I’m an American and I don’t think that’s an English accent. Indeed it doesn’t sound to me like he’s trying to do an English accent. It sounds like a certain version of the ‘posh’ American accent of the time (which was kind of ‘mid-atlantic’).
I’m too young to have seen the show, was he supposed to be English?
To turn the discussion on it’s head for a moment, here’s Alistair Cooke, who spent much of his life in America, talking on Masterpiece Theater- YouTube To us he sounded almost entirely American - it was some years before I realised he was English. How does he sound to you?
Alastair Cooke is famous in the UK too for Letter from America, his extremely long-running radio (appeared in it’s first incarnation in 1938 and run continiously from 1946-2004).
To me he sounds Englishh, his accent may’ve been somewhat affected by spending a very long time in America and certianly sounds ‘transaltantic’, but I would say that his accent is English.
I’ve never seen the show, but wikipedi confirms that he is mneant to be doing an English accent (it also says that many people believed the actor was english). All I can say as English person I would never think he was English, infact I agree with you that in that clip posted I wouldn’t even think he was trying to do an English accent.
I have a South Warwickshire accent and my Sister has a Coventry accent, yet we grew up in the same house. Basically, I grew up on the border between Warwickshire and the West Midlands and due to our peer groups our accents moved in different directions.
how does one speak/write like an englishman? to me, it’s not so much the accent but more in the way sentences and phrases are structured. and of course, they have a way of pronouncing akward words easily. examples:
american drill sergeant: “what the hell were you thinking?”
english sergeant major: “what madness possessed you?”