Joined: 26 Aug 2010 Age: 70 Gender: Male Posts: 35,189 Location: temperate zone
28 Nov 2018, 8:09 am
No idea.
Like most of us I mainly know Winnie the Pooh via the written word, or having a parent or teacher read the book to me as a child.
Its been made into cartoons. So he does have a voice on screen these days. Don't know how the voice over artist did his voice. And he may sound different in your country then in my English speaking part of the world.
The voice of Winnie the Pooh since 1988 is performed by a voice actor named Jim Cummings. This is a good example of comparisons of each voice actor who has done Winnie the Pooh through the years. The Winnie the Pooh voice I think of is the Sterling Holloway or the most recent Jim Cummings rather than the Hal Smith voice or the guy at the very beginning.
Does this help you? Does your voice sound like any of those examples?
Joined: 26 Feb 2017 Age: 31 Gender: Female Posts: 1,311 Location: brazil
29 Nov 2018, 4:09 pm
the person in question was from usa, that's why i asked here i tried to listen but i'm not good at identifying voices, so i was asking if pooh way of speaking is normally associated with something. i think he sounds maybe a bit monotone and demotivated, and a bit nasal??