two american characters were on British TV, and one had a slight New York City accent, and one had a slight Southern accent, most British TV viewers would say they both were Americans with American accents. They may be able to hear a difference between the two accents, but they would both simply be "American". Stewart and Sirtis (in her natural non-star trek acting voice) do have different accents, but they both sound "British".
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Cumby: No! You can't have two English accents on the bridge at once!
Spock: Lies! Let Marina use her real voice!
The point was that I disagree with TPTB making her invent something rather than having her simply speak more clearly for the Yanks.
It would be inappropriate for her to be on the Bridge talking about feeling the Captain all the time if she wasn't an EmpathThe point was that I disagree with TPTB making her invent something rather than having her simply speak more clearly for the Yanks.
Then why make her a half Betazoid?
The Rice Picker joke wouldn't make sense if he had round earsWhy put pointed ears on Spock?
Good for a couple of chuckles, at the very least.New article where Benedict mentions ST. Nothing earth shattering but in case it's of any interest... http://www.shortlist.com/entertainment/tv/benedict-cumberbatch
Benedict Cumberbatch said:Yep, it’s yet another thing I can’t talk about [laughs]. I’ll tell you this, it’s iconic and it’s exciting. I’m bored of denying that it’s Khan now, because people keep saying it.
Benedict Cumberbatch said:I’m bored of denying that it’s Khan now, because people keep saying it.
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