Resident Evil games typically have one really, really gross enemy. In Resident Evil Village, it was the giant baby that chased you around House Beneviento, and in Requiem, that has been replaced by The Girl, a hulking, deformed creature that stalks Grace around the game’s early segments, clambering through vents in the process.
Alongside her disgusting appearance, you can hear The Girl’s sickly, gurgling voice every time she approaches Ashcroft. Now, the antagonist’s actor, Delanie Nicole Gill, has revealed the lengths she went to get the character’s voice just right, and it involved chugging two giant jugs of milk.
The Girl Sounds As She Does In Resident Evil Requiem Thanks To Milk
Speaking on a panel at MegaCon Orlando 2026, which was uploaded to YouTube by MiamiGameHunter, alongside Resident Evil Requiem co-stars Angela Sant’Albano (Grace Ashcroft) and Nick Apostolides (Leon Kennedy), Gill was explaining the process she went through to nail The Girl’s voice.
“They wanted a very thick consistency to my spit, and they wanted gurgling and clicking and things like that,” she said to the crowd. “We did two four-hour sessions, and I went through two jugs of milk, around this big [gesturing the size of a jug that has to hold at least a gallon], to thicken up my spit.
“I had to lay a towel on my lap. Because of the way my mouth was arranged, my bottom lip was down, and it was just dripping in my lap.”
We did two four-hour sessions, and I went through two jugs of milk,
Apostolides, amused by Gill’s story, had to chime in. “That’s what we go through to do these voices, guys,” he said. “You have no idea of the tactics that we use.”
He then recounted a story from Resident Evil 2, in which he had to make the sounds of Leon being impaled, using cranberry juice to replicate the gurgling of the blood flooding his throat.
I guess he’s not wrong when he says that we have no idea of the tactics actors use, because that’s not something I’d have ever thought of.