Selfridge and his mother were both from Ripon, Wisconsin, not Michigan. Harry Selfridge lived in Michigan for a few years when he was a young man, and moved to Chicago, where he lived for the next 25 years, before coming to London. His wife, Rose, was a member of the prominent Buckingham family of Chicago, who donated the famous Buckingham Fountain to the city.
In my experience as a Chicago native who has visited Wisconsin dozens of times, people in south, south-central, and eastern Wisconsin sound like Midwesterners; not all that different from Chicago. Since the locales I just named contain Milwaukee, Madison, Janesville, Kenosha, Waukesha, Racine, Green Bay, Appleton, Oshkosh, West Allis, Sheboygan, and Fond du Lac, among others, I think I've just included about 90% of the population of the state. In general, Chicagoans have a stronger, flatter accent, more guttural vowels, and a bit more of a twang than folks from points north. (The suburb I grew up in, Lincolnwood, and its next-door neighbor where I went to high school, Skokie, gave name to an accent that is mentioned in several studies of accents of the area: the Skokiewood Twang. I used to have it, in spades, but years of living all over the world ended up with me sounding like a Canadian.) Of course, Selfridge speaks very rapidly, as befits his nature and personality, so he sounds more like a Chicagoan - albeit an upper-crust Chicagoan - than he sounds like someone from Michigan. Jeremy Piven, of course, although New York-born, was raised in Evanston, a North Shore suburb of Chicago, and spent the first 25 or so years of his life in Chicago. I was set to study with his parents, famed acting teachers, but I landed a part in a play that went on tour, and by the time I was free, it was too late to join the sessions in progress, and by the next cycle, I had left for college. I'm about eight years older than Jeremy Piven, so while it's entirely possible I met or saw him at his parents' studio, I have no recollection of him. But I used to sound like he sounds - CHICAGO. NOT Michigan.
reply
share