PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Redd Pepper
rdfs:comment
  • Redd Pepper (b. Richardson Green, Barbados, 1961) is a voice actor notable for his work providing theatrical trailers for movies such as Amistad, The Blair Witch Project, Men in Black and Boogie Nights. His vocal style is similar to that of Don LaFontaine. Born in Barbados, Pepper moved to London when he was young with his six sisters and three brothers. He attended Sedghill Secondary School in South East London. His first job was at a McDonalds restaurant after which he spent six months as a fireman and then became a train driver on the London Underground.
owl:sameAs
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:manga/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Birth Date
  • 1961-06-23
Name
  • Redd Pepper
Birth Place
  • Barbados
Image size
  • 150
Occupation
abstract
  • Redd Pepper (b. Richardson Green, Barbados, 1961) is a voice actor notable for his work providing theatrical trailers for movies such as Amistad, The Blair Witch Project, Men in Black and Boogie Nights. His vocal style is similar to that of Don LaFontaine. Born in Barbados, Pepper moved to London when he was young with his six sisters and three brothers. He attended Sedghill Secondary School in South East London. His first job was at a McDonalds restaurant after which he spent six months as a fireman and then became a train driver on the London Underground. He got bored very easily, and to spice things up, he used to stop the train between stations, turn off the lights and start talking on the loudspeaker system. "I used to say stuff like: 'This is your driver speaking... or is it?' in a really spooky voice" It was in 1996 that a television executive passenger on one of his trains offered him his card and asked him to call him. After providing numerous voiceovers for TV channels and adverts, he began doing movie trailers with his first being Space Jam in 1996. He also voiced Mike Leroi/Shadow Man in the video game Shadow Man. He came to prominence following his voice-over work for Armageddon and Independence Day when he was mistaken for Hollywood voice artist Don LaFontaine. Asked if he missed being a Tube driver, he responded "Listen, I make £3,000 to £4,000 per movie trailer. What do you think?" He is also a stage actor, having appeared in an Edinburgh Festival production of Jeffrey Archer's Prison Diaries. Recent work includes a long-standing relationship with the Chris Moyles Breakfast Show on BBC Radio 1, where Pepper provides idents and voiceovers for various segments of the show.