Sabrina Farhi |
A new NPR voice will quickly become one of the most-heard in
radio broadcasting. Sabrina Farhi joins NPR as the first on-staff Announcer –
voicing all broadcast and digital underwriting credits. Listeners will begin to
hear Farhi's own articulation of "Support for NPR comes from..." in
November, as she reminds audiences of the multitude of Member stations,
corporations and institutions who contribute funding to NPR and public radio.
"Out of hundreds of voices, Sabrina's immediately stood
out for its warmth and conversational approach," says Eric Nuzum, vice
president of NPR Programming. "We think listeners and supporters will find
her engaging."
Farhi, a voice-over and theater actress, will work out of
NPR's Washington , D.C. headquarters, to record, produce and
edit all underwriting credits. For the remainder of 2013, she will be heard
alongside Frank Tavares, the longtime and iconic voice of NPR credits. Tavares
has voiced NPR's funding credits for more than three decades – and since moving
from Washington in the late 1980s, has
recorded them from his home in Connecticut .
In addition to her commercial voice-over work, which includes
national campaigns for TIAA-Cref and Bioré Skincare, Farhi has extensive
experience performing in the New York
City independent theatre community, and frequently
with No Tea Productions. Farhi was born and raised in New
York City , and lived abroad for ten years before getting her
Bachelor of Arts in Theatre Arts from Brandeis University .
She is currently completing her Master of Arts in Media Studies at the New School ,
with a focus in Sound Studies.
NPR's journalism and programming is made possible by the
generous commitment and support of corporations, foundations and individuals.
Sponsorship messaging on NPR is highlighted in an uncluttered environment – and
offers sponsors unprecedented reach to and engagement with its audience of 27
million listeners weekly. Farhi will voice all underwriting credits featured in
national NPR broadcasts and across digital platforms, including podcasts,
playlists and program streams at NPR.org, and in the suite of mobile apps.
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