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I'm auditioning for Look Homeward, Angel from the book by Thomas Wolfe. It takes place in North Carolina in 1916. I need to know if people in North Carolina have southern accents. Or what kind of accents would they have?

2007-01-11 12:41:06 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Theater & Acting

6 answers

Watch some old "Andy Griffith" shows. They was from Mayberry, Nawth Carolina, they was.

2007-01-11 12:48:56 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

RE:
Do people in North Carolina have southern accents?
I'm auditioning for Look Homeward, Angel from the book by Thomas Wolfe. It takes place in North Carolina in 1916. I need to know if people in North Carolina have southern accents. Or what kind of accents would they have?

2015-08-04 17:03:35 · answer #2 · answered by Brennen 1 · 0 0

In 1916 North Carolinians had the epitome of southern accents (especially in T. Wolfe's mindset). Today, you're very likely to run across a more NJ or NY accent in Charlotte and Raleigh. If you move towards the mountains, you can vary from true south (Alabama or Mississippi) to Hollywood accents. You also still had a fair amount of immigrants from Scotland or Ireland in the early 1900s, so it would not be unusual to hear about the 'fookin anglish' (i.e. the English folk who raped and pilaged the islanders for a couple centruies).

2007-01-11 16:44:11 · answer #3 · answered by frank m 2 · 1 0

For those who don't live here, there are about 86 different and distinctive varieties of southern accent and speech patterns, all regionalized. If you try to sound like Vivian Leigh's Scarlet O'Hara in "Gone With The Wind" you will be wrong, wrong, wrong.

But for a play in some other part of the country, go ahead and have fun with whatever accent you can muster. The audience won't know the difference.

2007-01-11 12:56:30 · answer #4 · answered by John H 6 · 2 0

people north carolina southern accents

2016-01-25 04:04:37 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Yes, our accent isn't what you would call hillbilly-ish. It's Southern, but just like someone said above, it's more of soft drawl. You won't hit deep Southern accent until you get to Louisiana or a redneck accent until....somewhere in the mountains, I think? Somewhere around there I think I heard it was.

2014-05-30 09:15:28 · answer #6 · answered by ? 2 · 0 0

a North Carolina accent.

2007-01-11 12:44:55 · answer #7 · answered by Sophist 7 · 2 2

As a native North Carolinian, we all have Southern accents. In the earlier 20th century, it was a soft draw - not a hard hillbilly. :)

2007-01-15 10:49:36 · answer #8 · answered by Anna Mommee 2 · 0 0

That area of North Carolina has a strong accent. Think long "i" in words such and "nice" "price". Most of the words are pronounced lazily with little articulation.

2007-01-14 11:32:46 · answer #9 · answered by Abby Road 3 · 1 0

yes they do and you can tell by accent

2007-01-15 05:39:24 · answer #10 · answered by babykatdream099 5 · 0 0

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