- Mary Moore (Time Lady)
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In the United States of America, Mary Moore was the first national voice of the Bell System's standardized speaking clock[1] and also provided the voice behind many telephone company recordings on equipment manufactured by Audichron.
Moore's voice was often recognized for the distinctive two-syllable pronunciations of 9 ("NY-un") and 5 ("Fy-uv"). This was a required of telephone operators at the time, because "nine" and "five" can sound very similar on a poor-quality line.
Prior to Moore's recordings and Audichron equipment, an operator would sit in a room and read the time every 10 seconds. Callers reaching a disconnected number would be informed by the operator personally. Moore had one of these reading jobs herself before she was formally recorded.
References
- ^ David Lazarus. “Time of day calling it quits at AT&T”. © Los Angeles Times, 2007. Newspaper. Los Angeles Times. 29 Aug 2007.
Preceded by
Post createdVoice of AT&T
circa 1934 - 1 January 1963Succeeded by
Jane BarbeCategories:- American voice actors
- Bell System
- Telephone voiceover talent
- Possibly living people
- American voice actor stubs
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