Alan Marriott (voice actor)

(Redirected from Alan D. Marriott)

Alan Marriott (born July 19, 1971) is a Canadian voice actor, voice teacher and dialect coach.

Alan Marriott
Born (1971-07-19) July 19, 1971 (age 53)
EducationStudio 58, LAMDA
Occupations
  • Voice Actor
  • Dialect Coach
Years active1982–present

Marriott moved to Vancouver, British Columbia to attend the Studio 58 acting school. He left Studio 58 to join the first season of Salmon Arm Summer Stock Youth Theatre (SASSY) and did two seasons with the company. Marriott spent four years working with the improvisational theatre group Vancouver Theatresports[1] and also played the character of Aldous Bacon in VSL's original production of Suspect (an improvised murder mystery).

Marriott moved to London, England to complete his formal acting training at The London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art (LAMDA).[2] Upon finishing LAMDA Marriott began working in improv once again, starting London Theatresports and creating and playing in numerous different improv formats including Hamlet Improvised, Impro Lear, Impro Lab (London's first 2-act improvised play), The Impro Musical, Lust Boulavarde (an improvised soap opera), and Impropera (a 2-act improvised opera).

Marriott has worked with or taught almost every improvisational theatre group in London including: Grand Theft Impro,[3] Made Up Like Tarts,[4] Scratch, Showstopper, The Comedy Store Players, Dogs on Holiday, Impro Musical, Impropera, Brickbats Volunteers, South of the River (with Steve Frost and Jeremy Hardy) and, his own current impro troupe, The Crunchy Frog Collective.

Currently he helps form and trains an impro troupe in Vancouver BC titled 3rd and Main and occasionally hosts their weekly shows at School Creative every Saturday at 8:00 pm.

Marriott has also done extensive voice acting work for radio and TV both animation and documentaries, including the first season of Mighty Machines, as various characters, Mr. Fothergill, Travis, Spud (regular series only) and Scoop in the US dub on Bob the Builder and Glar on Planet 51. He also voiced Victor Volt in The Secret Show, and the characters Cowboy and Indian in A Town Called Panic.

He is the author of Genius Now!.[2]

He also wrote one episode of Wolves, Witches and Giants and Animal Stories (in which he narrated the American dubbed version for The Disney Channel), several comedy sketches for CBC and a short film called Teeth and worked as a voice director for the BKN Classic Series trilogy where he directed the voices for all six of their films including Alice in Wonderland: What's the Matter with Hatter?, The Jungle Book: Rikki-Tikki-Tavi to the Rescue, Robin Hood: Quest for the King, The Three Musketeers: Saving the Crown, The Prince and the Pauper: Double Trouble and A Christmas Carol.

Marriott also had onscreen appearances on several British television series including Wake Up in the Wild Room, The Bootleg Broadway Show, The All New Alexei Sayle Show, Ghost Train, Jo Brand Through the Cakehole and the TV movie Now What.

After twenty years living and working in London, England, Marriott relocated to Vancouver in 2008 but returned to the UK in 2017, currently residing in London[5] and now makes his home in North Vancouver, British Columbia. He is the driving force behind ImprovMusical,[6] a one-hour improvised musical based on a single audience suggestion which premiered in July 2010 and is currently[when?] playing at Vancouver Theatresports.[7][8]

In 2016, Marriott recently voiced the characters Buried Lede and Mr. Stripes in the season six My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic episode "The Saddle Row Review".

Selected filmography

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Sammy suitcase “At the Airport” Ernie the dump truck “At the Quarry” Lil’ Mack “In the City” Murphy the police boat “At the Harbor” Big Cat The Power Shovel “At the Construction Site” Red “At the Race Track” Mack Truck “At the Demolition Site” Freddie “At the Train Yard” Sparky the fire hydrant “At the Fire Hall” Big Mack “On The Road” Pee Wee “At the Garbage Dump” Andy “At the Cement Yard”

References

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  1. ^ "Improviser of the month December 2008". imprology.com. Archived from the original on 2012-03-01. Retrieved 2012-08-02.
  2. ^ a b About the Author - Genius Now
  3. ^ Grand Theft Impro Homepage
  4. ^ Made Up Like Tarts Group History[dead link]
  5. ^ Crunch Frog Webpage Archived October 1, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Georgia Straight revue of ImprovMusical
  7. ^ Theatresports homepage - Improv Musical Archived 2010-08-30 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Insider Vancouver Blog Review
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