Octavius escribió:
I have listened to Queen Mary's voice and I too detect the faintest German tones.
Which is really Octavius' über-diplomatic way of saying, "I don't really hear said tones, but let me humour her ideas".
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However, both King and Queen record their voices in an artificial "speech" style -standard for public addresses at the time- which may hide some aspects of her true accent or highlight others.
That's actually a very salient point, Octavius. You can tell the Queen, especially, is not used to speaking into a mic. She's
forcing herself to sound proper, strangely enough. By that time, the King had recorded various broadcasts for the BBC, since the early 20s. His voice, in fact, was found to be perfect for the young medium of radio. The tone is honeyed without being saccharine.
(I've listened to almost all the extanct recordings of his broadcasts. One day I'll tell you how I practically locked myself up in the Beeb's archives for three days)
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I would love to hear a recording of Queen Victoria Eugenia speaking in Spanish as I have the feeling she would not sound foreign at all.
I trust your instincts, of course, but I would find it odd that she hadn't had a heavy "British" accent when speaking a language which took her (I read) over four years to actually speak. Apparently, Queen Ena understood Spanish around her, from servants and courtiers, almost immediately though.
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What do you think of Prince William and Prince Harry's accents? The so-called Estuary English. I read that when they appeared on TV in the US they had to be subtitled!
Nah, that's has got to be an urban legend. The only time I remember them being interviewed
ensemble, which made it to US news airwaves, was during the lead-up to their late mother's 10th anniversary memorial. They seemed very loose and fresh, as ever.
As for the dreaded EE
and the princes, I also think not. They speak the
modern-version of the public schoolboy accent. It is not as refined as their grandfather's version, but it is still discernibly upper-class.
When I think of Estuary English, which has almost done away with regional accents in the younger generation (in the south), I think of John Major............
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Finally, to bring it back to royalty a little, a picture of the first cinematic Eliza Doolittle, Wendy Hiller, playing Princess Dragomiroff in the 1974 film "Murder on the Orient Express".
Oh my God, Octavius. You have impeccable taste! I adore Wendy Hiller in
Orient Express. I remember telling my grandmother when I was a kid (in the 80s), that Wendy Hiller's performance would be a pitch-perfect Queen Mary, Mary Stuart widow's peak and all, when she startled me by saying that Dame Wendy had INDEED already acted the role of the Queen.
It was a play called
Crown Matrimonial by Royce Ryton, which was a West End smash hit in the 70s! You probably already knew that, though.
Here she is, in all her glory as Queen Mary. I want a Time Machine!