• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Schools
  • Government/Politics
  • Food/Restaurant
  • Arts/Entertainment/Media
  • History
  • Health and Fitness
  • Sports
  • Kobe At Lower Merion
  • 21st Century On The Main Line

This Is Lower Merion And Narberth

Serving the Main Line Community

  • Ardmore
  • Bala Cynwyd
  • Belmont Hills
  • Bryn Mawr
  • Gladwyne
  • Haverford
  • Merion
  • Narberth
  • Penn Valley
  • Penn Wynne
  • Rosemont
  • Villanova
  • Wynnewood

Kate Winslet Wins Accolades For Delco Accent In Soon To Be Released ‘Mare Of Easttown’

by Gerry

Kate Winslet Wins Accolades For Delco Accent In Soon To Be Released Mare of Easttown

On Wednesday, HBO released a trailer for Mare of Easttown, a series that premieres on April 18, starring Kate Winslet. As the HBO website describes it “a small-town Pennsylvania detective Mare Sheehan (Kate Winslet) investigates a local murder. The series explores the dark side of a close community and provides an authentic examination of how family and past tragedies can define our present.”

In Phillyvoice.com, Matt Mullin thoroughly approves of Winslet’s treatment of the Delco Accent. He wrote Even though the show is set in Chester County, it seems like some of it was shot in Delaware County — Easttown is right on the border of the two — and that’s where Winslet reportedly adopted the accent from. I think it’s also worth noting here that while I call the accent a Philly accent, that’s more of a general term, as there are several different versions within the region. A South Philly accent isn’t the same as a Northeast Philly accent, for instance. And this is very clearly a Delco accent.

Mullin also provides stopping points in the trailer where Winslet’s mastery of the accent can be heard.

• At 0:33, when she is talking to Guy Pearce at the bar and asks, “You don’t have any bodies under your porch, do you?” 

• At 1:32, when she yells at her mom in the kitchen.

• At 1:50, when she says “Allatime,” as pointed out by Gary (@geeholla) on Twitter.

• But the crowning achievement comes at 1:41, when she says, “Doing something great is overrated.” It doesn’t get much better than that.

Winslow Said Delco Accent Was Challenging

 

On February 11, also in Phillyvoice.com, Allie Miller wrote During a recent virtual panel, Winslet said adopting the Delco accent was one of the most challenging accents ever required of her, IndieWire reported. Winslet said attempting it even made her “throw things.”

“It was up there with the hardest accents I’ve ever done, in the top three for sure,” Winslet said. “It’s one of only two dialects in my life that made me throw things — that and the dialogue that they made me do in the movie about Steve Jobs.”

Filed Under: Arts/Entertainment/Media Tagged With: Mare of Easttown

Primary Sidebar

Sports

Family Learning To Luge

Want to Try Luge? From Lower Merion, It Starts With a Drive to Lake Placid

I was watching the Luge on NBC over the weekend. I thought it was boring, especially when juxtaposed against the more dramatic events, like curling.  The color commentator kept explaining how each “slider” was doing something slightly better or worse than the others, but to my untrained eye, they all looked the same: feet first, […]

Arts and Entertainment

January 16-18: The Philly Pen Show — A Delightfully Analog Experience

f you’re looking for a break from screens, alerts, and endless scrolling, the Philly Pen Show might be the cure—at least temporarily. It’s an unapologetically analog event: pens, paper, ink, and the people who still care deeply about them. Whether you’re a serious collector, someone who misses the feel of writing by hand, or just […]

Hoots and Hellmouth at Bryn Mawr Gazebo

Bryn Mawr Gazebo Rocks To Hoots and Hellmouth

https://youtu.be/YOkPbgp7nII?si=YTr-Zo0vInLyPDa_ Music fans in Bryn Mawr were treated on Saturday night (July 20) to a high-energy performance by the Philadelphia band Hoots and Hellmouth. On several occasions, the group brought the audience to its feet by playing a mashup of music styles, including folk, gospel revival, blues, pop, and rock.

Trouble with Angels

Opening Shot Of 1966 Movie ‘The Trouble With Angels’ – At Merion Station

https://youtu.be/gaOBPM7unGg?si=6OSbdDO6ztY4nNLZ In 1966, when the movie “The Trouble With Angels” was filmed, a crew came to Merion Station to shoot a 12-second scene.  

More Posts from this Category

© 2019–2026