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Celebrity TTS Free · No install · Studio quality

Free Anthony Hopkins
AI voice generator.

Type any script. Hear it back in that quiet Welsh register — the patient, clinically precise delivery behind Hannibal's cell-door scenes, The Father's devastating silences, the Two Popes Latin-inflected exchanges, the Ford host monologues. 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 · Anthony Hopkins · Theatrical
★ 5.0 HD
"I'd like to ask you a question, if I may. Take your time answering."
0:00
11,204 plays · 2.7K likes Hear full preview →
GEN
AH
Anthony Hopkins ★ Style model
Mid · Patient · Welsh lilt layered over clinical precision
11.2K uses 2.7K likes 5 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 his voice recognizable
Voice DNA · TTS perspective

He almost whispers.
You lean in anyway.

The thing about Anthony Hopkins's voice is that it has been polished for sixty years without ever losing the Welsh underneath. Every vowel is placed. Every consonant is crisp. But underneath the Royal-Academy diction there is a musical lilt from Port Talbot — the slight rise on the middle of a phrase before the fall at the end — that he has never sanded off. It is what makes Hannibal feel polite while he is describing something monstrous. It is what makes The Father's confused patriarch feel loving while he is losing his mind.

TaskAGI's Anthony Hopkins AI voice generator runs on HyperVoice, our proprietary text-to-speech engine built with emotional control as a first-class parameter. The model captures the specific signatures: the long rising phrase-middles, the clipped final consonants, the half-second pause before a delicate word, the throat-close that arrives when the line turns cold.

The Menace style is the one that captures the Hannibal cell-door register — where politeness and threat sit on the same vowel. Observational is the Westworld Ford mode, narrating a world he designed as if he is still surprised by it. Whisper is The Two Popes garden walk. And Theatrical is the Shakespearean stage voice that started it all at the Royal Academy.

This tool exists for creators who want that specific weight in their own work. Audiobook producers cutting literary fiction or philosophy read-alouds. Documentary narrators on history, art, and religion docs that need gravitas without pomp. YouTube essayists dissecting film, literature, or ethics. Short-film directors staging monologues that need the quiet-menace register. Type your script, pick the style, get a studio-quality MP3 in under a minute.

REGISTER
Mid. Patient.
Not low, not light. A settled middle register with no strain. The voice sits where it sits and trusts the listener to come to it.
CADENCE
Slow. Placed.
Long gaps between clauses. Words arrive with visible consideration. Nothing rushed — the rhythm of a man who has never needed to win an argument on volume.
INFLECTION
Musical rise-and-fall.
Welsh phrase shape. A small lift in the middle of a sentence before the gentle drop at the end. That lilt is the signature — it survives under every accent he plays on top of it.
ACCENT
Welsh + Received.
Port Talbot base with Royal Academy diction layered over it. Both are audible. The Welsh music under the English precision is exactly why Hannibal sounds like a person, not a villain.
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How it works
Three steps · under 60 seconds
01
Paste your script
Drop in an audiobook chapter, a documentary narration cue, a Westworld-style monologue, a prestige-podcast intro, a eulogy. The Anthony Hopkins style reads best with literary sentences, subordinate clauses, and a willingness to let the line sit. Up to 500 characters on the free plan.
02
Pick a style & mood
Theatrical for the default Royal-Academy weight. Whisper for the Two Popes garden-walk intimacy. Observational for the Westworld Ford narration mode. Menace when the line needs the Hannibal cell-door register. Fine-tune with the emotional-intensity slider in the full studio.
03
Download the MP3
Studio-quality audio, 44.1 kHz, ready to drop into CapCut, Premiere, DaVinci Resolve, Descript, or any DAW. No re-encoding. No watermarks. No waiting.
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What you get
Four things that matter
FEATURE · 01
Neural TTS engine
HyperVoice is a purpose-built neural text-to-speech model with British-isles phrasing trained into its phoneme layer. It reproduces the Port Talbot lilt, the placed consonant work, and the willingness to sit inside a pause longer than any commercial narrator usually dares — audiobook-grade output, not a generic TTS impersonation of gravitas.
FEATURE · 02
Voice cloning
Upload thirty seconds of any voice — your own reading voice, a podcast co-host, a deceased grandparent on a cassette — and HyperVoice builds a clone you can prompt like any preset. Pair it with the Hopkins-style register as your reference point for any literary or documentary project where a specific non-celebrity voice has to carry the read.
FEATURE · 03
Studio-quality MP3
Audible-grade audio the second generation finishes. 44.1 kHz stereo, CBR 192 kbps, no watermark, no re-encoding. Drops straight into Pro Tools, Izotope RX, Descript, or whatever long-form audiobook workflow you already run. Ready for chapter-drop delivery the moment the buffer fills.
FEATURE · 04
30-language support
The patient Hopkins-class register isn't English-only. Generate literary readings in Spanish, French, German, Japanese, Portuguese, Italian, and 24 other languages — all from the same account. The cadence stays measured, the phrasing stays literary, the lilt shifts to whatever the target language's equivalent of gravitas sounds like.
§ 05
What creators make with it
Used on YouTube, TikTok, podcasts
01 / 06
Classic-literature audiobook
Dickens, Dostoevsky, Woolf, Proust, late-period Henry James. The patient Welsh-inflected register holds an eighteen-hour audiobook together the way no brighter narrator can. Works for sample chapters, full indie-press audiobooks, and public-domain canonical reads.
02 / 06
Museum audio guide
Permanent-collection walk-throughs, special-exhibition companions, architectural-heritage self-guided tours. The register that curators actually license from BBC veterans — now buildable on a laptop for regional museums on smaller budgets.
03 / 06
Philosophy & history YouTube
Long-form channel essays on Kant, Spinoza, the Reformation, ancient Rome, the history of ideas. The measured pace lets a 45-minute argument breathe where a generic YouTube narrator wears thin by minute ten. Academics use it for lecture companion clips.
04 / 06
Dramatic documentary
Nature-adjacent documentaries that want gravitas but not Attenborough-warmth. Historical reenactment series. Courtroom-case retrospectives. The Hopkins register sits naturally where other narrator voices feel either too performative or too neutral.
05 / 06
Mystery-podcast intro
Thirty-second cold-opens for true-crime, unexplained-phenomena, folklore-horror, and Gothic-fiction podcasts. The patient Hannibal-register lets the opening line land with the kind of placed menace that signals a show worth a serious listen.
06 / 06
Poetry recital
Canonical poetry reads — Eliot, Yeats, Hopkins (the poet, not the actor), Larkin. The register that trusts the line-break the way a stage-trained reader always does. Works for classroom companion audio, poetry-account content, and personal-commission memorial reads.
§ 06
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 · Anthony Hopkins-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?
Audiobook-grade Hopkins-style read. PDF-to-speech for whole chapters. Voice cloning for custom reads. 30 languages. Free plan, no card.
Start free →
Does the Welsh lilt actually come through in the output?
Yes — the Port Talbot musical rise-and-fall is the single most recognizable marker of the voice, and it's the first thing the model was tuned to preserve. The lilt survives under every style setting. Observational keeps it understated. Menace layers it over the clinical-Hannibal register. Audiobook lets it breathe through longer literary sentences. Blind listeners hear South Wales in the second vowel.
Is this trained on Silence of the Lambs or The Father audio?
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No — and that's a hard safety line. HyperVoice is not trained on any of the actor's copyrighted film recordings. The style model captures the publicly-known phrasing patterns associated with that kind of delivery (Welsh lilt, placed consonants, trust in silence), but it's synthesized from a separate voice dataset, not lifted from the films themselves. No infringement on the performer or the studios.
Is the output actually audiobook-quality?
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Yes. 44.1 kHz stereo, CBR 192 kbps, no watermark, no re-encoding required — the same spec Audible accepts for production uploads. Indie-press audiobook producers and self-publishing authors use HyperVoice for sample-chapter reads, full books, and narrative-nonfiction where booking a real veteran narrator would cost more than the book's entire production budget.
What languages can this voice handle?
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Thirty languages live today. The Hopkins-class register ports cleanly into Spanish, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Dutch, Polish, Japanese, Korean, Mandarin, Arabic, Turkish, Hindi, Russian — plus another sixteen. The measured literary cadence is preserved in each target language; the model shifts the phoneme layer and the prosody without flattening the reading register. Useful for translated-classic audiobooks.
How is this different from the Al Pacino style model?
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Different tradition, different purpose. Pacino is New York stage-theatrical — dynamic swings, stressed-word attack, volume contour. Hopkins is British-isles literary — patient, lilted, trusts the silence. For courtroom monologues or mob-drama scenes, Pacino. For audiobook narration, museum guides, or philosophy essays, Hopkins. Both sit inside the same 100+ celebrity-model library you can access on one account.
Can I use this for a 5+ minute mystery-podcast intro or long scripts?
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Yes — the Hopkins preset handles long-form better than almost any other voice in the library. PDF-to-speech support means you can drop a PDF script straight in and get chapter-level narration back without re-pasting. Free preview caps at 500 characters, but Personal ($19/mo) gives you 500 minutes per month, Orchestrator ($79/mo) gives 3,000 minutes, and the $99 LTD plan is unlimited — enough for a whole podcast season.
How much does it cost?
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Free tier is 2 minutes per month with no credit card — enough for one audiobook sample chapter or a mystery-podcast cold-open. Personal at $19/month gives you 500 minutes. Orchestrator at $79/month is 3,000 minutes — roughly a full audiobook. LTD at $99 one-time is unlimited and the plan most audiobook producers take.
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Type the question.
Press generate.
Let it linger.