If You Were Also Confused By Amanda Seyfrieds Unusual Voice In “The Dropout,” This Is Why She Sounds That Way – BuzzFeed

Her voice is giving tech bro chic.

If you just finished binge-watching Inventing Anna and are now jumping headfirst into the The Dropout — the next con artist retelling — then I bet you have a couple thoughts:


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Hulu’s The Dropout is based on the true story of Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes. Elizabeth dropped out of Stanford when she was only 19 to found Theranos — a biotech company that claimed to be able to run rapid blood tests using only small samples of blood. Elizabeth was convicted in 2018 on four counts of fraud.

Watching the show, your first thought was probably: dang, Elizabeth Holmes sure did have tunnel vision for wanting to be a billionaire.


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And second — why did she talk like that?


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There’s no explanation for the first one, (she is who she is), but for the second one — it was most likely a choice. And a choice it was.

The former Theranos CEO — who was convicted in 2018 of four counts of fraud for wrongly convincing investors that she had invented a device that only required small blood samples to run tests — is known for her extremely baratone voice.


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Elizabeth has never confirmed or denied the rumors that she purposefully lowered her voice to sound more authoritative in leadership settings, but it is the wildly held belief.


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On the show, Amanda Seyfried changes her natural voice and adopts a slightly lower, huskier register, in an attempt to imitate Elizabeth. Amanda said she knew nailing the voice was a huge part of the role.


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“People are always talking about the voice,” she told the Los Angeles Times. It’s the first thing people mentioned. Second is the turtleneck; third is the non-blinking. But the voice is number one. The voice is the foundation. If you don’t [get it right], it’s like you’re missing the whole thing.”


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Amanda spent almost two years of research to master Elizabeth’s particular way of speaking. “I went full force into finding out everything I could. There was this huge [encyclopedia], that’s still actually on my desktop, of all the information that had been collected over the two years of research during the development phase of The Dropout.”


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“The thing that really helped with the voice and how that evolved for me was the deposition, because it was so many hours, and I could just play it on loop.”


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“I had them all on my desktop, little thumbnails. And I’d be sitting at my desk — at that time, my son was really, really young and he wasn’t mobile yet so it was a lot easier when my daughter was at school to just crochet and listen, or to just write things down.”


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“I felt like I was really doing homework, I was really studying,” she added. “I was most excited about that, than any homework I ever had to do.”


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Amanda spent so much time speaking like Elizabeth Holmes that her throat literally got sore because of it (which makes me wonder if the real Elizabeth frequently had a sore throat).


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“I would be talking like Elizabeth and [my throat would] get a little sore,” Seyfried says. “And I’d be like: this can’t happen. Like, this is freaking me out. Am I going to be able to do this for weeks?”

Amanda said she still sometimes finds herself slipping back into Elizabeth’s voice. “I still sometimes talk like her,” she added. “It’s hard to shake.”