Singing Voice & Vocal Performance
Singing Voice & Vocal Performance
When the Performance Has to Sing
Singing in a voiceover context demands something most singers aren’t trained for and most voice actors can’t deliver: the ability to serve the material on both levels simultaneously. The voice has to be technically grounded enough to carry pitch, tone, and phrasing — and flexible enough to stay in character, hit a comedic beat, or sell a product in eight bars or less.
That dual demand is where formal vocal training meets the realities of the recording booth. A commercially viable singing performance isn’t a concert — it’s a character moment that happens to be in song.
A Foundation in Classical Performance
George Washington III spent 14 years with Opera Carolina as a chorister and soloist, performing principal and featured roles in some of the most demanding works in the operatic repertoire. His stage credits include the Imperial Commissioner in Madama Butterfly, Doctor Grenvil in La traviata, the Physician in Macbeth, the Duke of Verona in Roméo et Juliette, the Messenger in Rigoletto, Father in Hansel and Gretel, Balthazar in Amahl and the Night Visitors, and Jim in Porgy and Bess.
He was also a featured soloist with the Peoria Symphony Orchestra in a choral production of Porgy and Bess — a role that placed him on the concert stage alongside a full professional symphony orchestra.
That foundation — built over more than a decade in professional opera — is the engine behind everything he brings to commercial and character singing work. The breath support, the dynamic control, the ability to sustain a performance across an extended session: these are not skills that can be approximated. They are trained, and George has them.
His academic grounding is equally deep. George holds a Bachelor of Arts in Music from Northwestern University, one of the country’s premier music programs.
The Range of a Working Singing Voice Actor
Classical training is the foundation. But what makes George Washington III exceptional in the voiceover space is the breadth of what he can do with it.
His commercial singing credits span styles and brands: Harris Teeter, the NC Education Lottery, Fruit by the Foot, and Robitussin. These are not operatic performances — they are character-driven, style-specific, and commercially polished. The ability to move between a full lyric baritone and a light, accessible commercial tone without losing authenticity is a professional skill that takes years to develop.
His character singing work is equally versatile. For the YotoPlayer children’s audio program Morris and the Magic Bell, George voiced and sang as multiple distinct characters within the same production — each with its own vocal identity, personality, and musical style. In the podcasts BS de Résistance and My Friend Lyssa (Suffolk and Goode Players), he performed original songs in character across a range of styles, bringing the same commitment to musical storytelling that he brings to the operatic stage.
Sacred and Concert Work
Beyond stage and studio, George has served as a featured soloist at Davidson United Methodist Church, Myers Park United Methodist Church, St. Mark’s Lutheran Church, and the Unitarian Universalist Community of Charlotte — all in North Carolina. Sacred solo work demands a different kind of presence than commercial or theatrical performance: intimate, grounded, and emotionally direct. It is some of the most nuanced singing a performer can do.
Comedy, Character, and the Unexpected Note
Not every singing moment is serious. Some of the most effective uses of a singing voice in voiceover are the ones that catch an audience off guard — a comic character who breaks into song, an absurdist jingle, a parody that lands because the performer is actually good enough to sell the joke with real technique underneath it.
George’s work in the BS de Résistance and My Friend Lyssa podcasts lives in this space — original character songs that require both musical credibility and comic timing. The ability to do both in the same breath is genuinely rare.
How VO Evolution and George Washington III Can Help
Whether you need a classically grounded baritone for a prestige brand campaign, a character singer for an animated production or children’s audio program, a soloist for sacred or concert work, or a comedic vocal performer who can sell an original song in character — George Washington III brings the training, the range, and the professional discipline to deliver.
His voice carries authority and warmth in equal measure. His technique is real. And his ability to adapt that technique to whatever the project demands — commercial, theatrical, comedic, sacred — is what sets him apart in the voiceover space.
Singing Voice Credits
Commercial
- Harris Teeter
- NC Education Lottery
- Fruit by the Foot
- Robitussin
Character & Children’s Audio
- Morris and the Magic Bell (YotoPlayer) — multiple characters
Podcast
- BS de Résistance (Suffolk and Goode Players) — original character songs
- My Friend Lyssa (Suffolk and Goode Players) — original character songs
Opera Carolina — Principal & Featured Roles
- Madama Butterfly — The Imperial Commissioner
- La traviata — Doctor Grenvil
- Macbeth — The Physician
- Roméo et Juliette — The Duke of Verona
- Rigoletto — The Messenger
- Hansel and Gretel — Father
- Amahl and the Night Visitors — Balthazar
- Porgy and Bess — Jim
Concert
- Peoria Symphony Orchestra — Featured Soloist, Porgy and Bess
Sacred Solo
- Davidson United Methodist Church (NC)
- Myers Park United Methodist Church (NC)
- St. Mark’s Lutheran Church (NC)
- Unitarian Universalist Community of Charlotte (NC)






