pictures contact
 
  BookExpo Dialect Proposal Classes Biography
  

Eliza Jane Schneider has taught and recorded dialects all over England, Ireland, Scotland, Australia, both Islands of New Zealand, all 50 United States, South Africa, the West Indies, Russia, Israel, and France, to name a few. For five years, she voiced 8 Series Regular characters and hundreds of additional voices for Comedy Central’s hit animated series “South Park.” Her critically acclaimed one-woman, 34 character show, “Freedom of Speech,” won the “Best Solo Show” award at the New York International Fringe Festival, then ran Off-Broadway at P.S. 122, and was ultimately moved to The Public Theater. The popular show continues to tour, selling out venues from CitiStage Symphony Hall in Massachusetts to The Washington Center for the Performing Arts. Recently profiled for her dialect research and character acting on the International BRAVO! Network’s “Arts & Minds” program, alongside “Sting,” Eliza Jane Schneider has created multiple dialect characters for MTV’s animated series, “3 South”, NBC’s “King of the Hill,” Cartoon Network’s “Squirrel Boy,” the Mel Gibson film, “What Women Want,” and PIXAR’s smash feature, “Finding Nemo.” On camera, Eliza Jane recurred on UPN’s “Girlfriends” as a white girl, surprisingly fluent in “Ebonics”. She also recurred as a Russian on NBC’s “Spy TV,” and is known in over 60 countries as series regular “Liza,” on CBS’ “Beakman’s World.”

Founder of the “Eliza Doolittle Dialects” school, Ms. Schneider has been coaching actors for dialect roles in film and television in Hollywood since 1992. She taught dialects at Brown University, Trinity Rep, The O’Neill Theater Center, The Learning Tree University, and Dolores Diehl’s Voice-Over Academy. She has also been the primary research partner and protégé to Robert Easton, “The Henry Higgins of Hollywood”, since 1997, when clients Robin Williams and Helen Hunt each won Oscars for their roles in “Good Will Hunting” and “As Good as It Gets,” respectively. In 2007, client Forest Whitaker won every award there was for the Ugandan role of Idi Amin in “The Last King of Scotland.” As “Higgins and Doolittle.” Easton and Schneider are currently co-authoring a master work on dialects and accents, entitled “How To Talk the Talk: A Five-Volume Encyclopedic Textbook of the Dialects of Spoken English with Accompanying Digital Recordings.”

Fascinated by sound all her life, at age 7, Eliza Jane was recognized as a violin virtuoso, studying the Suzuki ear-training method at the Eastman School of Music, where she also studied classical voice. By age twelve, she had gotten her Equity card playing an English role in “A Christmas Carol” and an American Southern role in “Inherit the Wind.” She has since performed in dozens of plays, including the title roles in Antigone and Agnes of God (for which, at age 17, she won Rochester, New York’s “Dionysus Award” for “Outstanding Performance”). Schneider studied dialects and acting at Northwestern University and UCLA, where she graduated with a BFA from the World Arts and Cultures Department in Theater. She wrote her senior thesis on American regional dialects, and then participated in the Dialect 2000 conference at Queens University Belfast. Some of her recordings were used in the creation of the book resulting from that conference, Language Links: The Languages of Scotland and Ireland. She was then an invited guest at the joint meeting of the Northern English Dialect Societies in Yorkshire. Eliza Jane Schneider continues to traverse the globe. She has digitally recorded over 7000 interviews with native speakers of variant forms of English throughout the world, and is one of the top dialect coaches, voice actresses, and fiddle players in Hollywood. For info on Schneider’s playwrighting and music credits, visit www.elizajane.com.

Schneider is a New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) sponsored playwright who has developed her plays with dramaturges at the prestigious O’Neill Theater Center in New London, Connecticut, for the past two years.

In 2007, her play, “Sounds of Silence: A Documentary Puppet Musical Farce about the 2004 Election in Ohio,” was developed and performed at “WordBridge” playwright’s conference with a cast of 11 at Clemson University in South Carolina.

Her solo play, “USA 911” was critically acclaimed all the way from Madison Wisconsin to Kilkenny, Ireland, and won her inclusion in the California Arts Council’s Touring Artist’s Roster.

Her first solo play, “Road Trip” won her a Drama-Logue Critic’s Award for Outstanding Performance.

In 2000, “Blue Girl,” her science fiction rock opera about the return of the goddess, won the LA Weekly’s “Best of LA” award, and in that same year, she also starred in “Blue Girl” at the Mogodor Opera House in Paris, France as part of the 2000 Millennial New Year’s celebration, with former cast members from the Cirque Du Soleil.

Discography

  • GYPSY GRASS: to be released in 2009
  • Sounds of Silence: A Documentary Puppet Musical Farce about the 2004 Elections in Ohio
  • How to Talk the Talk: A Five-Volume Encyclopedic Textbook of the Dialects of Spoken English with Accompanying Digital Recordings
  • If Women Ran the World: a Collaboration with Shenkar and Robin DiMaggio inspired by Amma
  • Words of the Prophets: A Multi-Media Solo Performance on What it Means to be “Homeless”

    “Eliza Jane Schneider embodies a unique and extremely valuable combination of Voice and Dialect skills not found in any other teacher or performer in her field.  She is a formally trained and internationally recognized for her collection and research of English dialects throughout the world.  She is also a highly effective teacher of voices and dialects whose work has contributed to several iconic Oscar winning performances.  Finally, and perhaps most important, she is a successful working voice actress. Her contributions to several blockbuster movies and television shows are a measure of the value of her work as a performer and the quality of what she also teaches others.  In short, she possesses the unparalleled knowledge of what to teach, how to teach and how to apply what was learned so her students can land and succeed in real life top-tier working situations.”
    -Joel Tepp, Teacher

    “Fortunately, Eliza not only has a marvelous ear, she can hear all kinds of subtleties of dialects, and we talk about them, and we write them down and compare notes on it, she’s also as obsessed with the subject as I am. It’s rare to find somebody who is obsessed with dialects as, in fact, I am. So it’s been a joy to work with her. She’s very very bright. She has practically a photographic memory… I think she’s a genius.”
    -Robert Easton, Dialect Coach
    “The Henry Higgins of Hollywood”