
{"articleDetail":{"publishDateDisplay":"April 2, 2026","summary":"After stepping away from the workforce to raise her family, Kaye Weaver &#8217;04 launched a home-based voice acting career, using her lifelong creative skills and faith to guide her path.","image":"site://geneva.edu/stories/_assets/kaye-weaver-header-2.jpg","tagItems":"[]","articleText":"Kaye&#160;(Gideon)&#160;Weaver &#8217;04, wife to Zach and a mom of four, has recently stepped into a career&#160;as a voice actor after years&#160;out of the workforce while&#160;raising&#160;children.&#160;Amidst the twists and turns of her life journey,&#160;she&#8217;s&#160;trusted the Lord to direct her path with the skills she has developed and cultivated over the years.\nKaye&#8217;s fascination with the world of documentaries led her to major in communication at Geneva. Inspired by the Pittsburgh&#160;documentarian Rick Sebak and with a growing interest in foley art (the art of sound effects), Kaye created an independent-study documentary on the&#160;Genevans&#160;during her time at Geneva. Kaye participated in music groups including the&#160;Genevans and&#160;Grace Notes,&#160;and&#160;was involved&#160;with&#160;Geneva&#8217;s theater&#160;program.&#160;Kaye discovered a love of organization through her roles as stage manager and choir librarian.&#160;\nAfter graduating,&#160;Kaye married Zach and&#160;worked&#160;in&#160;retail until her husband&#8217;s military work moved them to New Jersey. Kaye&#8217;s communication degree gave her the flexibility to jump between various jobs, which fit well with the frequent moving her husband&#8217;s job&#160;required of&#160;them. In the early years of marriage, Kaye&#8217;s work included reception work at a dental office and an audio engineer job at a media and audio studio.&#160;When her&#160;children were born, she jumped into the vital&#160;role&#160;of&#160;mom.&#160;\nIn 2019, Kaye&#8217;s husband retired from the&#160;military&#160;and the family moved to Maryland.&#160;Around&#160;the same&#160;time, Kaye and Zach began seeking medical help for their youngest daughter who was experiencing symptoms that resembled cerebral palsy.&#160;When she was eventually diagnosed with an extremely rare neuromuscular syndrome, the family&#160;began&#160;saving money so their daughter could receive treatment internationally in Slovenia. However, her husband lost his job during&#160;the&#160;COVID-19 pandemic,&#160;driving Kaye to&#160;return&#160;to work as a voice actor. Although the circumstances were less than ideal, Kaye&#160;joyfully embraced this&#160;new season of&#160;their life.&#160;&#160;\nA few years later,&#160;Kaye&#160;now&#160;runs a&#160;voice acting business&#160;from&#160;home, fulfilling contracts with various voice acting sources and often&#160;utilizing&#160;her&#160;previous&#160;skills as an audio engineer. She&#160;enjoys&#160;the flexibility of virtual work (including the ability to act in her pajamas)&#160;as well as&#160;the variety of voice acting contracts available, which include commercials, animation, podcasts, online learning, video games, and museum tours.&#160;\nAccording to Kaye, &#8220;There&#8217;s&#160;a voiceover everywhere!&#8221;&#160;Although she has drawn the line at recording audiobooks because of their complexity, her&#160;attuned&#160;ear for&#160;mistakes,&#160;developed through audio engineering,&#160;allows her to proof audiobooks, providing yet another avenue of work from a skill learned years ago. Once, after a particularly dull voiceover job for a government procurement contract, Kaye&#8217;s director lifted her spirits through his observation, &#8220;You made this sound not boring!&#8221; Kaye&#160;values&#160;the impact her work&#160;provides even in&#160;technical fields.&#160;\nThe everyday joys of being a mother have prepared Kaye well for her current job. For years, she read aloud to her children, entertaining them with dialects and voices for the book characters.&#160;For Kaye, voice acting is a natural progression of something she has long enjoyed.&#160;She looks forward to undergoing training for&#160;additional&#160;voices in the future.&#160;Regarding&#160;her Geneva education, Kaye is grateful for the way she was taught the process of audio engineering and voice acting. Though technology has advanced exponentially since her graduation, the process of creating&#160;remains&#160;the same.&#160;\nKaye&#8217;s advice to the person considering a return to the workforce&#160;after a season away&#160;is&#160;to&#160;&#8220;find something that brings you joy.&#8221; As she builds her business, Kaye also works part-time at a department store to help make ends meet. She acknowledges the challenges&#160;she&#8217;s&#160;faced as&#160;she&#8217;s&#160;gotten her business off the ground, but she says, &#8220;When I&#8217;m here in my booth, I&#8217;m happy because I&#8217;m creating, being expressive, doing something that makes me smile.&#8221; Voice acting makes Kaye radiate, and that joy has become her driving force to keep pressing on when the going is hard.&#160;&#160;\nBy Sarabeth Sangrey &#8217;25","author":null,"publishDate":"2026-04-02","type":"Stories","title":"Kaye Weaver: The Joy of Voice Acting","imageDesc":"","url":"/article/kaye-weaver","blogCategories":"","id":"2007a0a9ac0a240426ac607da94707aa","detailUrl":"/stories/2026/04/kaye-weaver.json","sourcePath":null,"slug":"kaye-weaver"}}
