Mar 18, 2025
Anne Ganguzza (00:05.233)
Hey everyone, welcome to the VO Boss podcast. I'm your host, Anne
Ganguzza, and today I am so excited to be with very special guest,
Luanne Regis. Luanne is a veteran voiceover agent and talent agency
executive with over 30 years of experience. Her career spans
everything voiceover, all voiceover, including...
heading up scale departments at two LA boutique agencies, running the celebrity division at a top bi-coastal theatrical and commercial agency, as well as launching her own Chicago voiceover department in 2007. After a year at Sound and Fury Casting, she now owns and operates her own talent representation agency, Regal V.O. Luanne, thank you so much for joining me today.
Luanne Regis (00:57.621)
and thank you for having me, Anne.
Anne Ganguzza (00:59.929)
I love this. So I had such a wonderful time meeting you like
fleetingly at MAVO and was so excited to get the chance to talk to
you and work with you as well. You're gonna be coming up soon as a
guest director for me on my VO Peeps group. So I'm very excited
about that. And so for bosses that don't know who you are, give us
a brief, kind of a brief.
Luanne Regis (01:06.115)
Yes.
Luanne Regis (01:16.777)
I can't wait.
Anne Ganguzza (01:26.981)
bio of you more than what I've given in regards to your evolution
through the years as a talent agent and representative.
Luanne Regis (01:37.067)
Sure, of course. So I'll try to be brief because it is quite a long
speech. And you know, voiceover, just, people ask you, how do you
get into voiceover? And I'm like, I sort of really just fell into
it, which I did. You know, back in the mid nineties, I answered an
ad, they were looking for a voiceover assistant, an agent, and one
of the partners at a boutique agency was looking for an assistant.
And I thought, this is great. Let me just try this. And I quickly
liked it. I liked the fact that
Anne Ganguzza (01:41.124)
Ha ha ha ha!
Luanne Regis (02:04.703)
The voice can really be anything. It has nothing to do with your
aesthetic, what you look like, how tall you are, what color your
hair is. I loved that. That to me was a very creative aspect for
VoiceOver. And I started there and quickly became an agent, a scale
agent, and was there for about five years. I have seen the business
really, really grow and change to...
And right around the early 2001s when all of the theatrical agencies were getting into voiceover because they poo-pooed and they snubbed their noses at voiceover for so very long, a major theatrical agency wanted to have a voiceover department. And so they plucked our entire department from the boutique agency, which was Special Artists, which is where I worked since the mid-90s. And we took our entire business, SpongeBob and all, and set up shop at Innovative Artists, which was the
Anne Ganguzza (02:56.229)
Mm-hmm.
Luanne Regis (02:58.751)
Bicoastal theatrical agency that I was at for 16 years, including
what you mentioned in my bio, starting a Chicago voiceover
department for them in 2007, just after the birth of my daughter.
So I was there for 16 years and you wake up one day and you have
800 clients because you represent not only, we came with not only
our voiceover department intact with all of our amazing clients,
but we also were there to represent.
Anne Ganguzza (03:00.314)
Yes.
Luanne Regis (03:26.591)
their clients and they have a really healthy roster, a very well
known TV and film actors. And that's where I began doing celebrity
and overscale voiceover and really enjoyed it. But you know, like I
said, you wake up one day and you have 800 clients and that's a lot
to manage, especially in the way in which I agent. I was taught
voiceover agenting by one of the best, she's a mentor, Marsha
Hurwitz. you know, it's...
Anne Ganguzza (03:29.735)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (03:43.441)
Yeah.
Luanne Regis (03:52.321)
All hands on, it's more like a manager. It's not just submit an
audition and whatever happens happens. It's you pitch, you sell,
you call producers. We don't do that anymore because the business
has changed. But you're on the phone, you're calling producers,
you're selling people, you're saying, I think you should really
listen to Nancy Smith. She's really good on this read. That's the
way I voice over agent and it's really impossible to do that with
800 people.
Anne Ganguzza (03:55.589)
Yeah.
Luanne Regis (04:20.641)
800 clients on your roster. So I went back to my small boutique
agency, Roots TGMD Talent, which is formerly Tishman Agency. the
owner, Kevin Motley, who's a dear friend of mine, had recently sort
of reshaped his agency, gutted all of the promo and trailer
announcer type guys, which was an avenue in which advertisers
weren't going down anymore. And we built a really great roster of
actors, well-known actors.
Anne Ganguzza (04:28.993)
Yep.
Luanne Regis (04:50.761)
working actors, which is all I know. I know about actors in
voiceover as opposed to voice actors. And was there for four years
doing that until the pandemic. And then after the pandemic, I
thought, you know what, I want to try my hand on the buyer's side.
I always wanted to try my hand at being on the other side of the
business, not just rapping. And so I worked at Sound and Fury,
which is one of the, if not the top voice casting companies in the
entire country, if not the world.
Anne Ganguzza (05:14.928)
Mm.
Luanne Regis (05:18.941)
And you know, really enjoyed my time with that team. They're like a
family to me. And I missed representing talent and agenting. And so
after a year, I decided to go back to it, but do it on my own. And
believe it or not, I kept a lot of clients with me even as I left
the agenting side and went over to the casting side because I have
a a really lovely roster of
very loyal talent. Some of them I've had since I started in the mid 90s and you know they were very sad to see me leave the agenting side. So they sort of held on to me even while I was on the casting side and once I decided to jump back they were like well we're still here for the ride let's go and that's how I sort of built my roster, my independent roster I should say and again it just they just come at me. I have agents and managers and
Anne Ganguzza (05:56.687)
Mm-hmm.
Luanne Regis (06:13.909)
theatrical agents and commercial agents just wanting to work with
me and they throw all their clients my way and I don't refuse them
because I love to
Anne Ganguzza (06:21.827)
love that, I love that. You know, it's interesting because, you
know, as we're talking, you're kind of going back and forth between
casting and agent and manager. And, you know, for the benefit of
our boss listeners, what is your definition of the difference
between the responsibilities of each? Because I think it's
important for us as voice actors to know when we're trying to
develop relationships, you know, to understand.
what is encompassed in your job because that makes us able to communicate with you easier and help you, because I really believe it's a partnership no matter what you're really looking for. And so I think it will help us as voice actors to work with agents or casting directors better.
Luanne Regis (06:57.664)
It is.
Luanne Regis (07:06.443)
Well, the reason why, and that's a great question, and the reason
why the transition from agent to casting director back to agent was
such a seamless one is because a lot of what my job entails as a
voiceover agent is casting. We work with casting directors, but
agents also work directly with buyers and producers, and they come
to us looking for talent. And we sit there and cast.
Anne Ganguzza (07:22.287)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (07:28.657)
Mm-hmm.
Luanne Regis (07:33.555)
in pretty much the same way a casting director who gets paid to do
it does it. I sit there, I go through my roster, who's right for
this? And I do essentially do a casting. And so a lot of my
agenting is casting, but that's just sort of like the day-to-day
job of a voiceover agent. Again, back in the day when we had booths
and actors would come into our lobby and read and have, you'd be
distributing copy, you know, back in the day, pre-pandemic and all
that.
Anne Ganguzza (07:41.307)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (07:48.07)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (07:58.631)
Look at
Luanne Regis (08:03.611)
A big part of my job also was directing talent, not just sitting at
a desk and agenting. I would go into the booth. I need to know what
my talent does. I need to be able to sell that person. So in order
to do that, I'm in the booth, I'm directing, and I really, really
love that directing process because it's, again, it hinges on such
creativity. It's so creative. They get to play around. I get also
to play around with them in terms of what they can do, what their
range is.
Anne Ganguzza (08:07.974)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (08:15.109)
Right.
Anne Ganguzza (08:21.264)
Mm-hmm.
Luanne Regis (08:32.991)
And that's how I know what my clients can bring to the table so I
can effectively sell them. So it's casting, it's directing, it's
obviously selling. It's very managerial as well because I'm, like I
said, very, very hands on. you know, like for instance, many times
I go into the booth with a client and we'd spend an hour in there
if we have the time. And the last five minutes of that hour really
is recording the copy and auditioning.
Anne Ganguzza (08:46.767)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (09:02.342)
Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
Luanne Regis (09:02.561)
but the previous, how many ever minutes, spent catching up. How's
your wife? How are the kids? How is life? How's your mom doing?
Stuff like that. That's how you get to really know clients because
what they share with you in the booth, you bring that to you as
you're casting. You bring that to you as you're selling them. You
have to really know them inside out. That's more of a very
managerial, I think, position as an agent.
Anne Ganguzza (09:08.646)
Right.
Anne Ganguzza (09:16.238)
Right.
Luanne Regis (09:30.641)
not all agents agent that way. I just learned to do it that way. So
it's manage it's managing talent. It's selling talent, agenting
obviously, but it's also casting and directing talent in the booth.
And then of course your negotiations skills come into play. Your
knowledge of contracts, your knowledge of legal, legal procedures,
as far as contracts go. That's all encompassing as a voiceover
agent.
Anne Ganguzza (09:33.484)
Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (09:48.355)
Sure.
Anne Ganguzza (09:54.34)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (09:58.767)
It's such a broad base of that you need to have. And you said
something before that I thought was so interesting. You said you
had been working with, and it really, I think it goes to show the
evolution of the business. You talked about actors who did voice
acting rather than voice actors. And so I caught that little tiny
nuance right there, which really speaks to your amount of time and
experience in the industry.
Luanne Regis (10:00.82)
It is.
Luanne Regis (10:16.416)
Yes.
Yes.
Luanne Regis (10:23.829)
Yes, yes.
Anne Ganguzza (10:25.509)
Because how often, like what would you say, I guess now in your,
because you've been in business for so long, you must still, I
suspect, deal with actors who do voice acting, as well as voice
actors. And what are your thoughts on how you work with, let's say,
actors now who do voice acting, or voice actors differently? Do you
spend as much time, or how does that work today?
Luanne Regis (10:33.877)
We will.
Mm-hmm.
Luanne Regis (10:53.737)
The reason why for me, it's actors in voiceover, not only was I
brought up in the business knowing that, because when I started at
Special Artists, they were mainly a commercial, on-camera
commercial agency, and this predated me, obviously, but when they
started their voiceover department, they used their on-camera
actors as the basis for their voiceover department.
Anne Ganguzza (10:56.25)
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (11:10.118)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (11:21.253)
Mm-hmm.
Luanne Regis (11:21.853)
I come from a track record where the agents who taught me used
actors and put them in voiceover and made them successful. The
voice of SpongeBob, Tom Kenny, was a comedian, an actor. We put
him, he made that transition because of how talented he is. So I do
feel voiceover is not just a voice, you're acting.
Anne Ganguzza (11:29.339)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (11:35.44)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (11:49.35)
Sure. Yeah.
Luanne Regis (11:50.529)
You're bringing copy to life. You're selling copy, but you have to
bring it to life. You have to connect with the product. You have to
connect with what the words are saying. So at the end of the day,
it really is about acting, which is why I favor having someone who
has an acting resume, someone who's done work, because they have a
certain measure of experience that they can bring to the voiceover
table.
Anne Ganguzza (11:59.761)
Sure.
Anne Ganguzza (12:08.358)
Sure.
Anne Ganguzza (12:15.463)
Yeah, yeah, absolutely. And I love the emphasis on acting because
even for something like I specialize in a lot of the corporate
e-learning, the non-broadcast style stuff, but in order to really
bring that material to life, and sometimes it needs a lot of help,
just saying, because it can be a little bit dry and boring, you
have to, I mean, every company, and I think whether you're dealing
with commercial,
Luanne Regis (12:27.894)
Yes.
Anne Ganguzza (12:41.959)
Right? Any type of copy. mean, if you're dealing with a company or
a client, they're ultimately, I mean, unless you're doing
entertainment, right? Ultimately, they're trying to sell something.
And so there's always a story. I good companies, I would say that,
you know, it's marketing 101 that, you know, stories really sell
better than, you know,
Luanne Regis (12:49.375)
Right. Absolutely.
Anne Ganguzza (13:03.322)
cold heart announcing facts sort of thing. And so if you can be the
actor that can tell the story or understand the story that the
company wants to sell or tell, that's gonna help them to sell. So I
love the emphasis on acting.
Luanne Regis (13:04.437)
Yeah, yeah.
Luanne Regis (13:14.749)
Absolutely, and it really, you're absolutely right. When you say, a
story, that is really what it is. I was telling actors yesterday,
you have to, when you get a script, you create a narrative behind
that script that those lines will support. Whether it's right or
wrong, it's truthful and it's authentic.
But you do have to connect with the product. You do have to connect with the lines. You do have to connect with the script. And the only way you do that is if you make it part of a story that you're telling.
Anne Ganguzza (13:36.142)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (13:45.703)
Yes, absolutely. And I think that's what so, at least with students
when I'm working with them in the corporate narration or the e-lin,
like what story? I'm delivering information. I'm like, but there is
a story and you have to keep the listener's attention for longer
than 30 or 60 seconds. This is not a 60 second commercial. And so
even if I...
Luanne Regis (13:58.849)
We resist.
Luanne Regis (14:04.372)
You too. That's right.
Anne Ganguzza (14:08.642)
I think if the story doesn't make sense, right, if they're reading
the words and they're like, well, I would never really say that, or
you know, you have to create the scene in which those words make
sense. And I guess my question to you is, what would you say is the
main difference between on-camera acting and voice acting?
Luanne Regis (14:17.173)
That's right. Yes.
Luanne Regis (14:26.939)
on camera acting, you have so much more at your disposal. You have
what you look like, you have the physicality of being on camera.
And this is why I love voiceover, because with voiceover acting,
you have to basically emit all of that just vocally. Whether you're
in the booth and you're, you where you see the animation
characters, they're in the booth and they're using their hands and
all that, that's all well and fine, but that does not translate on
camera in the way it
Anne Ganguzza (14:31.59)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (14:44.708)
Yeah, yeah, through your voice.
Luanne Regis (14:56.417)
would if you were an on-camera actor. really does have, so again,
we go back to is telling that story. If you have a story to tell,
it's gonna come out in the words, it's gonna come out in the smile,
it's going to come out in the warmth that you bring out, or not the
warmth, or the cold, or whatever it is, the stories that you're
telling. But it all comes from the heart, it all comes from
here.
Anne Ganguzza (14:57.062)
Right.
Luanne Regis (15:22.313)
as opposed to you being able to use your hands to gesture in a way
that conveys whatever you're trying to convey in an acting, you
know, when you're acting.
Anne Ganguzza (15:26.49)
Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (15:32.231)
So what would you say when you're working with talent? time is
precious these days, so I imagine that you probably don't have as
much time to work with talent, let's say on a job or an audition,
as you would. What are the types of things that you find you're
telling your talent to do most in terms of, know, either following
direction better or their performance-wise? What are the kind of
tips or tricks that you're speaking to most?
Luanne Regis (15:40.437)
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Luanne Regis (15:59.487)
Yeah. Well, it does vary from project and script to script,
obviously, but a lot of it is what I just said, you know, creating
that story, creating that narrative. A lot of times, and this
specifically relates to commercial copy, a lot of times you get a
script and you have no idea what the storyboards are. You have no
idea what the visuals are. You just have maybe two or three lines
and you sort of have to put it together. At that point, you have to
make a very specific creative choice. This is the story I'm going
to tell.
Anne Ganguzza (16:02.171)
these days.
Mm.
Anne Ganguzza (16:18.566)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (16:25.562)
Mm-hmm.
Luanne Regis (16:27.957)
So that's one tip and we just spoke about that. There's a lot of
non-announcery, non-polish, non-slick directives nowadays and I
always have to tell my clients, so here's what I want you to do. I
don't want you to think about yourself on mic. I don't want you to
think about yourself up there as a speaker or as an announcer
saying something. I want you to sit and talk to a friend at a bar
and you say what you need to say and you come from that place.
so that we can get you conversational, we can get you casual, and we don't have you coming out of the box like you're making a grand announcement. A tip, a trick I use sometimes is I will have them slate their name after they've done their session, after they've done their audition, because once you slate your name, Luanne Regis, you sort of go into this, okay, I'm here, I'm announcing mode, I just want you to tell me what you have to say on your copy, you can save the slate for later. So that's just one of the tips that I use.
Anne Ganguzza (17:05.296)
Sure, sure.
Anne Ganguzza (17:17.808)
Right.
Anne Ganguzza (17:25.06)
Mm-hmm.
Luanne Regis (17:25.375)
you know, the conversational thing, just sort of like bring it back
home. If it's something that I feel they need to be a little bit
more intimate with, I give them situations like, I want you to read
this bedtime story to your six year old, or I want you to sit with
your child and have a one-on-one conversation with him or her. you
know, I just give them a place from which to emote so that we can
bring that emotion into the copy.
Anne Ganguzza (17:48.752)
Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (17:52.803)
Speaking of emotion, find, for me, just on longer copy, because if
you have a particular energy or emotion and you continue for over a
minute or two or three, with that same energy, it doesn't
necessarily allow the story to flow. And I feel that people might
get into the rhythm of this particular emotion or this
particular...
Luanne Regis (18:03.958)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (18:14.887)
Energy and I feel with with any good story right energy in your
story changes and evolves and it can evolve throughout like the
course of one sentence even and the energy you start with in the
beginning or the story that you tell in the beginning isn't
necessarily the same story that's happening or evolving when you're
halfway through or three-quarters of the way through and for a lot
of for a lot of my students I find that you know if they're if they
forget
Luanne Regis (18:25.502)
Absolutely.
Luanne Regis (18:37.152)
Right.
Anne Ganguzza (18:44.119)
about the story halfway through, then it starts to turn into this
kind of just into this, let's news, news broadcast read or, you
know, something like that. And so in the middle of the script, do
you ever have to kind of redirect or give another scene to help
this through? Or are you finding that for the most part, you're
working with with top caliber actors that already are doing that or
have done that?
Luanne Regis (18:51.041)
Yeah.
Luanne Regis (19:09.279)
Yeah, know what, an actor is gonna find his or her way, again,
depending on the story that they want to tell. The seasoned actors,
the really good actors understand how to flow in and out, how to
make a change, or how to sort of navigate around certain things.
And I'm glad you asked that question, because one point I really
wanna bring to mind is sometimes when you're directing talent, I
can't tell you.
Anne Ganguzza (19:13.723)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (19:18.042)
Yeah.
Luanne Regis (19:37.663)
Yes, I can give you a line reading. Yes, I can tell you how to do
it. But I want you to color it the way you would color it because
that brings a certain uniqueness that no one else will do. You
might put a pause in the middle of the copy for effect, or you
could take a beat, or you could do a slight, And someone else will
not necessarily do that. that...
Anne Ganguzza (19:39.748)
Yeah.
Anne Ganguzza (19:44.613)
Right.
Anne Ganguzza (19:50.395)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (20:02.822)
Mm-hmm.
Luanne Regis (20:02.827)
Completely changes the way that copy gets conveyed to to the
audience. So a lot of times it's it's what you do specifically and
not me directing you into that read because I want it I sort of
wanted to come from you I want you to bring that that authenticity
to it because at the end of the day authenticity is what will May
not book you the job, but it will have the producer go. Wait a
second. What can we hear what? And that's what you want to do
Anne Ganguzza (20:27.787)
Mm, it might get you on the short list.
Luanne Regis (20:31.357)
Exactly. That's what I'm glad you said that I was seeing this exact
same thing yesterday. It's like, yes, you want to book the job, but
don't focus on booking the job. Focus on wowing whoever's
listening, focus on making an impact. So maybe you weren't right
for that job, but perhaps you bring you back in for something
else.
Anne Ganguzza (20:42.17)
Yeah.
Anne Ganguzza (20:48.133)
Yeah, yeah. And also I think then you're really, especially if it's
an audition that you're submitting to your agent or casting
director that is very familiar with working with actors in regards
to, well, okay, it can showcase right away that you're an actor.
And if you're an actor, you'll be able to follow direction no
matter what the direction ends up being. Cause I have a lot of
times people will say to me, but that's not what I hear in the
actual commercial.
Luanne Regis (21:00.321)
Mm-hmm.
Luanne Regis (21:06.037)
Yes.
Anne Ganguzza (21:16.229)
you know, it sounds completely different. And, you know, I'm always
like, well, you know, it really depends on who's directing you at
the time and what the client is listening to and what they hear in
their head as being the way they want the copyright. So you have to
be versatile enough to be able to take any direction. I've turned
in for me as a coach, I've turned to almost saying, well, here, I'm
coaching you on how to get the gig, not necessarily on the final
product, because
Luanne Regis (21:17.878)
Thanks
Luanne Regis (21:22.251)
That's right.
Luanne Regis (21:28.415)
Yes, yes.
Luanne Regis (21:45.429)
Right.
Anne Ganguzza (21:46.129)
Coaching you to get the gig is gonna make you the most authentic
actor that you can showcase in the first or second sentence. So for
me, Luanne, coming in in the first or second sentence is so
important with a connection to the copy. Talk to the importance of
maybe that, the first few words that come out of the actor's mouth
or in the copy, how important is that?
Luanne Regis (21:50.145)
That's right.
Luanne Regis (21:58.719)
Yes. Yes.
Luanne Regis (22:10.145)
very, very important because again, when I worked at Sound and Fury
and we got 800 casting, 800 auditions from one casting, they're
listening and they know right away if this person's gonna nail it
or not. So you wanna come in just hitting the mark immediately.
even, obviously I don't have 800 clients, but you see that process
with a casting director. They don't have the time to listen to the
entire script if they feel you didn't hit it within the first.
Anne Ganguzza (22:24.079)
Mm.
Anne Ganguzza (22:28.027)
Mm-hmm.
Luanne Regis (22:39.929)
Or maybe not even hit it if you didn't do something in the
beginning that made them go. let me keep listening because time is
money and they do have to get through all of these these auditions
and the same to a certain extent with me I mean I listen to every
single audition all the way through but I know by the second or
third line if someone has nailed that piece of copy or not just
because obviously I have the the experience in the years of the
instinct but again, it's that
You can't put your finger on it. It's that je ne sais quoi. It's like, yeah, let me keep this. wow, she did that? Okay. It really is important to nail whatever you want to nail at the beginning of the copy as opposed to saving your best for last.
Anne Ganguzza (23:24.047)
Yeah. Now, I love that you said you listen to the auditions all the
way through. Now, why? Why do you do that?
Luanne Regis (23:32.085)
For several reasons. One, and you said something that I wanted to
sort of bring back to the forefront, so I'm glad you asked that
question. A lot of times, again, I'm a casting, I'm sort of a
casting director when I age, because I'm putting people on stuff
and I'm wondering, is she right for it, is he right for it? I have
to listen throughout the whole thing. One, because it's my client
and they've done the audition and I need to hear what they did,
they may not be right for it.
Anne Ganguzza (23:33.732)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (23:48.848)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (23:54.715)
Mm.
Luanne Regis (23:58.805)
That way I know, you know what, I'm not gonna put him or her on
this anymore because I don't think they're right for it. Or I hear
something that they do and I think, you know what, I've got
something else that, I've got a different role that I think she's
right for. I don't think I put her on the right role. I think I
need to get her on this other one. So it gives me a clue. It clues
me into what my clients can do, what they can't do, even as well as
I know them, even as much as I know their range.
Anne Ganguzza (24:04.314)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (24:23.494)
Mm-hmm.
Luanne Regis (24:25.481)
I still am learning a lot about them as we go along. So it behooves
me to listen to everything that they do.
Anne Ganguzza (24:33.53)
so interesting. I love that you listen all the way through because
it shows that you really care and that you really care about your
clients and you care about making the best fit and really choosing
the best person for the job. That just requires a lot of, think,
integrity and I love that. I think that's amazing. Plus, I think
it's so interesting because maybe even...
Luanne Regis (24:36.417)
Mm-hmm.
It does, yeah. Yeah.
Luanne Regis (24:47.359)
Yeah.
Luanne Regis (24:52.883)
Yeah.
Anne Ganguzza (24:57.946)
You know, people that you've known for a long time, I mean, we
continue to grow and evolve and learn and discover. I find with
myself, like, I discover new things about myself and it impacts,
right, my acting in the booth. And, you know, in lots of different
ways where all of a sudden I'll be like, well, gosh, I've been
doing it like this for years and goodness, I should have maybe
thought this way. And it just will bring something different out in
me, which is kind of cool. And so that's just kind of being the
lifelong learner sort of.
Luanne Regis (25:02.678)
Yes.
Luanne Regis (25:12.607)
Yes.
Luanne Regis (25:27.05)
Yeah!
Anne Ganguzza (25:27.483)
you know, always trying to grow my skills and craft. And you think
like, well, have I reached this point? Well, now I've done it and
I'm an actor. But I feel like you never quite reach the point where
you're never not learning.
Luanne Regis (25:31.583)
All right.
Luanne Regis (25:42.129)
No, you always are learning and you're always trying new things and
I'm always learning things about clients. I'm like, I didn't know
you did that. That's good for me. I can sell you in a different way
now. it's a learning process on both ends.
Anne Ganguzza (25:49.508)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (25:53.05)
Yeah. Yeah.
Anne Ganguzza (25:59.142)
So the sell, okay? I wanna talk a little bit about the sell. When
you're trying to sell a talent, what is it when you're
communicating with a client for a particular spot? So what's
involved in the sell of it on your end? I'm just curious because
I've never, I mean, I've cast people, but I've never really been
had to like, hear my choices and then the client will ultimately
make the...
the end result, but when you're really trying to sell a talent, like what goes, what sort of qualities are you selling in the talent?
Luanne Regis (26:36.605)
So you're talking about me selling to a buyer a casting director or
okay? So then it would it depends on if it's the buyer's a casting
director or if the buyer is the actual buyer the producer the the
ad agency or something You know if it's a casting director. It's
because I want that person to understand He can do this what you're
asking what you're asking for me to cast for you This guy can do
this so I need you to
Anne Ganguzza (26:39.876)
Yeah, to a buyer, yes, yeah.
Anne Ganguzza (26:45.766)
Mm-hmm.
buyer, right, Yeah.
Luanne Regis (27:05.161)
I send links, send if it's stand-up comedians they're looking for,
I send a link to their stand-up. One of many different ways I keep
all of my auditions, so I will curate a specific sample of voices
so that they can hear. For instance, if they're looking for
something specific, I go back and I pull auditions that they've
done for that specific character and I said, listen, here's what
he's done for me in the past. That's one tool I use to sell.
Anne Ganguzza (27:20.75)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (27:32.622)
Mm. Mm-hmm.
Luanne Regis (27:32.833)
And that's to a cast director if I want to convince her that this
client can audition for her on a project if it's a buyer the actual
buyer the producer the ad agency or Yeah, well, it would be the
producer of an ad agency because if it's animation is it's casting
directors You know again, it's showcasing what they've done before
showcasing the stuff that they've done showing them listen to
this
Anne Ganguzza (27:40.218)
Got it, got it. Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (27:48.357)
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Anne Ganguzza (27:55.206)
Mm-hmm.
Luanne Regis (27:59.647)
I know you're looking for a guy that can do this. Listen to him
right here. He's done this before. He's auditioned for this before.
He's actually booked this before. Here's a spot that he's done. And
you might want to listen to this. So that is, that's what I'm
pushing when I'm speaking to producers. Sadly, don't get, don't
have, agents don't have that direct link to producers anymore. It's
really become so remote now and remote, in the sense of remote
recording, but.
Anne Ganguzza (28:12.003)
Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (28:16.624)
Got it.
Luanne Regis (28:27.433)
remote in the sense of we're far removed from these producers. I
used to be able to pick up the phone and call a producer at Leo
Burnett and say, listen to Nancy, she's really great for this. You
want to hire her. And they would hire her. But they themselves, the
producers, they're removed as well from their clients. Now it's the
client, Walmart, that has to make the decision. The producer used
to be able to make the decision before.
Anne Ganguzza (28:30.181)
Yeah.
Anne Ganguzza (28:47.59)
Sure.
that's a, I'm so glad you made that distinction because I think for a lot of voice actors, they don't really know what happens once they submit that audition. then what is, like what's, how does my audition traverse, you know, to either get to the ears of the person who's hiring and who is the person that's hiring, right? You know, because I think if you're my talent agent, right, and I'm auditioning for you.
Luanne Regis (29:03.478)
Yes.
That's right.
Luanne Regis (29:11.638)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (29:17.219)
What I love and what I've heard from you is that you must have a
little file of me where you're keeping all my good auditions and
you're keeping all the spots that I've done and I like that, right?
You didn't just trash my audition if I didn't work for that
particular spot, but you're like, okay, so you've got like bits and
pieces of me there. And then, so if you're working with another,
let's say, casting director, right? You can then send those files
and sell me in that way. But then if you're actually talking to the
client directly,
Luanne Regis (29:22.527)
Yes. Yes.
Luanne Regis (29:28.619)
Nope, keep everything.
Luanne Regis (29:43.236)
Right.
Anne Ganguzza (29:47.342)
Which is something I'm like, well, I've not been in this process. I
speak with my clients directly, but probably not on the scale that
you do because you're working on a broadcast scale. So I have a
client that I've worked with for years and they'll ask me, who do
you think would be good to do this for me? And I can refer, which
is.
Luanne Regis (29:55.937)
you
Luanne Regis (30:00.394)
Right.
Luanne Regis (30:05.569)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (30:09.817)
on a small scale compared to what you do. Because you're talking to
big time producers and agencies that have multiple projects going
on. And so for me as an actor, I never quite know what happens once
I submit that audition. So it's really nice that you just kind of
explain that process. And the fact that you said you don't always
get to talk to the producer like you used to be able to, which is
what I sometimes I assume and I don't really know.
Luanne Regis (30:11.457)
Yes.
Anne Ganguzza (30:36.548)
you know, depending on the agency, depending on who it is and what
your relationships are, which I think it comes all down to
relationships. But you're right, now even the producer is removed
because it really comes down to like, let's say the client Walmart
or whoever that might be. So that's a very good thing to know from
my perspective.
Luanne Regis (30:42.518)
Yes.
Luanne Regis (30:53.621)
And I'll tell you the reason, I'll tell you the reason for that,
Anne, and I want to make sure people understand this because it was
a very drastic change. think the reason that I was able to, first
of all, be able to pick up the phone and call a producer and they
would actually book, or the producer would call me and say, who do
you have for this? We need to cast this job right away. Who do you
have? book David Pasquese. He'd be great. And they would hire him.
So how many ever years, 10, 15 years ago when, you know, the
big
Anne Ganguzza (31:09.666)
Mm. Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (31:15.611)
Mm-hmm.
Luanne Regis (31:23.113)
ad agencies, the DDB Needhams, the Chiat Days, you the big ad
agencies, they had the bulk of the work, they had the majority of
the work. And as time went by, these smaller agencies started
picking up work. So the ad agency now sort of lost the power to be
able to make that decision because they themselves are trying to
hold on to their accounts. So they no longer can say, I can hire
you for this Walmart voiceover.
Anne Ganguzza (31:25.37)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (31:29.821)
mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (31:41.527)
Mm-hmm.
Yes, yes, yes. Makes sense.
Luanne Regis (31:49.953)
they now have to check with the head of marketing or whomever at
Walmart. That never used to be the case. They used to be able to
pull that trigger and go, great, let's hire him. That's no longer
the case. And I do firmly believe it's because of that change over
in, in work, a lot of ad agencies lost clients, a lot of ad
agencies are afraid of losing their clients. So they're really at
the disposal at the mercy of their clients to make every single
decision.
Anne Ganguzza (31:52.944)
Sure.
Anne Ganguzza (32:20.359)
That's very interesting and that really speaks to this, think also
the size of the industry over the years that has really increased
greatly.
Luanne Regis (32:21.248)
Yeah.
Luanne Regis (32:25.183)
Yes, yes. It has, yeah. No, it has. You've had a lot of these
smaller or maybe ad execs from ad agencies sort of offshoots and go
off and start their own small companies, and they're now getting
the big jobs. They're now getting the big work as opposed to those
big multimedia conglomerate ad agencies that they're not really
getting those accounts anymore.
Anne Ganguzza (32:41.616)
Sure.
Anne Ganguzza (32:46.544)
Right?
Anne Ganguzza (32:51.686)
Well, and now also I think technology, mean, gosh, technology has
certainly evolved over the years. And now a lot of times, like you
said, you'd meet in the, and I from back in the day when I would go
to a studio for a callback, and gosh, that's almost not the case
too much anymore. But I miss the days when you would see all your
voiceover friends in the lobby. And even though you'd kind of be a
little bit nervous, you'd all be like catching up and seeing people
you hadn't seen in a while.
Luanne Regis (32:55.179)
Yeah.
Luanne Regis (32:59.188)
It has.
Luanne Regis (33:09.491)
I know.
Luanne Regis (33:14.185)
Yeah.
Luanne Regis (33:19.137)
Yeah.
Anne Ganguzza (33:21.375)
And I kind of miss that. with the digital evolution and people
having their home studios and the internet and I think a lot of
those agencies too, mean, went online, am I not correct? Yeah,
yeah.
Luanne Regis (33:23.497)
Yeah.
Luanne Regis (33:34.943)
They sure did. They sure did. Yeah, they really did. And to speak a
little bit, I'm just going to hear my pet peeve about that. Again,
I remember a day when ad agency would hire a studio here, hire a
studio in Chicago, hire a studio where they are, and they would
connect. Now that cost, because we've had a situation like the
pandemic where everyone sort of had to get set up to record from
home, a lot of ad agencies haven't gone back to that, gone back to
hiring studios.
Anne Ganguzza (33:49.52)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (33:59.366)
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Luanne Regis (34:04.277)
they figured out a way, wait a second, we don't have to hire a
studio. We don't have to incur that cost. We can keep that budget
under control and pass that cost on to the actor. That's one of my
biggest pet peeves of the consequence of the pandemic where actors
have now had to become engineers, incur their own costs for
studios. I'm like, wait a second, you would hire a studio in New
York and Los Angeles back in the day. We're like, how is that?
Anne Ganguzza (34:29.489)
Yeah.
Luanne Regis (34:34.37)
What do I know what you're doing.
Anne Ganguzza (34:36.282)
Yeah, and they're not necessarily, you know, claiming, I am correct
in the assumption, they're not necessarily saying, well, hey, I've
got a home studio. I should be charging for that studio. I should
be tired. Theoretically, right, they are, but I don't know anybody
that really, like, has a line item that says, hey, this is my
studio cost, right?
Luanne Regis (34:45.825)
No!
Luanne Regis (34:53.957)
No, no, the actors sadly have had to fall in line, you know, and
now we've gone, it's just everyone is now remote studio required,
home studio required. I'm like, wait a second, you would hire a
studio back in the day. I just think it's unfair because now the
actor should be concentrating on his audition and he should be
concentrating on the creative aspect. He should not be asked to
upload stuff. He should not be asked to be an engineer in his own
session. You know, it's just the way of the world now.
Anne Ganguzza (34:58.35)
Yeah, it got absorbed.
Anne Ganguzza (35:03.504)
Yeah. Yeah.
Anne Ganguzza (35:23.567)
It is such a luxury to be directed even in my home studio now. It's
just, and it's lovely for, I will say at least they're Source
Connect so that an engineer can take what I'm doing back here in my
home studio and engineer it and I don't have to upload and he can
just take it. That is a luxury. And also the fact of actually
having a director is a luxury these days. And I love it. And I kind
of wish we went back to it.
Luanne Regis (35:27.403)
Yeah.
Luanne Regis (35:39.711)
and do his own thing. Yes.
Luanne Regis (35:47.198)
Yeah.
Luanne Regis (35:52.757)
I know.
Anne Ganguzza (35:53.33)
And you never know, mean, maybe that will happen, maybe that will
not, but I think in the end, right, is it not all driven by the
customer, right, the client, like it's Walmart, like what do they
want? And so ultimately, what type of voice are they gonna look
for? How are they gonna hire? And I think that's something as a
voice actor, we need to consider the business aspect of it, because
how are we going to kind of shine in front of all of...
it seems like obstacles, maybe not obstacles, but there's so many paths to getting hired these days, you know, and yeah.
Luanne Regis (36:28.031)
Yes, there are. And let me go back to a question you asked earlier
about what happens when that audition goes off. And it's really
important for actors to understand, because you don't book a job,
that doesn't mean you weren't on a short list. That doesn't mean
that you weren't listened to and someone was vying for you and that
just, the client or whomever came in and said, no, let's go with a
woman instead of a man. doesn't, you have...
Anne Ganguzza (36:53.264)
Mm-hmm.
Luanne Regis (36:54.205)
I have no idea what happens once it leaves my, you know, my coffers
because no one says anything. And then you get on a short list and
you have one of five on a short list and that's great, you're
excited. And then it just goes away. But for me, that's a win. Like
someone listened to you and someone put you on a short list and
someone considered you for this job. And even beyond the short
list, you don't know who listened and went, wow, I really like him.
You know what I mean? It's like, there's so many.
Anne Ganguzza (36:57.574)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (37:08.42)
Yeah.
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (37:20.496)
Sure. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I love that you brought that up. Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Luanne Regis (37:23.837)
intangibles and actors need to understand that just because you
didn't book a job doesn't mean you weren't right for it. They could
have changed their minds, changed the specs, changed the age,
changed the gender. All of those things sort of are out of your
control.
Anne Ganguzza (37:36.432)
Yeah.
Anne Ganguzza (37:39.791)
Yeah, there's so many aspects that are out of your control. And I
think that's one of the most important things that a voice actor
can also do is try to understand that and not let the mental, like,
my gosh, I don't know what happened, or I'm not good enough, or
that self-sabotage, get to them. And I think that's one of the
biggest challenges that a lot of voice actors face is imposter
syndrome that, because they didn't hear anything, they assume,
right?
Luanne Regis (37:53.119)
I know. Yeah. Yeah.
Luanne Regis (38:00.788)
It is.
Luanne Regis (38:06.399)
Yeah, that's right. And by the way, that's another aspect of my job
as an agent, to sort of manage their expectations and manage their
disappointments. I had an actress tell me last night, she said, you
know, I'm really just very dejected and sort of tired and fatigued
with these auditions. I haven't had a callback, I haven't had this,
I haven't had that. And for me, you know, I need to...
Anne Ganguzza (38:15.171)
Mm-hmm.
Anne Ganguzza (38:19.792)
Mm-hmm.
Luanne Regis (38:32.841)
I do need to boost her up, at the same time, I do need to
understand her frustration and it's real. So, you know, my job
there is to sort of maybe go, okay, let me reevaluate, reevaluate,
excuse me, what I'm sending her. Maybe I'm not sending her the
things that she's really gonna nail because at the end of the day,
as an agent, you don't want to keep sending an actor hundreds and
hundreds and hundreds of auditions and they're not booking because
that debilitates them.
Anne Ganguzza (38:38.63)
Mm-hmm. Yeah.
Luanne Regis (39:02.207)
So part of my job is almost like a therapist of sorts. It's sort of
like manage how they feel. Okay, let's do this then. Let's sort of
reevaluate what we send you. Let me pull back a little bit so that
you don't feel burnt out. How can I help you? Because obviously I
believe in her. I don't want her to just go silent and not do
auditions, but I have to kind of hold her hand along the way.
Anne Ganguzza (39:06.086)
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Anne Ganguzza (39:26.727)
Right, Sure.
Luanne Regis (39:30.187)
That's another aspect of the voiceover agent's job, at least
mine.
Anne Ganguzza (39:31.706)
Yeah. Yeah. I love it. this has been such a wonderful conversation,
Luanne. thank you. Thank you. Well, it's been a pleasure. And I'll
tell you what, I cannot wait to have you as a guest director for my
group, for my VO Peeps guys. So make sure you take a look for that
coming up soon.
Luanne Regis (39:37.824)
I love your questions, the way. Your questions are very
pointed.
Luanne Regis (39:47.711)
Yes, I cannot wait. Yes.
Luanne Regis (39:54.08)
Yes.
Anne Ganguzza (39:55.916)
And with that, I will give a great big shout out to our sponsor,
IPDTL. You too can connect and network like bosses. Find out more
at ipdtl.com. Luanne, this has really been amazing. Thank you so
much. It's been a pleasure.
Luanne Regis (40:08.373)
Thank you, Anne, for having me. I really do love talking about this
stuff.
Anne Ganguzza (40:13.146)
Bosses, have an amazing week and we'll see you next week. Bye.
Luanne Regis (40:16.033)
Bye!