Class in the BBC Drama Department
Why are you surprised that Susannah and Figaro had northern accents?
Servants and "common" people are almost always, it seems to me, played by actors with northern accents while their superiors are always played by actors speaking in Received Pronunciation.
Some might counter that they are not all Yorkshire or Lancashire accents but that Scouse, Geordie and Lancashire accents to say nothing of Northern Irish, Brum or Devonian often appear in the similar roles.
But if anyone is required to portray the lowest of the low, listen for a scouser.
I wonder what the pecking order is.
Don
Why are you surprised that Susannah and Figaro had northern accents?
Servants and "common" people are almost always, it seems to me, played by actors with northern accents while their superiors are always played by actors speaking in Received Pronunciation.
Some might counter that they are not all Yorkshire or Lancashire accents but that Scouse, Geordie and Lancashire accents to say nothing of Northern Irish, Brum or Devonian often appear in the similar roles.
But if anyone is required to portray the lowest of the low, listen for a scouser.
I wonder what the pecking order is.
Don
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