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It's a warm, sunny morning, but you wouldn't know it in the darkened, soundproof recording booth where Harlan Hogan stands. With lips close to the microphone, Hogan performs his art, making phrases like "analysis by market," and "search criteria" sound as captivating as a Frank Sinatra love song. As a voice-over actor, Hogan's offscreen work in radio and TV commercials for such companies as Kraft, Cadillac, Ameritech, McDonald's, Budweiser, and Motorola to name but a few have made him a familiar voice in American homes. It's a voice also heard on countless industrial and educational films, movie trailers, recorded books, and corporate phone systems. Hogan even did the narration that you hear at the top of the Sears Tower and the Adler Planetarium in Chicago. Scratching his blondish-gray beard, Hogan
finishes the recording session at Studiomedia in Evanston, Illinois,
quickly, in less than the standard hour for which he was booked. But
that's not unusual for him. "Harlan
is intelligent," said Stacy Irwin Christie, the creative director who
hired Hogan to read the copy for this session.
"You have to do very little direction because he just gets it,
assimilates it." Bouncing into his Jeep Grand Cherokee,
Hogan heads south. A half-hour later, he's at Swell Pictures, a post-production
facility located steps off Chicago's magnificent mile. Occupying the
entire 18th floor of glitzy NBC Towers, Swell is, well, swell.
It's the kind of place one imagines exists only in L.A., where
Spielberg-types edit their latest blockbusters. Across from the vast
reception area is a 20-foot-long, granite-topped bar where directors, ad
agency creative honchos, corporate marketing execs, and voice-over talent
can grab their favorite flavor of Starbucks coffee on tap. Floor-to-ceiling
refrigerated cases with enormous glass doors reveal shelves heavily
stocked with assorted free snacks. Hogan
sips an Espresso and then he's carted off to one of Swell's numerous
recording studios. The associate creative director of a major ad agency
and the audio engineer are there to greet him. Things are
getting set up, and Hogan banters briefly with his clients. At $350-$425
an hour for studio time, he knows intuitively when to cease and desist. It's great work if you can get it. And
Hogan gets it all right. Perhaps one of the reasons is because, in a
certain sense, he's been preparing for this job for a very long time. As an undergraduate majoring in theatre
arts at Illinois Wesleyan University, Hogan moonlighted as a full-time
DJ at a local radio station. A few years after graduation, he landed a
position at a Chicago ad agency, teaching executives how to do speech
presentations. After being asked to record numerous scratch-tracks (demo
tapes of potential television commercials), a seed was planted. "I
thought to myself, I can do this," he says. In 1973, he took a better paying position as an ad manager at a video-computer training company, but the desire to perform gnawed at him, and he started acting in Community Theater at night. He returned to radio-DJ work in 1976, but hungered for a greater challenge. Recording a demo tape, Hogan went to auditions and pounded the pavement. Industrial shows, local on-camera commercials, and training films soon followed. But it was the voice-over work where he really sparkled and eventually gravitated toward almost exclusively.
The extent of TV and radio commercial voice-over work he has done over the past three decades sometimes amazes even Hogan. Once, in a Twilight
Zone like experience, he got a ticket for being in the wrong lane and the
judge ordered him to watch a traffic-safety film that Hogan himself had narrated.
Hogan, who says he never thought he had a great voice, says, "I think I sound like somebody you might know.
Maybe the guy next door." Judy Marcus is a free lance writer who lives in Glencoe, Illinois |