You're working on Toy Story 4 already.
>> Yeah, we do the Toy Stories.
>> [APPLAUSE]
>> Have you ever done this?
Has this ever happened to you?
You're fabulous Dory, right.
>> I'm Dory.
>> And there you are.
You're in an elevator and
somebody walks in with little kids.
And they say [SOUND] Dory, Dory!
This is Dory.
Say hello to Dory.
This is Dory!
And a little kid sees a lady
with white hair and blue eyes.
So that's not Dory.
Do you make them close their eyes,
and then speak to them like Dory?
Like if I was, go ahead, do it.
>> Hi Tom, how are you?
>> It's Dory!
>> [LAUGH]
>> We could actually have
a Pixar-off right here.
>> [LAUGH]
>> You want to?
>> Yeah, you wanna try it?
Everybody close their eyes,
close your eyes.
>> Close your eyes, all right.
>> And imagine Woody.
Close your eyes, ma'am.
There you go.
>> [LAUGH]
>> And
now imagine you're in Pixar Land and-
>> Hey, I'm gonna swim over here.
You wanna come with me?
>> My god, look at this fish!
Buzz, Andy, look at this fish,
it's right here.
>> Yeah, but I just wanna keep swimming.
Come with me.
Where are you going?
>> Shouldn't we get you into
the aquarium back in Andy's room?
>> [LAUGH]
>> What, who are you?
I don't even know who you are.
>> Hey, my hat, where is my hat?
I have lost my hat.
>> [LAUGH]
>> I know where a hat is.
I've seen a hat.
>> Take me to the hat, please.
Come on, guys!
Dory's gonna take me to find my hat!
>> What hat?
I don't know what you're talking about.
>> [LAUGH]
>> I need my hat.
You said you had my hat.
>> Who are you?
>> [LAUGH] [APPLAUSE]
>> It goes on like that-
>> [LAUGH]
>> Now,
can you just go to black while we do that?
Can you just, for the viewers at home,
just go to black?
And kids go nuts.
>> [LAUGH]
>> Yes, we will for sure.
No, we can't do that.
It appears people change
the channel if they see nothing.
>> Do you not find that that's incredibly
hard work, the recording session?
>> It's harder work than people think
it is, because it's all emoting.
Just your voice is doing all the acting.
And even though you're not,
it doesn't seem like hard work, but it is.
>> Woody is clenched all the time,
he's clenched.
>> [LAUGH]
>> My diaphragm is always exhausted after
those four hour, five hour recordings.
>> [LAUGH]
>> Yeah,
I'm always hyperventilating cuz
Dory is either left behind or
like, wait, she's out, so
I'm always out of breath.
And they're making me [NOISE],
and so that's exhausting.
>> [LAUGH]
>> And
the 92 different versions
of the same line.
Close that door!
Close that door.
Close the door!
>> [LAUGH]
>> Close that door.
>> [LAUGH]
>> Close the door!
Close the door.
And then the people in the control room
would say, yeah, that's great, Tom.
Could it be more like, close the door.
And so they still tell you how to do it,
even though you've exhausted yourself.
>> I was in there doing so many different.
And I'm like, don't you have that by now?
>> [LAUGH]
>> They would call me in four weeks later
to go. [GASP]
>> [LAUGH]
>> I had a cue sheet once, and
it was just 20 things.
And the first cue was!
And the second cue was, [SOUND].
>> [LAUGH]
>> And then catch a [SOUND].
I said, you guys should have this
in the hard drive somewhere, right.
>> Yes, I know, yeah.
>> It is fun, though.
They treat you well at those things.
>> They do treat you well.
They always make me take
a bite of an apple.
Did they make you?
So that you don't have a dry mouth,
you have to take a bite of an apple.
>> I've made four of these movies and
no one has given me the dry apple.
>> [LAUGH]
>> Does Doc do your sound?
>> Doc over at-
>> Yes.
>> Over at Disney?
>> Doc does my sound, he always-
>> Occasionally, yeah.
>> Maybe he just wants to see
me eat an apple then, because-
>> [LAUGH]
