The mention of TV shows and accents prompts me to mention that if you want a lesson in Southern accents in some (but not all) of their variety, watch the miniseries "Deadwood".
They have a number of characters who are originally Southern and who were allowed to use their real accents for the show.
Jim Beaver - Whitney Ellsworth - Texas
W. Earl Brown - Dan Dority - Mid- Tennessee
Kim Dickens - Joanie Stubbs - North Alabama
William Sanderson - E.B. Farnum - Memphis, TN
Sean Bridges - Johnny Burns - Eastern North Carolina
Powers Booth - Cy Tolliver - Texas
Gerald McRaney - George Hearst - Mississippi
All had true Southern accents and all are different. When I heard W. Earl Brown/Dan Dority speak on the show for the first time it took about 5 seconds (or less) for me to say to myself, "That guy is from HERE." I looked him up and it turns out he grew up about an hour's drive west of Nashville.
It is always annoying to Southerners to hear actors *trying* to do a Southern accent. Even though they have about a dozen or more to choose from they rarely get any of them right.
I suspect that in the Age there were twice as many Southern variants just because there was less travel and less TV/radio influence.
(Historical note: By choice or by chance, it was accurate for "Deadwood" to have so many Southerners in the cast. There was a saying in the late 1800's that, "The Confederates took Montana without firing a shot." since so many went there after the War.)
They have a number of characters who are originally Southern and who were allowed to use their real accents for the show.
Jim Beaver - Whitney Ellsworth - Texas
W. Earl Brown - Dan Dority - Mid- Tennessee
Kim Dickens - Joanie Stubbs - North Alabama
William Sanderson - E.B. Farnum - Memphis, TN
Sean Bridges - Johnny Burns - Eastern North Carolina
Powers Booth - Cy Tolliver - Texas
Gerald McRaney - George Hearst - Mississippi
All had true Southern accents and all are different. When I heard W. Earl Brown/Dan Dority speak on the show for the first time it took about 5 seconds (or less) for me to say to myself, "That guy is from HERE." I looked him up and it turns out he grew up about an hour's drive west of Nashville.
It is always annoying to Southerners to hear actors *trying* to do a Southern accent. Even though they have about a dozen or more to choose from they rarely get any of them right.
I suspect that in the Age there were twice as many Southern variants just because there was less travel and less TV/radio influence.
(Historical note: By choice or by chance, it was accurate for "Deadwood" to have so many Southerners in the cast. There was a saying in the late 1800's that, "The Confederates took Montana without firing a shot." since so many went there after the War.)