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Celebrity TTS Free · No install · Studio quality

Free Ana de Armas
AI voice generator.

Type any script. Hear it back in that warm Cuban-Spanish inflection — breathy, close, unhurried — the register she brings to a Bond cold-open, a Knives Out monologue, or a two-minute scene that takes place entirely across a dinner table. Studio-quality MP3 in under a minute. No software to install. Built on HyperVoice, our proprietary neural TTS engine.

✓ 60,000+ creators ✓ 300+ AI voices ✓ 4.9 ★ rating ✓ Studio-quality MP3
Demo · Ana de Armas · Intimate
★ 5.0 HD
"You want the truth? Sit down. This will take a minute."
0:00
6,120 plays · 980 likes Hear full preview →
GEN
AA
Ana de Armas ★ Style model
Breathy · Close-mic · Cuban-Spanish inflection with an intimate storyteller cadence
6.1K uses 980 likes 2 weeks ago
Your script 0 / 500
Voice style
Or swap voice
MP3 · 44.1 kHz Studio quality ~4 seconds
§ 01 · Numbers
300+
AI voices in library
30
Languages supported
~10s
Average processing time
60K+
Creators worldwide
4.9/5
Average user rating
§ 02
What makes her voice recognizable
Voice DNA · TTS perspective

She doesn't raise her voice.
She lowers the room.

The first thing you notice when Ana de Armas speaks is how close she sounds. Even on a 70mm print of Blade Runner 2049, even in a Bond cold-open cut for IMAX, the voice reads like it's being said to one person from across a small table. That's the Cuban-Spanish register underneath the English — vowels that sit a little further forward, consonants softened just enough that nothing has hard edges. She has a breathy, upper-mid register that never clicks into broadcast mode. It's the delivery of an actor who trusts the room to lean in.

TaskAGI's Ana de Armas AI voice generator runs on HyperVoice, our proprietary text-to-speech engine built with emotional control as a core feature — not an add-on. The model captures the specific markers: the slight melodic lift on a question that would otherwise be flat, the way she holds a pause a half-beat longer than the line requires, the warmth she threads through a sentence even when the content is cold.

You hear it most clearly in her Knives Out work — the scenes where she's carrying the confession, the confidante, the quiet revelation. That's the texture the Intimate style captures: unhurried, storyteller-first, like someone is telling you a thing they've only told one other person. Switch to the Theatrical style and the model reaches for her No Time to Die register — cleaner English, tighter attack, more Hollywood polish while keeping the inflection underneath.

This tool exists for creators who want that specific energy for their own work. Trailer editors cutting prestige film teasers. Audiobook producers needing a female narrator with a bilingual ear. Indie filmmakers scoring a scene that has to feel like one human talking to another, not a brand. Documentary narrators on stories set in Havana, Miami, or anywhere else the accent belongs. Type your script, pick the style, get a studio-quality MP3 in under a minute.

REGISTER
Upper-mid. Breathy.
Sits a notch higher than most leading-lady voices, but the breath underneath pulls it close. Feels whispered even when it isn't.
CADENCE
Unhurried. Storyteller.
Half-beats longer than the line asks for. Pauses where a thought is landing, not where grammar says to stop.
INFLECTION
Warm lift on questions.
Small melodic rise where flat would be easier. Colour in the places a less confident reading would skip past.
ACCENT
Cuban-Spanish + English.
Default Havana inflection under Hollywood English. Toggle Latin style to push the Spanish phrasing further forward.
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How it works
Three steps · under 60 seconds
01
Paste your script
Drop in a trailer line, an audiobook chapter, a documentary passage, a scene monologue, a podcast cold-open. The Ana de Armas style reads best when the writing leaves room — long sentences and present-tense description both work. Up to 500 characters on the free plan.
02
Pick a style & mood
Intimate for the close, storyteller default. Latin to push the Cuban-Spanish phrasing further forward. Whisper when the scene is meant to be confessional. Theatrical when you need the No Time to Die register — polished, controlled, still warm.
03
Download the MP3
Studio-quality audio, 44.1 kHz, ready to drop into Premiere, DaVinci Resolve, CapCut, Descript, Pro Tools, or any DAW. No re-encoding. No watermarks. No waiting.
§ 04
What you get
Four things that matter
FEATURE · 01
Neural TTS engine
HyperVoice is a purpose-built text-to-speech model with emotional control baked into the architecture. It processes your script and applies the breathy, close-mic register — the upper-mid warmth and Cuban-Spanish inflection — that defines Ana de Armas's speaking voice. No stock female voice with a pitch shift. No robotic artifacts.
FEATURE · 02
30-language support
The Ana de Armas style ships with native Spanish, English, French, Portuguese, Italian and 25 more languages. Generate a bilingual Havana-Miami monologue in one pass, or run the same script through English, Spanish and Portuguese for a pan-American campaign — the Cuban-Spanish inflection survives across every language the model speaks.
FEATURE · 03
Voice Design
The preset gets you 90% there. Voice Design is the dial when you need the last 10% — a slightly higher register for a teen character, harder Cuban vowels for a bilingual audiobook, the breath pulled back for a trailer. Build a Latina-POV voice from scratch when no preset fits and save it alongside Ana de Armas.
FEATURE · 04
Emotional control
Dial the intensity per sentence, not per clip. Full confessional whisper for a first-person memoir line, controlled theatrical polish for a Knives Out-style reveal, a close trailer-narration lift for the last beat — all in the same generation. The slider shapes how much breath and stillness the reading carries, sentence by sentence.
§ 05
What creators make with it
Used on YouTube, TikTok, podcasts
01 / 06
Bilingual EN/ES content
Scripts that code-switch between English and Spanish in the same breath — Miami-lifestyle vlogs, first-gen Latina storytime, Havana memoir readings. The Cuban-Spanish inflection stays intact whether the sentence lands in English or pivots mid-clause.
02 / 06
Latina-POV lifestyle
First-person lifestyle content written from a Latina perspective — beauty rituals, food, family, travel. The close-mic warmth makes it feel like a conversation across the kitchen table instead of a polished brand read.
03 / 06
Spy / thriller trailer
Cold-open trailer narration for espionage features, neo-noir shorts, and No Time to Die-style teasers. The unhurried register carries the tension without tipping into voiceover cliché — the line lands because it refuses to push.
04 / 06
Romantic-drama readings
Literary-fiction narration where most of the scene lives in the silence between sentences. Works for memoir, first-person romance, epistolary projects, and dinner-table two-handers where the subtext matters more than the words.
05 / 06
Beauty / luxury VO
Perfume films, jewellery campaigns, hotel brand shorts, fashion-house editorials. The voice signals intimate-luxury instead of corporate-prestige — closer to a private invitation than a public commercial.
06 / 06
Celebrity profile intros
Vanity Fair cover-reveal voiceovers, Vogue 73-questions openers, magazine-profile documentary cold-opens. The style was made for the first thirty seconds of a prestige editorial video — where the voice has to signal caliber in one sentence.
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vs. other TTS tools
Celebrity voice generation · Apr 2026

Five TTS tools.
One built for this.

01
HyperVoice ↴
Free · → $19/mo
4.90
02
ElevenLabs
$22/mo · no celeb voices
4.10
03
Murf
$29/mo · corporate TTS
3.40
04
WellSaid Labs
$44/mo · ad reads only
3.60
05
Uberduck
$10/mo · robotic artifacts
2.75
MOS scores from internal blind listening tests · Ana de Armas-style prompt set · May 2026.
§ 07
Answers
60seconds
First clip in under a minute.
Free plan. No credit card. Type your script, pick the style, download the MP3 — or you never hear from us again.
Still deciding?
The Ana de Armas style bilingual out of the box. 300+ other voices behind it. Voice Design for the Havana register you can't find in the library. 30 languages. Free plan, no card.
Start free →
Does the Cuban-Spanish inflection actually come through?
Yes — that small Havana colour threaded under Hollywood English is the single most distinctive marker of her speaking voice, and it's the first thing the HyperVoice style model was tuned to preserve. The default Intimate style keeps it subtle. Toggle the Latin style and the Spanish phrasing pushes further forward, which is what you want when the script is bilingual or set in a Latin context.
Can I generate Spanish-language content with this voice?
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Absolutely — the Ana de Armas style runs natively in all 30 languages HyperVoice supports, and Spanish is where it sings hardest. Drop a Spanish script in, you get Havana-inflected Spanish out. Drop a mid-sentence EN/ES code-switch, the model carries the accent across the switch. That's what makes it useful for Latina creators rather than just prestige-film parody.
Is this trained on Blade Runner 2049 or No Time to Die?
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No — and it's important that you understand that. The Ana de Armas option is a style model, not a clone. It captures cadence, register, and accent patterns associated with her public speaking voice. It is not trained on her films, interviews, or any copyrighted recording. Output is fully AI-synthesized, the likeness is stylistic, and the page is not sold as a licensed impersonation.
How does this compare with the Angelina Jolie voice model?
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Different archetype entirely. Jolie sits lower, slower, with the American-Anglo gravitas register — built for humanitarian-content and dark-fantasy narration. Ana de Armas sits upper-mid, warmer, more intimate, with the Cuban-Spanish inflection underneath. Use Jolie for weight; use Ana for closeness. Both live in the 100+ celebrity style models library, both switch from the same generator panel.
Does it capture the breathy, intimate close-mic register?
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Yes — and the per-line emotional slider is the dial that lets you push it further when you want confession, or pull it back when you want cooler detachment. Keep the intensity at the default Intimate level for a Knives Out interview register; push it toward whisper for first-person memoir; pull back toward Theatrical for a trailer. Per sentence, not per clip.
Can I make bilingual EN/ES code-switching content?
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Yes. This is actually one of the strongest use cases — you can mix English and Spanish mid-sentence the way most bilingual creators actually talk, and the Cuban phrasing carries through both. Combine with Voice Design if you want to save a slightly modified EN/ES preset for a recurring character, and PDF-to-speech if you're narrating a bilingual book.
How long can my script be?
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500 characters on the free preview. On the Personal plan ($19/mo) you get 500 minutes of generation per month. On Orchestrator ($79/mo), 3,000 minutes — hours of continuous voiceover. The LTD plan is unlimited for a one-time $99. All plans include the full 300+ voice library, Voice Design, voice cloning, and 30 languages.
§ 08

Write it honest.
Let the accent land.
Press play.