Hey everyone,
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Archived from the IMDb Discussion Forums — Gina Bellman
sparx_91 — 17 years ago(November 05, 2008 04:53 PM)
Hey everyone,
I was wondering if anyone knew what her natural accent is? In Couplings, its obviously a british accent of some sort. Then, in her new show (or from what I've seen of the previews), she seems to have an american accent.
Just wondering if anyone knows.
Thanks.
It was a joke! Do you not get the concept of a joke, or sarcasm possibly? -
CCCampedel — 17 years ago(December 23, 2008 10:46 PM)
In tonight's episode of 'Leverage' ("The Miracle Job"), I'm hearing Gina do a bit of her original New Zealand accent. In the other episode I watched, she was doing a southern U.S. accent. She slips pretty easily from one to another.
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sparx_91 — 17 years ago(January 03, 2009 06:44 AM)
Thanks for the answers. I really admire actors/actresses who can change their accents and dialects to fit different characters.
I haven't gotten to see "Leverage" yet, but I'll look for it next time it's on tv.
Thank you again.
It was a joke! Do you not get the concept of a joke, or sarcasm possibly? -
evelinajazz — 17 years ago(February 17, 2009 11:20 AM)
I like the actress, but I think she can't do other accents to save her life. None of the accents on Leverage seems real when she attempts it. It's always british with a bit of trying hard to put something else in there. ((
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scifisam — 12 years ago(June 15, 2013 05:04 PM)
Assuming the person who called it a British accent is American like me, using the term English gets confusing when we all speak it. I know British actually means a larger group than just the people of England, but using British rather than English (referring to accents) adds a bit of clarity to the conversation. (and the only place I've ever heard someone complain about the word switch is on these forums)
I don't know what a div is, and I don't really care, but thought I'd clarify. -
TheLionKingKong — 11 years ago(October 07, 2014 11:57 AM)
Many people don't know that "British" refers to more than one country. The UK is really 4 nations: Scotland, Wales, England, and Northern Ireland.
Whenever somebody says "British" to me, I say, "you mean English?". Then they get confused because they don't know the difference.