A really superb wedding master of ceremonies script is manna from heaven for any first timer given the task of emceeing a wedding, wouldn't you think? After all, nobody's addicted to the struggle. Of course, we'd all prefer to have the wedding reception program emceed by Billy Crystal with all the production values the Oscars are renowned for (a wedding to remember in a good way), but reality usually does come with a little more elbow grease and this is no exception. I’m also sure most of us have heard of, or been to weddings where the would-be wedding MC has one too many shots of Dutch Courage and makes a meal of the job instead of the dinner complete with off colour jokes about the bride or her mother. Click here to go straight to the beginning of the Perhaps even worse, the wedding MC has been dragooned at the last minute and resembles a deer caught in the headlights. It is confidence destroying for the deer and agonizing for everyone else.
Of course, it doesn’t have to be like that at all. If you can’t afford a professional emcee, a plethora of excellent, a well-prepared and above all, a decent sample emcee script ( below) can turn even old agoraphobic Uncle Bertie into a smooth and charming wedding master of ceremony. Of course, this takes time and lots of practice. It is a big production and the more time taken, the smoother it will be.
Remember, if other people have done it, you can do it too. Above all, rehearse, rehearse, rehearse. You should know weeks in advance about the venue, the order of events, the speech-makers.
It is advisable to give them a few pointers on what to speak about. Wedding Emcee Sample Script Bear in mind, this sample emcee script template below is only a guide. I have followed the general wedding reception order of events with thanks and acknowledgments to the wedding party. It is neither mandatory, nor desirable for the Emcee to quote verbatim from the script (unless both the MC and the script are brilliant).
Some things look good in a script but sound stiff and stilted when spoken. A guide is just there to ensure nothing is overlooked or left to chance. It is recommended the reception program and script is prepared weeks in advance so the Emcee can familiarize himself with the flow of events. There are basic instructions to give a broader view on how to present each part.
Now you have some of the basics. Before you can develop your emcee sample script, you will need your. This is the framework around which you will craft your master of ceremonies wedding reception script. Here is a master ceremonies guide I’ve put together to help spur your imagination. Master Of Ceremonies Welcome 'Good evening ladies and gentleman, friends and loved ones, welcome to Winona and Derek's Nuptial Dinner Reception. My name is Robert, and I have been asked by our lovely bride, the former Miss Walker, now Mrs Winona McGregor & her husband Derek, to be your Emcee tonight and they would like to extend their thanks for attending their nuptial celebrations tonight.' 'Dinner will commence very soon, so we ask that everyone make their way to their seats and make your selves comfortable as we begin our celebration with a wedding prayer.'
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Like a flower that blooms and exudes its sweet scents to attract bees and butterflies, the debutant will be swarmed later on by 18 equally gentle bachelors. Let us invite them to come in to the grand ballroom. Let us start with:. Gio Paolo Flores. Benedict Pe. Oliver Flores.
Ken Maquinay. Roy Piore. Phillip Pulido. Jake Casaquite. James Lisondra. Girme Ambita. Kevin Ledesma.
Vincent Fontaina. Meryll Gilbuena. Renzy Samaniego. Renmar Tanael.
Dwayne Castanarez. Jigo Lontoc.
Maxell Marquez. Cyprian Flores. And to represent Cyrill’s Circle of Important People of her Life, let us welcome the following persons who will share their wishes and offer Ring of Enlightenment which symbolizes friendship which binds two persons together, and the different colors of light from the ring represents all aspects of hardship and joy to make them closer together. Of course these people will be the ones who will give her advices and kind words along the way on how to become a perfect woman. But I want to clarify that before they say their wish for Cyrill, ay may sorpresa tayong ipapagawa sa kanila, anu po kaya yun?
– Kailangan nilang isubo at nguyain ang kending kinahiligan ng ating debutante. Ang YAKEE BUBLE GUM.
Let us call in the first group. The wine symbolizes commitment and triumph.
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Cyrill is considered victorious because she is able to reach the debutant age and it is a great time for this kind of celebration. To toast with her the wine for a long lasting victory of her life, let us all call in the following special persons who are in one way or another became a part of her life through thick and thin, ups and downs, right and wrong and sometimes good and bad times of life. Once again Cyrill’s Family to be with here for the wine toast. Ortega, The outline of your your debut programme is systematic and very organized, it shows your instinct talent in toastmastership and emceeing, your terminologies are unique, genuine, inspiring, and very comprehensive.
What a splendid ideas and concept!!! Fantastic and bravo!!! With your permission sir, please allow me to use the format of your programme and permit me to use some of your unique words and ideas as a master of ceremony for my niece's debut. Thank you so much, more power and mabuhay po kayo!!! Ortega, The outline of your your debut programme is systematic and very organized, it shows your instinct talent in toastmastership and emceeing, your terminologies are unique, genuine, inspiring, and very comprehensive. What a splendid ideas and concept!!! Fantastic and bravo!!!
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With your permission sir, please allow me to use the format of your programme and permit me to use some of your unique words and ideas as a master of ceremony for my niece's debut. Thank you so much, more power and mabuhay po kayo!!! Ortega, The outline of your your debut programme is systematic and very organized, it shows your instinct talent in toastmastership and emceeing, your terminologies are unique, genuine, inspiring, and very comprehensive. What a splendid ideas and concept!!! Fantastic and bravo!!! With your permission sir, please allow me to use the format of your programme and permit me to use some of your unique words and ideas as a master of ceremony for my niece's debut. Thank you so much, more power and mabuhay po kayo!!!
Ortega, The outline of your your debut programme is systematic and very organized, it shows your instinct talent in toastmastership and emceeing, your terminologies are unique, genuine, inspiring, and very comprehensive. What a splendid ideas and concept!!! Fantastic and bravo!!!
With your permission sir, please allow me to use the format of your programme and permit me to use some of your unique words and ideas as a master of ceremony for my niece's debut. Thank you so much, more power and mabuhay po kayo!!! Ortega, The outline of your your debut programme is systematic and very organized, it shows your instinct talent in toastmastership and emceeing, your terminologies are unique, genuine, inspiring, and very comprehensive.
What a splendid ideas and concept!!! Fantastic and bravo!!! With your permission sir, please allow me to use the format of your programme and permit me to use some of your unique words and ideas as a master of ceremony for my niece's debut.
Thank you so much, more power and mabuhay po kayo!!! Ortega, The outline of your your debut programme is systematic and very organized, it shows your instinct talent in toastmastership and emceeing, your terminologies are unique, genuine, inspiring, and very comprehensive. What a splendid ideas and concept!!!
Fantastic and bravo!!! With your permission sir, please allow me to use the format of your programme and permit me to use some of your unique words and ideas as a master of ceremony for my niece's debut. Thank you so much, more power and mabuhay po kayo!!!
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Ortega, The outline of your your debut programme is systematic and very organized, it shows your instinct talent in toastmastership and emceeing, your terminologies are unique, genuine, inspiring, and very comprehensive. What a splendid ideas and concept!!! Fantastic and bravo!!! With your permission sir, please allow me to use the format of your programme and permit me to use some of your unique words and ideas as a master of ceremony for my niece's debut. Thank you so much, more power and mabuhay po kayo!!!
Andy emcees AT&T’s 2011 Solution Provider Champion Awards Dinner in Dallas If I asked you why you’re filled with such trepidation, you might respond, “I don’t know what to say” or “I’m afraid I’ll say the wrong thing and bomb.” You’ve already embraced a worst-case scenario featuring you on stage, fumbling awkwardly for words, humiliating yourself in front of legions of people with camera phones and YouTube access. If that’s your vision, know this: you can have fun as an emcee. It can be done. I’ve done it. And when you have fun as an emcee, it really is a magical experience. You generate a connective energy in the room that’s just intoxicating, and will leave you wanting to do it again.
But as with any live performance, emcee work does carry a real risk of failure. If you don’t prepare well, you won’t execute well, and that experience is exactly as excruciating as you think it is. RELATED POSTS: WHY BAD EMCEEING HAPPENS TO GOOD PEOPLE In my experience, the most common reason emcee gigs don’t end well is this: the emcees don’t start their shows well. They fumble through the critical first few minutes, setting an awkward, underwhelming tone from which it’s hard to recover. This post, the first of a two-part set, will help you avoid that.
Emcee Script For A Program
As a professional emcee for AT&T , Best Buy, Microsoft and others, I’ve learned over many years and events that a great emcee performance starts with a great emcee script. Here are six key components good emcee scripts include, and many not-so-good emcee scripts leave out. They’ll help you connect, relax and establish yourself in the opening minutes of your event, which will make everything else flow better.
EMCEE SCRIPT TIP 1: USE A “VOICE OF GOD” INTRODUCTION It’s true what they say about first impressions: you never get a second chance to make one. Your first impression sets the tone for the whole event. So what do you want your first impression to be?
In those key opening seconds of a special event, you no doubt want to create eager anticipation, energy, and suspense. That won’t happen if you just walk on the stage and start talking over your audience members (or shushing them). That approach ensures your program will start with an awkward whimper, not a bang. Instead, use what’s called a “Voice of God” introduction to start your proceedings. The VoG isn’t complicated; it’s literally just someone with a deep radio announcer voice starting your event by standing offstage somewhere and introducing you before you take the stage. Here’s a sample: “Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to event. And now, here’s your host, name!” You can even tweak it with some fun wordplay that enhances your emcee credibility.
For example, when I emceed one of the AMD/Microsoft North American Tech Tours back in 2005, my Voice of God introduction emphasized my knowledge of blazing-fast computer chip speed, which was the event’s theme: “Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the AMD/Microsoft Tech Tour 2005. And now, please welcome your host, the Seeker of Speed, the Sultan of Swiftness, the one, the only, Andy Saks!” See for yourself; here’s the video from our Seattle show on that tour.
As you can see, the VoG intro works even better when the house lights are down, the spotlights move wildly, and there are very loud guitars playing. Don’t have someone to do this for you live? Don’t be afraid to deliver your own. I’ve delivered my own Voice of God introductions at events I’ve emceed, introducing myself while hiding behind the crew table, then running on stage to start the show. Or try having your VoG intro pre-recorded by a professional; you can find countless voice-over artists at freelance sites who’ll do this for a song.
EMCEE SCRIPT TIP 2: THANK EVERYONE Successful emcees are both grand and humble. You can demonstrate the humble part by immediately acknowledging the contributions of everyone who helped create your event, showing your audience you know your event isn’t all about you. Here’s a partial list of people you can thank: 1. THE EVENT PLANNERS for planning a great event. Event planners are the unsung heroes of events, and tend to get noticed only when something goes wrong. They deserve a BIG moment of recognition. As as the emcee, you’re perfectly positioned to deliver it by inciting a round of applause from your audience.
THE PRODUCTION CREW for building the set, lighting, audio, video, slides, decorations, etc. The production crews I’ve worked with toil tirelessly, hauling massive cases from the loading dock, assembling scaffolding, seating, video wiring and drapery for hours, then running the whole show from the crew table. They too deserve your public acknowledgement. (Plus, it never hurts to throw some love toward the folks who control your lighting and sound).
THE AUDIENCE for showing up. Without them, you’re just a crazy person talking to an empty room, right? Thank your audience members sincerely for their time, their attention, and (if it applies) their passion and efforts for your organization and its mission. You’ll win them over and give credit where it’s due all at once! Here’s a sample video of me thanking the audience when I served as auctioneer at the Boston Jewish Film Festival’s 2012 Gala, held at Theatre 1 in Boston. Starting around the 0:45 mark (and leading up to that) you’ll see me thanking the audience and telling them what their contributions mean to the BJFF: EMCEE SCRIPT TIP 3: TELL THEM WHO YOU ARE Sounds obvious, right? You’d be amazed at how many emcees I’ve seen who forget to identify themselves.
This lapse leaves a nagging hole in your audience’s understanding of the proceedings. They see you, but don’t know who you are or why you’ve been chosen for this central role in the event. So while you’re off pontificating about other topics, they’re still ruminating on why you’re up there to begin with. Ah, but maybe you’re confident that everyone in your audience already knows you? Introduce yourself anyway. There may be friends, colleagues, special guests, and spouses in your audience who don’t know you. And those who know who you are may not really understand what you do, or how and why you got tapped for the emcee role.
I’d suggest mentioning: — Your first and last name (yes, both) — Your official title in the organization sponsoring the event — Your role within that organization (summed up in one casual phrase or sentence) — Some sense of why you were tapped as the emcee. BONUS: Express to your audience that you’re honored and humbled to serve in the emcee role.
Reassure them you know how special it is, and you’re happy to do it. EMCEE SCRIPT TIP 4: TURN YOUR MONOLOGUE INTO A CHAT Emcees can get overwhelmed with performance anxiety before taking the stage, wondering how they’ll do all that talking when their hearts are pounding and their limbs are shaking. If that’s you, share your speaking burden with your audience by engaging them in something of a conversation. The most common approach is to ask three questions on a relevant topic, such as who’s attended previous events, or who’s traveled the farthest to attend this year. The first question sets the terms, the second ups the ante, and the third plays off the first two as a joke. Here’s a sample script: “Show of hands: who traveled at least two hours to be here?” Audience members raise hands. “Who traveled at least four hours to be here?” Some audience members keep hands up, others lower hands.
“Who never left last year’s event?” Audience laughs; all hands go down. Here’s a video sample for you: In 2012, I emceed an IT seminar for Spark client Atrion called AlwaysOn Symposium, held at the Putnam Club at Gillette Stadium (home of the New England Patriots football team). I snuck in TWO of these three-question sets: — At the 2:03 mark, I asked audience members about their association with the stadium (the Wes Welker reference related to a photo on the screen of an Atrion employee wearing a painted face and Welker jersey). — At the 2:40 mark, I polled audience members about their attendance at past AlwaysOn Symposia, and saved the biggest “ginormous” round of applause for first-time attendees. In the 15-20 seconds it takes to ask questions, you’ve not only lessened your own performance anxiety with a few key seconds to breathe and collect your thoughts.
You’ve connected directly with your audience members, assessed their collective mood, discovered the extroverts (who respond to every question) and introverts (who always stay silent), and shown everyone you care about their contributions to the proceedings, all of which helps you relax on stage. EMCEE SCRIPT TIP 5: SHARE KEY EVENT INFORMATION When an event starts, audience members will inevitably be harboring nagging logistical questions about it: Will I get home in time to relieve the babysitter? Who validates my parking?
Should I pee now, or wait for a break? If you don’t answer these questions, they tend to become distractions that prevent your audience members from giving you their full attention. In your first few minutes on stage, put them at ease and set their expectations by giving them the full agenda for your event. Spark owner and professional emcee Andy Saks Andy Saks owns and runs Spark Presentations, a private company founded in 1998 that provides presentation skills training and speech coaching for executives, salespeople, marketers and other businesspeople, plus booth staff training for trade show exhibitors. Spark also books professional presenters and public speakers to represent its clients at high-profile events, in roles like keynote speaker, trade show booth presenter, master of ceremonies (emcee) and auctioneer, as well as on camera talent and voice talent. Spark’s client list includes large corporations like AT&T, Best Buy, FedEx, Hyundai, Intel, Kimberly-Clark, Olympus, Owens-Corning, Panasonic, Samsung, Sony, and Volvo; high-tech industry players like AMD, Atrion, Citrix, Gigamon, and Symantec; service organizations like Vistage, 1nService and NERCOMP; and New England institutions like the Boston Jewish Film Festival. Andy is also the author of The Presentation Playbook Series, a three-volume set of books that help businesspeople master common presentation situations by building and running speaking “plays” like a coach or player calls a key play in a game.
For more information on Spark services, please contact Andy Saks via or Spark’s.
Andy emcees AT&T’s 2011 Solution Provider Champion Awards Dinner in Dallas If I asked you why you’re filled with such trepidation, you might respond, “I don’t know what to say” or “I’m afraid I’ll say the wrong thing and bomb.” You’ve already embraced a worst-case scenario featuring you on stage, fumbling awkwardly for words, humiliating yourself in front of legions of people with camera phones and YouTube access. If that’s your vision, know this: you can have fun as an emcee. It can be done. I’ve done it. And when you have fun as an emcee, it really is a magical experience. You generate a connective energy in the room that’s just intoxicating, and will leave you wanting to do it again.
But as with any live performance, emcee work does carry a real risk of failure. If you don’t prepare well, you won’t execute well, and that experience is exactly as excruciating as you think it is. RELATED POSTS: WHY BAD EMCEEING HAPPENS TO GOOD PEOPLE In my experience, the most common reason emcee gigs don’t end well is this: the emcees don’t start their shows well. They fumble through the critical first few minutes, setting an awkward, underwhelming tone from which it’s hard to recover. This post, the first of a two-part set, will help you avoid that.
As a professional emcee for AT&T , Best Buy, Microsoft and others, I’ve learned over many years and events that a great emcee performance starts with a great emcee script. Here are six key components good emcee scripts include, and many not-so-good emcee scripts leave out. They’ll help you connect, relax and establish yourself in the opening minutes of your event, which will make everything else flow better. EMCEE SCRIPT TIP 1: USE A “VOICE OF GOD” INTRODUCTION It’s true what they say about first impressions: you never get a second chance to make one.
Your first impression sets the tone for the whole event. So what do you want your first impression to be?
In those key opening seconds of a special event, you no doubt want to create eager anticipation, energy, and suspense. That won’t happen if you just walk on the stage and start talking over your audience members (or shushing them). That approach ensures your program will start with an awkward whimper, not a bang.
Instead, use what’s called a “Voice of God” introduction to start your proceedings. The VoG isn’t complicated; it’s literally just someone with a deep radio announcer voice starting your event by standing offstage somewhere and introducing you before you take the stage. Here’s a sample: “Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to event.
And now, here’s your host, name!” You can even tweak it with some fun wordplay that enhances your emcee credibility. For example, when I emceed one of the AMD/Microsoft North American Tech Tours back in 2005, my Voice of God introduction emphasized my knowledge of blazing-fast computer chip speed, which was the event’s theme: “Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the AMD/Microsoft Tech Tour 2005. And now, please welcome your host, the Seeker of Speed, the Sultan of Swiftness, the one, the only, Andy Saks!” See for yourself; here’s the video from our Seattle show on that tour. As you can see, the VoG intro works even better when the house lights are down, the spotlights move wildly, and there are very loud guitars playing. Don’t have someone to do this for you live?
Don’t be afraid to deliver your own. I’ve delivered my own Voice of God introductions at events I’ve emceed, introducing myself while hiding behind the crew table, then running on stage to start the show. Or try having your VoG intro pre-recorded by a professional; you can find countless voice-over artists at freelance sites who’ll do this for a song. EMCEE SCRIPT TIP 2: THANK EVERYONE Successful emcees are both grand and humble.
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You can demonstrate the humble part by immediately acknowledging the contributions of everyone who helped create your event, showing your audience you know your event isn’t all about you. Here’s a partial list of people you can thank: 1. THE EVENT PLANNERS for planning a great event.
Event planners are the unsung heroes of events, and tend to get noticed only when something goes wrong. They deserve a BIG moment of recognition.
As as the emcee, you’re perfectly positioned to deliver it by inciting a round of applause from your audience. THE PRODUCTION CREW for building the set, lighting, audio, video, slides, decorations, etc.
The production crews I’ve worked with toil tirelessly, hauling massive cases from the loading dock, assembling scaffolding, seating, video wiring and drapery for hours, then running the whole show from the crew table. They too deserve your public acknowledgement. (Plus, it never hurts to throw some love toward the folks who control your lighting and sound). THE AUDIENCE for showing up. Without them, you’re just a crazy person talking to an empty room, right? Thank your audience members sincerely for their time, their attention, and (if it applies) their passion and efforts for your organization and its mission.
You’ll win them over and give credit where it’s due all at once! Here’s a sample video of me thanking the audience when I served as auctioneer at the Boston Jewish Film Festival’s 2012 Gala, held at Theatre 1 in Boston. Starting around the 0:45 mark (and leading up to that) you’ll see me thanking the audience and telling them what their contributions mean to the BJFF: EMCEE SCRIPT TIP 3: TELL THEM WHO YOU ARE Sounds obvious, right? You’d be amazed at how many emcees I’ve seen who forget to identify themselves. This lapse leaves a nagging hole in your audience’s understanding of the proceedings.
Emcee Script Sample For Event
They see you, but don’t know who you are or why you’ve been chosen for this central role in the event. So while you’re off pontificating about other topics, they’re still ruminating on why you’re up there to begin with. Ah, but maybe you’re confident that everyone in your audience already knows you?
Introduce yourself anyway. There may be friends, colleagues, special guests, and spouses in your audience who don’t know you. And those who know who you are may not really understand what you do, or how and why you got tapped for the emcee role.
I’d suggest mentioning: — Your first and last name (yes, both) — Your official title in the organization sponsoring the event — Your role within that organization (summed up in one casual phrase or sentence) — Some sense of why you were tapped as the emcee. BONUS: Express to your audience that you’re honored and humbled to serve in the emcee role. Reassure them you know how special it is, and you’re happy to do it.
EMCEE SCRIPT TIP 4: TURN YOUR MONOLOGUE INTO A CHAT Emcees can get overwhelmed with performance anxiety before taking the stage, wondering how they’ll do all that talking when their hearts are pounding and their limbs are shaking. If that’s you, share your speaking burden with your audience by engaging them in something of a conversation. The most common approach is to ask three questions on a relevant topic, such as who’s attended previous events, or who’s traveled the farthest to attend this year. The first question sets the terms, the second ups the ante, and the third plays off the first two as a joke. Here’s a sample script: “Show of hands: who traveled at least two hours to be here?” Audience members raise hands.
“Who traveled at least four hours to be here?” Some audience members keep hands up, others lower hands. “Who never left last year’s event?” Audience laughs; all hands go down. Here’s a video sample for you: In 2012, I emceed an IT seminar for Spark client Atrion called AlwaysOn Symposium, held at the Putnam Club at Gillette Stadium (home of the New England Patriots football team). I snuck in TWO of these three-question sets: — At the 2:03 mark, I asked audience members about their association with the stadium (the Wes Welker reference related to a photo on the screen of an Atrion employee wearing a painted face and Welker jersey).
Sample Emcee Script For Seminar
— At the 2:40 mark, I polled audience members about their attendance at past AlwaysOn Symposia, and saved the biggest “ginormous” round of applause for first-time attendees. In the 15-20 seconds it takes to ask questions, you’ve not only lessened your own performance anxiety with a few key seconds to breathe and collect your thoughts. You’ve connected directly with your audience members, assessed their collective mood, discovered the extroverts (who respond to every question) and introverts (who always stay silent), and shown everyone you care about their contributions to the proceedings, all of which helps you relax on stage.
EMCEE SCRIPT TIP 5: SHARE KEY EVENT INFORMATION When an event starts, audience members will inevitably be harboring nagging logistical questions about it: Will I get home in time to relieve the babysitter? Who validates my parking? Should I pee now, or wait for a break? If you don’t answer these questions, they tend to become distractions that prevent your audience members from giving you their full attention. In your first few minutes on stage, put them at ease and set their expectations by giving them the full agenda for your event.
Spark owner and professional emcee Andy Saks Andy Saks owns and runs Spark Presentations, a private company founded in 1998 that provides presentation skills training and speech coaching for executives, salespeople, marketers and other businesspeople, plus booth staff training for trade show exhibitors. Spark also books professional presenters and public speakers to represent its clients at high-profile events, in roles like keynote speaker, trade show booth presenter, master of ceremonies (emcee) and auctioneer, as well as on camera talent and voice talent. Spark’s client list includes large corporations like AT&T, Best Buy, FedEx, Hyundai, Intel, Kimberly-Clark, Olympus, Owens-Corning, Panasonic, Samsung, Sony, and Volvo; high-tech industry players like AMD, Atrion, Citrix, Gigamon, and Symantec; service organizations like Vistage, 1nService and NERCOMP; and New England institutions like the Boston Jewish Film Festival. Andy is also the author of The Presentation Playbook Series, a three-volume set of books that help businesspeople master common presentation situations by building and running speaking “plays” like a coach or player calls a key play in a game. For more information on Spark services, please contact Andy Saks via or Spark’s.
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