Austin Butler is ‘getting rid’ of the Elvis accent, has likely damaged his voice


Austin Butler has been getting roasted a little bit for continuing to talk like Elvis long after completing filming of the role. He said he doesn’t hear it anymore, but if we hear it it’s just because Elvis is ingrained in his DNA at this point. Cool! Last time I wrote about him, I wondered if the accent would magically disappear after the Oscars. But Austin said he’s getting rid of it now and he might have damaged his vocal cords from the singing.

Austin Butler says he’s “getting rid of” his Elvis Presley accent.

The star of Baz Luhrmann’s Elvis adopted the music icon’s southern drawl for the film — and kept it. Much has been made about Butler’s new voice, especially after his Golden Globes speech last month, but it seems he’s finally shedding it.

“I am getting rid of the accent,” he said in a preview of Friday’s The Graham Norton Show. “But I have probably damaged my vocal cords with all that singing. One song took 40 takes.”

However winning the Golden Globe — and earning an Oscar nomination for Best Actor — has helped make up for it.

“It has been a whirlwind,” the Southern California native, 31, said of the success of the film and his accolades. “It’s amazing because when you are making a film, you never really know how it will be received. With this one there were so many ways it could go wrong, so to be received in the way it has means the world to me.”

The film came out in June — and there’s been a lot of interest in the fact that he’s still taking like Elvis. He said last year that having committed two years to his life to the role, “I’m not surprised that it clicks in… Check in with me in 20 years when I’ve played a lot of roles, who knows what I’ll sound like!”

Butler’s speech at the Globes in January really amped up the conversation and criticism. He said after his acceptance speech, “I didn’t even think about it. I don’t think I sound like him still, but I guess I must, because I hear it all the time… I often liken it to when somebody lives in another country for a long time. I had three years where that was my only focus, so I’m sure there’s pieces of him in my DNA and I will always be linked to him.”

Nonetheless, even his former girlfriend of eight years, Vanessa Hudgens, who encouraged him to take the role, noted the change in his voice. She enjoyed a public LOL after his voice coach said Butler’s accent may end up being permanent.

Meanwhile, Butler, who’s now dating Kaia Gerber, didn’t sound like Elvis to his Dune 2 co-star Dave Bautista on the set last year.

“I don’t know who this guy was, but it’s not Austin Butler,” Bautista said of the actor who plays his brother Feyd-Rautha. “It’s not Elvis. His voice is different, his look is different. Everything about his demeanor is terrifying.”

[From Yahoo! Entertainment]

Austin’s been (and put himself through) a lot for this role and now it might have damaged his vocal cords too? Yikes, I hope he feels that it was worth it because I certainly wouldn’t. I guess singing that many takes in a voice completely different than his own really took a toll. That combined with all Austin’s own method efforts really put his body through the wringer. He must be getting tired of getting roasted for the voice though, that’s why he says he’s getting rid of it after saying he didn’t hear it anymore. Maybe he’ll keep a little tiny bit though, just to keep things interesting! Also, what Dave Bautista said about him was nice and I guess the point was to show that Austin is a good actor and immerses himself in every role, not just Elvis. I have a hard time imagining Austin as terrifying in any scenario (or him playing Dave Bautista’s brother), but sure!

Photos credit: Getty Images for AARP

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25 Responses to “Austin Butler is ‘getting rid’ of the Elvis accent, has likely damaged his voice”

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  1. TIFFANY says:

    Dude, you are not winning the Oscar. So just stop.

    • OriginalLeigh says:

      Is he not predicted to win? I really haven’t been following this year. I almost feel like he should get something for his troubles. LOL.

    • Normades says:

      He could be that young surprise win like Adrian Brody. In the long run it didn’t help Adrian’s career that much.

      • TIFFANY says:

        I don’t see the vote splitting for that to happen. Things are really going Brendan’s way right now.

    • Dillesca says:

      Tiffany, you nailed it. This is 100% Oscar campaigning.

    • CK3 says:

      He may not, but no awards’ body that has any overlap with the academy has weighed in past nominations. No amount of press puffery is going to turn Fraser or Butler into anything other than a perceived frontrunner at this point. If anything, recent history points to the Best Actor nominee in a Best Picture contender having the edge. In fact, no Actor has won without a corresponding BP nom for their film since 2009.

  2. Suze says:

    I didn’t know he’d been cast as Feyd-Rautha! That’s really interesting, I look forward to seeing what he does with it.

    For his voice, I bet he’s got vocal nodes. That can happen when you do repetitive singing, or hit notes you haven’t prepped yourself for. Julie Andrews famously had surgery for them and lost her singing voice. Gabe Saporta of Cobra Starship also dealt with them, but managed to retain his range.

  3. shanaynay says:

    I’m sorry, but in my opinion he was one of the worst people to portray Elvis. I really don’t understand it. I know I read that someone from Elvis’ family thought he was the best to portray him, but I don’t see it, nor agree with that decision.

  4. Solidgold says:

    Watch him win the Oscar. I was surprised Rami Malek won. Hollywood loves bio pics.

    • Frippery says:

      Rami Malek really channeled Freddie Mercury, without making it a parody. He was much better than the movie he was in (which was fine, not bad, just fine). But yes, the Academy especially loves biopics the way squirrels love acorns.

  5. lunchcoma says:

    I swear, this Oscar campaign is way more irritating than anything Anne Hathaway or Natalie Portman ever did.

  6. Whatever says:

    I’m surprised to hear that he has permanent damage from this. I would think that actual professional singers probably do at least that many takes in the studio while recording, plus touring, rehearsals, etc… I’m not saying he’s lying, but this does come off as very, “look how much I’m suffering for my AAAAAHHRT.”

    • Concern Fae says:

      But professional singers are generally singing within their natural vocal range. Also, all the breathy, growly singing pop and rock singers do today does damage the voice. Look at Adele. There were some articles talking about it after her troubles. One of the things is that most singers keep any vocal troubles very secret, because they don’t want to lose work.

    • Lilacmaven says:

      Many people who aren’t professionally trained to sing tend to sing from their throats, rather than their diaphragm. That could definitely lead to damage if it’s being done repeatedly for hours at a time, day-after-day, as he would’ve been doing on set for two years.

  7. HeyKay says:

    I wonder what his next project will be?
    I give him credit, he has been working the Elvis PR like crazy. The PTB, must be pleased that he is going all out to keep the film in the press, it did big box office also.
    Since he claims to have spent 3+ years working on this movie, did he receive a cut of the box office I wonder.
    Will he win the Oscar? Or is he a one-trick pony?

    IIRC correctly, Gary Busey was huge after the Buddy Holly film and he did continue to work but never at that level again. Lou Diamond Phillips also did the LaBamba film to big success, and has continued to work for years.

  8. Emmi says:

    I don’t know why he thought it was a good idea to keep talking like this after the movie wrapped. I can understand slipping into the voice now and then during the first few weeks. But nobody will convince me that it wasn’t just a little fake for awards season and promotion before that. Come on. I watched that actors’ roundtable and it was so annoying because it sounded so fake. Like he was straining.

  9. Christine says:

    IMO he was only using the voice to remind everyone what role he played because he’s super bland. I’m not surprised it’s magically going away now that awards season is almost wrapped

    • Coco says:

      This, right after the Oscars the accent will go way. This is just prep-work for when he stops using the voice in hope of getting ahead of any stories that he used it for his Oscar campaign.

  10. TeamMeg says:

    Just went and watched a few interviews with Austin Butler. Wow…he reminds me so much of Brad Pitt! Anyone else see that? Not in looks, but in his similar manner of speaking, his timing and gestures, and same weird sense of attempting to be humble.

    I do think AB did an amazing job in the role of Elvis. I can’t imagine playing someone mega famous like that, succeeding at it so well, and not thinking I was the GOAT.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZRnGs-fFSsI

    • Frippery says:

      Bruce Campbell was the best on-screen Elvis.

      • NormaLeft says:

        Eh, I’m a HUGE Bruce Campbell fan (got my tickets for Bruce-o-rama in April!), but he wasn’t “the best on-screen Elvis.” He was fun and funny in Bubba Ho-Tep, but “the best on-screen Elvis” he was not.

  11. Mabs A'Mabbin says:

    What a goober.

  12. Silver Charm says:

    I’ll miss the voice. It was sillyfun. Baz has moved on to invoking Lisa Marie and using her as a talking point to boost his Best Actor campaign. It’s kinda dark. Go back to the fake accent.

  13. J.Ferber says:

    I don’t see how copying an accent can “damage” his voice. Is this a bid for how much he’s suffered for the role and “deserves” the Oscar? Please.