In 2020, Corbo landed his biggest voice role ever when he played a kid version of SpongeBob SquarePants in the animated movie sequel The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge ...
"[Chimney Town] captured both sides of what I want to do when it comes to comedy and drama,” he said. “I’m still getting auditions for young kids, but occasionally I’ll get an audition for a 14-year-old,” Corbo said. What’s also going to be a challenge for Corbo moving forward is booking roles that call for him to voice young characters. In the Japanese anime Poupelle of Chimney Town, Corbo plays Lubicchi, a young boy who teams up with a man made of garbage to go on an adventure past the smoke-filled sky of their small town and toward the stars. So, it was a bit of a challenge.” He’s lent his voice to several animated projects including work on Cartoon Network’s We Bare Bears, The Secret Life of Pets 2, and Frozen II.
Raul Malo was a lone maverick when he performed solo on Saturday night at the Kessler in Dallas.
“Music is the beautiful thing bringing us all together — look at this room. “Music is the beautiful thing bringing us all together — look at this room. It was, as had been all night long, a vivid display of the incandescent energy — whether backed by his Mavericks bandmates or standing solo Raul Malo brings to the world every time he opens his mouth to sing. Malo, his guitar slung around his back, held in his hand a piece of paper, containing the lyrics to the Japanese composer Kyuu Sakamoto’s “Sukiyaki.” That easy familial chemistry was just one more pleasurable undercurrent of Saturday’s showcase, anchored, as always, by Malo’s sonorous voice, the quality of which could make real estate listings come alive. “If he plays one more song in Spanish, we’re out of here,” Malo said.