Nancy Cartwright Chats with Andrea Romano -- Part 1

In her next two columns, Nancy Cartwright has a revealing conversation with legendary casting director, voice director and voice actress Andrea Romano.
Posted In | Magazines: AnimationWorld | Columns: Nancy Cartwright | Site Categories: 2D, Acting, People, Television, Voice Acting
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Andrea Romano.

Andrea Romano has been a staple of TV animation since the '80s, working at Hanna-Barbera and then on the Smurfs, among others, before segueing into the '90s with Batman, Tiny Toon Adventures, Animaniacs, Pinky and the Brain, Superman and more; and then, most recently, on Justice League, Teen Titans, Avatar: The Last Airbender, Superman/Doomsday, Batman: Gotham Knight, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern: First Flight and Ben 10: Alien Force.

Nancy Cartwright: So tell me about your beginning -- all the way back to 1981 or '82 at Hanna-Barbera (HB).

Andrea Romano: I grew up in Eastern Long Island in NY and did my undergraduate school at Fredonia NY which is 60 miles SW of Buffalo -- an excellent theater arts school--excellent! I graduated in three years because it's near Buffalo, NY and freezing cold and I wanted to get the heck out of that 40 below temperature! I did my graduate at Rutgers in NJ and didn't finish my graduate degree because I just felt the need to get out of academia and into the professional industry. I was auditioning in Manhattan and working at Capezio, a dance and fashion shop in The Village and I'd take my lunch break, go do an audition, come back to work until 7:00 pm, then go out and do a play at night! When I wasn't doing a play at night I would go do phone sales because you had to just keep trying to make a living in NY. I didn't have two nickels to rub together when I was there!

But it was good phone experience it was good just to use your voice of all things. So then, I always had this feeling that I belonged in Southern California, every time a classmate would come out here for a vacation and come back tan in the middle of winter I just thought I need to go out to California... I only just found out a few years ago that I was conceived in Santa Monica.

NC: So, in other words, you're a native?

AR: Yeah, exactly, so there were always roots here for me. I moved here in 1979, just packed up my life in my mom's attic and came out with one suitcase and $400, which was my entire life savings and I moved to San Diego thinking I would get some theater work. There is very little theater work in San Diego. I was a trained actress but I was also five-feet tall and 200 lbs-- a quite large Italian Jewish actress… not many roles for that. I knew nothing about voice-over. I did a couple of plays down there and then my dear friend, Anthony Barnao, who I had gone to college with at Fredonia, called me up and said, "Hey, I'm at a big talent agency in Los Angeles and they need a voice-over assistant for a couple of weeks while Vanessa Gilbert recovers from a car accident. Can you come up and temp for a little while?" So I came up to Los Angeles and I was there just a few weeks when Vanessa called in and said "I'm not going to come back. It's going to take me a lot longer to recover." So within months they franchised me as an agent at Abrams-Rubaloff, which was a very large talent agency at the time. It had Paul Winchell, Frank Welker, June Foray and Gene Moss -- all these remarkable voice-over actors and every day I would meet these people and my jaw would drop. I was just astounded at their talent and to me, Paul Winchell, from Winchell and Mahoney was just amazing!

NC: Did you make a decision right then?







Comments


Did she die

Anonymous (not verified) | Sat, 10/29/2011 - 10:52 | Permalink
5

A special thanks to Nancy Cartwright for this interview.I have been a HUGE of Andrea'a work since Batman The Animated Series.She is truly amazing with an uncanny talent for casting.No one does it better than you,Ms. Romano.

Love the interview....now it's off to read part 2 ;-)

James

Toonhead | Sat, 01/02/2010 - 16:05 | Permalink

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