![]() ![]() ![]() Loosely based on Megara and Deianira, Hercules' first and second wives in Greek mythology, directors Ron Clements and John Musker adapted Meg into a morally conflicted con artist, while basing her role and personality on 1940s screwball comediennes, particularly actress Barbara Stanwyck's performance in The Lady Eve (1941).Įgan had already been starring as Belle in the stage adaptation of Disney's Beauty and the Beast (1994) when she learned of auditions for Hercules. Hades forces Meg to uncover Hercules' weaknesses by seducing him in return for her freedom, only to develop genuine feelings for the character instead. Voiced by actress Susan Egan, Meg is introduced as a cynical young woman enslaved by Hades, god of the underworld. ![]() After returning to Athens she acted in films and was twice given the best actress award for features and shorts in theatre plays, mainly in Athens but also London, Vienna, Warsaw, Paris, Brussels and on TV, where she led eight TV shows in Greece.Megara, also known as Meg, is a fictional character who appears in the Walt Disney Pictures 35th animated film Hercules (1997). Alexandra grew up in an Austrian-Greek family in Vienna, Berlin and Athens, where she completed the German Abitur and then went on to study theatre in the UK for 6 years. ![]() During her long and renowned career she has worked intensively on commercials and corporate videos as well as security instructions, phone messages, IVR and dubbing animated films, such as Pocahontas 1 & 2 as Pocahontas, The Lion King 1 & 2 as Nala, 101 Dalmatians as Anita and in Titan as Akima. Alexandra has been the official Vodafone voice in Greek and English for over 13 years. Her voice is extremely versatile and adaptable. Experience She records in Greek, German and English and sometimes in French for clients who require one voice for all 4 languages, such as for the Olympic Games of 2004 and the Special Olympics 2011 in Athens, the Greek and Cypriot tourist boards, British Airways, Aegean Airlines, airport announcements, Minoan Ferry Lines, mailboxes, as well as announcements in the Athens Tramway. ![]()
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