

It was during this process that Garner picked up on Delvey's propensity to brush her hair behind her ears and to readjust her glasses, which the actor does throughout Inventing Anna. Garner went to visit Delvey in prison before she embarked on filming, in order to decipher the complexities of her criminal counterpart's dialect.
#JULIA GARNER INTERVIEW ACCENT SERIES#
While Garner has nailed the essence of the accent’s oddity, Sorokin’s actual voice is softer, the pronunciation subtler’. She's winning praise for her turn as Anna Delvey in the Netflix series Inventing Anna, and Julia Garner has revealed she actually met with the conwoman in prison. ‘I found Netflix Anna too nasally, the words harshly diced, each syllable too carefully executed. Julia Garner's accentĮmily Palmer, who wrote about the show for The New York Times, was quick to comment on Julia Garner's accent in the series.


Another way, she revealed in an interview with W Magazine, was by journaling. Hanna (Julia Garner) is the cautious one and Liv (Jessica Henwick) is the broken one, leading to a few uncomfortable scenes where Liv gets fall-down drunk. Sorokin confirmed that this was absolutely not the case, in a text message sent from the facility she wrote, ‘Def no tea at rikers!’. 'Inventing Anna' actress Julia Garner talks about finding the con artists infamous accent. Nailing an accent is just one way that Julia Garner is able to find her way into the heart of a character. In one scene during the early episodes of the production, Delvey and her interviewer are filmed drinking tea from porcelain cups at the prison. In Inventing Anna, Delvey and Vivian's interview process is shown to be an intimate affair, which often takes place in a private room separate from the crowded hall where prisoners meet their visitors. Journalist Jessica Pressler and Anna Chlumsky as Vivian Kent in Inventing Anna Getty Images/ Netfilx Delvey's special treatment at Rikers
