Very Voice Actors – Grey DeLisle

Grey seems to attract many meaner, more evil, sassier types of characters. But what’s interesting about Grey is that in real life she couldn’t be more opposite. Full of smiles and laughter, she does her best to make sure people have a fun time around her. She constantly acknowledges that she has a strong desire to win people over.

So where does this darker side that manifests itself so often in Grey’s work come from?

Well, while she’s certainly a charming and pleasant person to be around, she channels much of her humor and conversation through a filter of hilarious sarcasm, sharp truths, and strong self-deprecation. Through interviews, behind-the-scenes looks, and her heavy social media presence, one could easily see where she draws this biting personality and blows it up to fit the characters she plays.

Whether voicing the abusive baby-sitter Vicky in The Fairly Oddparents, the devilish Mandy from The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy, the feisty Kimiko of Xiaolin Showdown, goth girl Sam from Danny Phantom, or the chillingly evil Azula from Avatar the Last Airbender, Grey seems to find common ground with these darker characters by amplifying her own pleasantly twisted senses of humor and life views.

A good amount of her personality could be attributed to her grandmother (89), whom she was largely raised by. Grey apparently takes her grandmother with her on various recording sessions and has seen her repeatedly, (and unintentionally), insult various actors and celebrities. Once when she ran into John Ritter after he’d gained some weight and grown a beard, Grey’s grandmother told him he was barely recognizable and “looked like he was running from the law…but he at least still had a cute face”.

Each of Grey’s characters listed previously, however, are certainly vastly different from one another, even if they do fall under the “darker” description. But like most great voice artists, Grey offers a wide variety of talents as she brings to the table cartoon icons like the kind hearted Frankie from Foster’s Home For Imaginary Friends, the polite Daphne from many iterations of Scooby Doo, energetic characters like Flicker the Flashlight in Handy Manny and Wubbzy from Wow! Wow! Wubbzy, the sweet protagonist girl Emily in Clifford the Big Red Dog, and the regal Padme Amidala from the ’03 Clone Wars series.

These chipper and polite characters actually showcase Grey’s other prominent side of her personality. They branch from her demeanor in which she executes her sense of humor. While telling a dirty joke or whipping out a dry biting statement, she’ll do it with a smile and a laugh to follow.

I bring these two different, (more like opposite), sides of Grey up for a reason. A great lesson can be taken out of this for all voice actors. That lesson is this:

Characters branch from a part of who you are.

It may be a small part or a hugely encompassing side to your identity, but your characters are grounded in some element of your being.

In this way acting is less like trying on different masks and more like taking those masks off to show the world parts of your true self in the manifestation of a character. That is why it is so important for an actor to be active. Watching movies, adapting hobbies, going through the ups and downs life offers…these are all ways to give us more to draw from. The more involved we are in life, the more we have to amplify or reveal in our characters just as Grey has done with her wide expanse of credits.

But widening our identity is only part of the process. We need to develop the ability to draw that applicable part of us out and throw it into a character. That’s where training comes in.

Grey worked her whole life to have this ability. She started acting as a baby in stage productions. Throughout school she became known for her impersonations and eventually garnered the nickname “Dorothy” for her spot on Wizard of Oz impressions. She attended a fine arts high school and went on to obtain a theatre degree in college. She had started stand up in her early teens and incorporated her voices into her routines.

These years of training prepared her to express/exaggerate the elements that made her who she is.

I believe we all have a million characters hidden inside of us. We just need the training (and talent, don’t get me wrong) to be able to bring those characters out.

So which side does Grey sway towards more heavily? It’s probably her friendly bubbly attitude because she states that Azula was the most difficult and challenging character she’s ever played. But you couldn’t tell by her flawless performance that it was in the least bit challenging. Why? The training. The practice. She had Azula in her. The lifelong hard work helped bring her out.

What crazy unique characters are inside you? And how hard are you willing to work to bring them out?

gd_1_voice