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Hithere, I'm Ruth Sherman, CEO and Celebrity Speech and Media Coach, but you don't have
to be famous to work with me. I never thought I’d say this, but Meryl Streep really annoyed
me. She was so irritating, I had to turn off a movie I was watching that she was starring
in. This never happened before. I love Meryl Streep, think she’s one of the all-time
great actors. She’s so great at dialects and accents and using her voice to embody
her characters. Truly a rare talent. You don’t see a lot of even famous actors with this
level of skill. And she may actually be too good at it, because that’s what bugged me
– her character’s voice. This movie I had to escape was “Hope Springs.”
It’s about a couple, probably close to 60, who’ve been married for a long time and
have gotten bored with each other, the spark has gone out. Tommy Lee Jones played the husband.
Streep’s character, the wife, tries to get the excitement back in the marriage.
Traditional housewife, of that generation. And her voice was so small. She never raised
it, even when she was angry or hurt. Can I tell you this type of voice is common
even today and I see it in women who are young, and accomplished.
Great example is when I go to events and people stand up and ask questions. And they speak
as if they are in a one-on-one conversation in a private setting instead of a room filled
with hundreds of people. Their voice is hushed and high-pitched. They don’t realize how
they come across. Weak, dependent, not accomplished. They don’t realize they’re being vetted
by everyone in that room. People are making decisions about them and basing those decisions
on the way they sound. When you are in public, especially a professional
environment, you have to remember that everything you do, including the way you speak, marks
you. You can choose to be marked as powerful, confident, and authoritative. Or, you can
choose to be marked as weak and whiney.