What I'm about to add is an anal retentive, nit-picking correction. The verb "dub" is short for: "doubling". That is, using a DIFFERENT actor's voice re-recorded over the original actor's voice. It actually started when sound films came into existance in 1927. An actress, in an early Hollywood, silent film, refused to record her own voice to her charcter when the producers decided to add sound to the finished film, so a "voice DOUBLE" was used in her stead. ADR (automated or automatic dialog replacement) or "looping" (because the actor listens to and watches a loop of film over and over to be re-recorded) is when the actor records THEIR OWN voice. Some actors love doing this because they can alter their original reading and add emotion to their performance. As regards to Martin Stephens ADR, I've seen both "Village..." and "The Innocents" and yes, the same voice is used BUT 17 years later, I swear the same voice is used to "dub" the young actor who played the boy Jesus in Franco Zefferelli's "Jesus Of Nazareth". I don't know....(?)
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