The Ladies Behind the Bottles
E.G. Daily, Christine Cavanaugh, Cheryl Chase, and Kath Soucie...what do these four women have in common? They all perform voices on "Rugrats"! Here's where you can find out a little more about these girls.
E.G. Daily (Tommy Pickles)
Tommy is played by E.G. Daily. Her other cartoon voices include "Duckman" (Mambo), various roles on "Eek! The Cat", "Duck Daze", Problem Child, and Babe II:Pig in the City, in which she replaced the original Babe voice, costar Christine Cavanaugh. She has also appeared in various films, including Pee Wee's Big Adventure, Valley Girl, and Streets of Fire. And though she doesn't want her fans to know this, E.G. stands for "Elizabeth Guttman", but she likes to say it means "Extra Little Girlie". (But there's no L!)
Christine Cavanaugh (Chuckie Finster)
Chuckie is played by Christine Cavanaugh, who also does the voice of Oblina on another Klasky-Csupo cartoon, "AAAHH!!! Real Monsters". But besides monsters and babies, she's voiced a pig in Babe, and on cartoons such as "Darkwing Duck" (Gosalyn), "Sonic the Hedgehog", "Dexter's Laboratory" (Dexter), "Sing Me A Story", and "Cathy" (I assume she voiced Cathy). As for how she creates Chuckie's sometimes throaty voice, she replies that she has always had a froggy throat.
Cheryl Chase (Angelica Pickles)
Angelica is played by Cheryl Chase. Besides Angelica, she did various voices on the first two seasons of another Nicktoon, "The Ren & Stimpy Show", the new Betty Boop cartoon, the sound effects for Pubert Addams in Addams Family Values, and the voice of May in My Neighbor Totoro. To do Angelica's voice, she says she just sounds like she would when someone on the road would cut her off in traffic.
Kath Soucie (Phil, Lil, and Betty DeVille)
Phil, Lil, and their mom, Betty DeVille, are all played by Kath Soucie. She was also Lola Bunny in Space Jam, and Casper on the "Casper" TV series based on the 1995 movie. Although it's hardly noticable, but Phil wasn't voiced as growly as he is today. Kath Soucie says she wanted to distinguish the twins' voices more by giving him a deeper voice.