Are you crazy, or is Frasier urging you to sign up with MCI? You're not crazy. More and more celebs are making an effort to be heard, and not seen, doing commercial voice-overs. Given the easy time demands (usually a few hours' work) and cash involved (''We pay [celebs] way over scale,'' says Team One cochairman and creative director Tom Cordner of paychecks that can hit $1 million), who can blame them? Here, a roundup of recent pitchmen.
STAR Drew Carey
PRODUCT Chevy Venture
THE AD A Jack Russell
terrier tries to woo the saucy Afghan in the next car by
juggling and doing flips in the ample space of a minivan.
THE
PITCH ''You never know when a little extra room is going to come
in handy.''
WHY HIM?? ''We liked him because he seemed very
different from your average minivan personality,'' says Jim
Gorman, senior VP and creative director of ad agency
Campbell-Ewald. ''We wanted to say, 'It's okay to drive a
minivan.'''
STAR Kelsey Grammer
PRODUCT MCI
THE AD Grammer is the voice of
reason coming through the office intercom in a series of eight
spots.
THE PITCH ''One team. One company. One local-to-global
connection.''
WHY HIM?? ''We needed a big personality who could
bring life to an inanimate object,'' says Gretchen Gehrett, VP of
advertising and communications at MCI.
STAR Sigourney Weaver
PRODUCT Buick
THE AD City life is
romanticized in three spots featuring sophisticated couples
escaping (e.g., newlyweds fleeing their wedding) in the sleek
black sedan.
THE PITCH ''Park Avenue by Buick. The power of
understatement.''
WHY HER?? ''We were looking for a voice that is
rich and passionate,'' says Nina Abnee, group account director of
McCann-Erickson Detroit. ''And she is such a great actress that
she can enhance the luxury image in a natural way.''
STAR Joe Pesci
PRODUCT Lexus
THE AD As part of ''The Road Is
Calling'' campaign, Pesci is the voice of the snarling Brooklyn
Bridge challenging the ES 300.
THE PITCH ''You want a piece a'
me?... I got your fancy suspension right here.''
WHY HIM?? ''He has
the quintessential tough-guy voice,'' says Team One account
supervisor Valencia Gayles. ''We look for celebrity voices that
correspond to the personality of the road.''
STAR Rosie O'Donnell
PRODUCT California prunes
THE AD In two
animated spots, Rosie's the voice of Josephine (with Napoleon)
and a busy Cleopatra.
THE PITCH ''California prunes, the
energy-packed supersnack.''
WHY HER?? ''We wanted the double
entendre of these historical characters with a very modern, hip
voice,'' says John Randazzo Jr., account supervisor at Randazzo &
Blavins. Plus, Rosie has that ''highly recognizable New York
accent.''
STAR Sylvester Stallone
PRODUCT Pontiac Bonneville
THE AD In
one of the three spots Stallone voices, a chrome hood ornament
shaped like an overstuffed gentleman comes to life only to be
left coughing in the dust of a Bonneville.
THE PITCH ''Luxury
with attitude.''
WHY HIM?? ''He personifies luxury with attitude,''
says senior VP and group creative director Mark Zapico of DMB&B.


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