Summary

  • Dick Van Dyke still hears criticism of his Cockney accent in Mary Poppins, but the British don't poke fun at him.
  • Van Dyke's bad accent in Mary Poppins arguably adds charm, similar to Keanu Reeves in Bram Stoker's Dracula.
  • Despite his embarrassment, Van Dyke got a second chance in Mary Poppins Returns and did better with his accent.

It’s been 60 years since Disney’s most beloved movies.

But Van Dyke’s Mary Poppins performance also featured one of movie history’s most famous bad accents, a fact people still won’t let him forget even after 60 years, though the 98-year-old star doesn’t seem to mind, as he explained in a recent interview, where he also revealed the one group of people who don’t give him grief about his grasp of the Cockney way of speaking. Check out his remarks below (via EW):

"I still get kidded about it. But it didn't seem to harm anybody's enjoyment of the movie. But I do get kidded about it. The people who don't kid me are the British. They never mentioned it — and they're the ones who should be making fun of me and don't."

Van Dyke’s Bad Cockney Accent Is Part Of Mary Poppins’ Charm

Dick Van Dyke and Julie Andrews with soot on their faces in Mary Poppins

A bad movie accent can be very distracting, as in the case of Blood Diamond, where Leonardo DiCaprio’s inconsistent attempt at sounding like a Rhodesian mercenary detracted from an otherwise powerful film. Sometimes a bad accent can be weirdly charming, as is the case with Keanu Reeves in Bram Stoker’s Dracula. Sometimes a movie just absorbs a bad accent, as happens in Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, a film that remains entertaining despite Kevin Costner fighting a losing battle with sounding English.

Van Dyke’s Mary Poppins Cockney voice creates an effect closest to Reeves’ terrible British accent in Bram Stoker’s Dracula. It’s distracting, but weirdly becomes part of the character’s charm. The film is a family-friendly Disney fantasy anyway, so it barely matters that Van Dyke misses badly in his attempt to sound like an authentic London chimney sweep.

Mary Poppins is available to watch on Disney+

Van Dyke has itted that he himself was embarrassed by his Mary Poppins accent, but thankfully, he got a second chance to get it right in 2018's Mary Poppins Returns, where he made a brief cameo appearance, and did a better job sounding Cockney. As Van Dyke himself insists, the British don’t seem to mind his bad accent, and they are the only ones with reason to be offended. Had Van Dyke nailed his Cockney accent, Mary Poppins could scarcely be more charming, and might actually be slightly less endearing.

Source: EW

Your Rating

Mary Poppins
10/10
Release Date
June 18, 1965
Runtime
139 minutes
Director
Robert Stevenson
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Karen Dotrice
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Glynis Johns

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming

Based on the classic book series by P.L. Travers, Mary Poppins stars Julie Andrews as the famous magical nanny, who arrives under mysterious means to look after the Banks children in early 1900s London. Considered one of Walt Disney's crowning achievements, the film blends live-action and animation with whimsical storytelling and song and has been a staple children's movie since its release in 1964.

Writers
Don DaGradi, Bill Walsh
Studio(s)
Disney
Distributor(s)
Disney
Budget
$6 million