シャドーイング練習: Emma Watson Reveals How She Became Hermione & The “Destiny” Behind Harry Potter Casting - YouTubeで英語スピーキングを学ぶ

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mentioned that you talked about how harry potter had a family feel
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mentioned that you talked about how harry potter had a family feel
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and i wanted to ask you how did
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that come about in the first like what what was where did the auditions come from like how did
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that become a part of your life yes
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so i did not go to a performing arts school i'd never done anything i never acted professionally
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but they came they they did like a basically countrywide searched to find Harry,
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Hermione and Ron and so they asked my school
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if they wanted to submit any students who love drama who wanted to audition
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and so I was one of I think about 12 students that was asked if I wanted to audition.
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I don't know, it was weird.
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I had this weird, weighted,
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fated sense of destiny pretty much from the moment that they mentioned the audition.
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I remember I brought maybe seven different Beanie Babies with me along and all these different lucky talismans.
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I loved the world and the book so much.
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My dad had been reading them to me before bed
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when I would spend the weekends with him and on long car journeys.
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We'd often drive back and forwards to France and that's how the time would be passed.
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And so I was just like,
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loved the world, loved Hermione.
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And for me, it wasn't so much about acting so much as it was that like,
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I just, the books meant so much to me personally.
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Did you feel like it was destiny for you or did it feel like,
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did you always feel like it was going to be this?
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I always...
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Because obviously the books were already, you know.
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I always felt like Hermione was...
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I knew I was never auditioning for anything else.
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Like, I knew it was her.
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I don't know.
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I don't know how to explain it.
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Something felt right about it.
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And my, yeah, my poor parents,
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because if I hadn't have got it,
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I think they knew her crush.
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I ended up doing nine auditions over a period of over a year and a half,
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which for a nine-year-old is a massive commitment.
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But I loved her.
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I loved it.
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I really did.
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What do you wish now that you would have known before you became Hermione?
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I did a pretty good job.
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And actually, I give my mother specifically credit for this.
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She was like a warrior for my normalcy and for me having an ordinary life and going to school.
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And no one wanted that.
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I mean, it would have been considerably easier if I had not continued going to school.
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But she, wow, like I will forever be in her debt.
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She somehow knew that me feeling part of the ordinary world
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and feeling I had a place in it and that I belonged outside of those films was going to be crucial.
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Wow, that's really incredible.
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It was because she basically didn't have anyone on her team.
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She was kind of on her own on that one.
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And she fought tooth and nail.
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She was on the phone for hours saying she has to sit her exams,
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she has to go back,
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like she needs to be here,
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she needs to have some parts of a normal childhood.
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And yeah, forever in her death.
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That's so special to have had that and have those,
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yeah, to have a parent who can foresee,
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and you can't see anything for yourself.
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Yeah, no, and to be honest,
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I didn't really, I didn't really get it.
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No, of course not.
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I was like, okay, I guess it's important.
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I didn't really get it.
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So I think, yeah, she was amazing.
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Yeah.
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When did, because from what I was reading,
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from what you shared with me,
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when did Emma, you, Emma Watson and Hermione and the characters that then followed start to get blurred and intertwined?
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because that expectation that comes with...
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I remember this and I share it because,
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to give it to context to people,
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I was walking down the road with one of my friends
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who's an actor who gets recognized a hundred times for every one time I get recognized.
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So just to put it in context.
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And so if we're walking down,
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this person gets stopped a hundred times for pictures and then I'll get stopped once.
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And it was really beautiful because we'd spent a day together and that person had been stopped a hundred times,
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and they had been stopped a couple of times.
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And then they said something to me.
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They said, Jay, you're really lucky.
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And I said, what do you mean?
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And I thought they were going to say,
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because I'm anonymous to some degree.
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But they didn't.
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He said to me, he goes, Jay, you're really lucky.
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Because he goes, when people stop me,
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they stop me for who I play to be.
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And when they stop you,
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they stop you for who you are.
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And it was really encouraging words from someone that I respect a lot.
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And I was like, wow,
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like I never thought about it like that.
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I just, I just, it hadn't hit me how different it was.
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And because I think you just see fame or success or whatever it is,
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this one big bubble of stuff,
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especially when you're not that close to it,
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you don't know too much about it.
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And it was that conversation that made me even be even more personal with everyone
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that I ever spoke to because they'd always have a personal story
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or uh and and that's not not to say
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that isn't true for music and for acting
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and of course there is I don't want to take away from it no no um
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and I'm not saying
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that as a egotistical statement I'm saying it as like how hard it is for an individual to go through
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that yes and to be disassociated from themselves yes uh because
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that role could be a part of you it could be
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an expression of you it was a part of life at a same period of time,
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but of course it isn't you.
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But does that make any sense?
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I remember when I gave my UN speech about he for she and about feminism and women's rights,
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and people started stopping me because of things that had come from me and that I'd said.
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It felt like a very significant transition for me
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because for the first time I felt like I could I could look someone in the eye
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and receive and accept something that they were saying because I felt like it actually had something to do with me.
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And I wasn't just kind of a custodian of something sacred,
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which I did take very seriously and I still do,
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but it had been a direct transmission for me.
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And I think that's why writing has become so important to me,
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is because it's a way that I can say things directly and that feels really meaningful.

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このレッスンについて

このレッスンでは、エマ・ワトソンがハリー・ポッターのハーマイオニー役をどのように獲得したのか、その過程について学びます。彼女の経験を通じて、オーディションや運命感についての英語の表現を学び、スピーキングやシャドーイングのスキルを向上させましょう。具体的には、彼女が感じた「運命」や、通常の生活を保つことの重要性についても触れます。これは、YouTubeで英語学習を進める上で非常に興味深い内容です。

重要な語彙&フレーズ

  • audition - オーディション
  • destiny - 運命
  • talismans - お守り
  • commitment - 約束、献身
  • normalcy - 普通の状態、一般性
  • belonged - 所属していた
  • ordinary world - 普通の世界

練習のヒント

この動画のスピードとトーンを考慮しながら、効果的なシャドーイングを行うためのアドバイスをいくつか紹介します。まず、動画を数回視聴して内容を把握し、その後シャドースピーチに取り組んでみてください。エマ・ワトソンの話し方は自然で流れるようなので、それに合わせて声を出すことが大切です。また、動作も真似てみると、より発音や表現が自然になります。例えば、彼女が「運命」を語るときの感情を捉えて、自分の発音にもその感情を反映させましょう。これは、シャドーイングサイトでの練習にも役立ちます。最後に、ゆっくりとしたスピードから始めて、徐々に自分のペースを合わせていくと良いでしょう。これにより、言葉のリズムを体得しやすくなります。

シャドーイングとは?英語上達に効果的な理由

シャドーイング(Shadowing)は、もともとプロの通訳者養成プログラムで開発された言語学習法で、多言語習得者として知られるDr. Alexander Arguelles によって広く普及されました。方法はシンプルですが非常に効果的:ネイティブスピーカーの英語を聞きながら、1〜2秒の遅延で声に出してすぐに繰り返す——まるで「影(shadow)」のように話者を追いかけます。文法ドリルや受動的なリスニングと異なり、シャドーイングは脳と口の筋肉が同時にリアルタイムで英語を処理・再現することを強制します。研究により、発音精度、抑揚、リズム、連音、リスニング力、そして会話の流暢さが大幅に向上することが確認されています。IELTSスピーキング対策や自然な英語コミュニケーションを目指す方に特におすすめです。

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