Harlacher grew up in Camarillo, California, and started acting in school plays.[5][6] When she was around 9โ10 years old, she was inspired by an interview by Christy Carlson Romano, who voiced the title character from Kim Possible, in which Romano said that with voice acting, you could go to work in your pajamas. Erika's mother responded that it was not a real job, and suggested Erika pursue acting only as a hobby.[7][8] Her first exposure to anime was through Dragon Ball Z and Pokรฉmon, which she considered more like cartoons, and then became more interested in manga and anime in school when Fruits Basket was being published in English.[4] At La Reina High School, she was active in the Speech and Mock Trial team,[5] winning the California state championship in 2008.[9][10] She also competed on the school's diving team.[6][11][12]
After graduating high school in 2008,[13] she attended California State Polytechnic University, Pomona where she intended to major in graphic design.[7][14][15] During her freshman year, she looked up some online forums on voice-over acting and attended Anime Expo, where she attended an Adventures in Voice Acting workshop conducted by Tony Oliver.[5] On Oliver's suggestion that she was pretty good at it, she changed her major to theatre,[4][16] and continued to take voice acting lessons and workshops while studying at school. She also did a production internship at Bang Zoom! Entertainment where she got to sit in on some of the recording sessions.[7] Her first voice acting project was on K-On!, where she voiced Keiko Ida, among some other incidental characters.[5][17] Her first big voice-over role was for the Battleship video game, based on the 2012 movie of the same name, where she got to voice the main character, Grace Harland, among many veteran voice actors.[17] However, video game reviewers panned the game because none of the movie's actors reprised their roles in the game, and faulted the game's limited acting, which was relegated to mostly radio chatter and mission updates.[18][19][20] At one point in college, she had some health issues that led her to take an absence from school and acting, so she pursued production work, which her parents thought would make for a more practical career. She later dropped it as she was encouraged by Oliver to pursue acting and to finish school, eventually landing the lead role as Ayesha in the video game Atelier Ayesha: The Alchemist of Dusk.[7] She described Ayesha as a bit airheaded and ditsy but relatable and resembles her personality at times.[21] Video game reviewer Sean Madson of Diehardgamefan found the dub to be of decent quality, but said Ayesha "sounded a bit too obnoxious with her airheadedness."[22] Matt Sainsbury of Digitally Downloaded thought the dub was reasonable but disliked their American accents as not suiting the Japanese personality of the game.[23] Vince Ingenito of IGN wrote that "both the writing and voice acting fail to lend any weight to her plight. Ayesha seems about as upset over her missing sister as I might be over a glass of spilled milk, making it really hard to care about the outcome of her quest."[24] She also voiced Sadira, a spider-themed woman and new character to the Killer Instinct series.[25]
In 2014, Harlacher voiced Kyoko Kirigiri in Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc. She described Kyoko as the most calm among the wacky characters and always on top of things.[8] Video game reviewers thought the voice acting was okay.[26][27][28] In the same year, she voiced Blood Leopard in Accel World, who was similar to Kyoko's stoic disposition. In Sword Art Online, she voiced Sasha, whom she describes as being like a teacher/nun lady who is in charge of the kids who are lost in the game.[8][17] In the second season of Sword Art Online, she voiced Siune. She also began attending anime conventions as a guest panelist.[8][29] In voicing Dunya in the Magi: The Labyrinth of Magic series, she found her character to be not your average princess, and that she was fun because she was unpredictable.[5] Her biggest role that year was Ami Kawashima in the romantic comedy Toradora!, a classmate who harbors a mean and bratty personality behind a cheerful perfect-looking facade of a model.[30] As it was one of NIS America's first dub productions for anime,[31] She said they took a long time to call back from the audition, and that it also took more time than other studios in producing the dub for the show.[21][32] She describes Ami's character as trying to act like she knows what she's doing but does not really have it together, and also her lack of culinary talent.[21] LB Bryant of Japanator said that the Toradora dub release is a "must obtain" item and that "Ami Kawashima equals best girl."[31] Travis Bruno of Capsule Computers said the English dub cast did impressively well and those who only listen to the Japanese tracks would be missing out.[33] She also voiced Mako's mother, Sukuyo Mankanshoku in Kill la Kill, which later ran on Adult Swim's Toonami block in 2015.[7] She described the series as crazy, the Mankanshoku family as ridiculous, and that Sukuyo is very sweet by constantly providing everyone food.[4]
In 2015, Harlacher voiced Mimori Togo in Yuki Yuna is a Hero, one of the main heroines who are called to save their world by interacting in an alternate dimension, where they have super powers. She described Togo as going through a lot of emotional stuff, which helped her expand her acting range.[21]Anime News Network reviewer Theron Martin said that the cast was "appropriately chosen for their roles in a vocal quality sense and handled the acting capably."[34] In the same year, she voiced main character Princess Asseylum Vers Allusia in Aldnoah.Zero as well as Elizabeth in The Seven Deadly Sins, both of which had English dub premieres on Netflix. She attended Sac-Anime in Sacramento, California; the panel she was on was regarded as one of the highlights of the convention.[35]Manga Entertainment listed Harlacher among their top 5 English voice actresses.[36] In 2016, she landed the voice role of main character Kurapika in the Viz Media English dub of the 2011 anime adaptation of Hunter x Hunter, which premiered on the Toonami block in April.[37] In 2017, she voiced Ann Takamaki, one of the core player characters in the video game Persona 5.[38]
Harlacher lives in North Hollywood in the Los Angeles area.[45][46] In 2014, she started a Let's Play video channel on YouTube, where she plays through various games, some of which she has starred in, and others just for fun.[21][47][48] She has a younger sister Natalie.[49][50][51] She also owns two dogs.[52] On October 14, 2020, she married long-time partner Luke Stone.[53][54] Her paternal grandfather, Ervin Harlacher, was the first president of Brookdale Community College.[55] Harlacher is diagnosed with Obsessiveโcompulsive disorder.[56]
^Johnson, Brett (May 11, 2008). "La Reina makes its case at mock trial nationals". Ventura County Star. Archived from the original on April 26, 2016. La Reina's national team consisted of "attorneys" Amanda Mundell, Hannah Harper and Nayantara Bhushan; "witnesses" Lauren Dansey, Erika Harlacher, Kristin Miller, Piper Nunez and Julianne Brauer; and team clerk/timekeeper Paloma Spencer.
^ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaab"Erika Harlacher (visual voices guide)". Behind The Voice Actors. A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information. Retrieved December 18, 2018.
^"Top Five English Voice Actresses". Manga Entertainment. March 9, 2016. Erika Harlacher is twenty-five years old and the newest voice-actress on this list. She might not have a robust catalogue of voices to pick from, but she can perform with the best of them with her roles including Kyoto Kirigiri in Danganronpa: The Animation, Sasha and Siune in Sword Art Online, Dunya in Magi: The Kingdom of Magic and Ami Kawashima in Toradora! Erika has also branched into games where she, once again, voiced Kyoto Kirigiri in Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc, Momoka in Omega Quintet and Ayesha Altugle in Atelier Ayesha: The Alchemist of Dusk. Despite having only been in a handful of shows so far, they've all happened to be successful and are fantastic shows to have on her resume. I'm sure we'll be seeing a lot more of Erika in 2016!
^"Aniplex USA to Release 1st Aldnoah.Zero Season on BD, DVD with Dub, Sub". Anime News Network. May 6, 2015. Retrieved April 25, 2016. Aniplex of America will host an English dub premiere event at Anime Expo. The company will show the first three episodes and host a Q&A event with Mittelman (Inaho), Aguilar (Slaine), and Harlacher (Asseylum).
^Creamer, Nick (May 2, 2018). "Violet EvergardenโEpisodes 1โ13 streaming". Anime News Network. Retrieved August 21, 2018. Erika Harlacher's take on the heroine is far more expressive from the start than Yui Ishikawa's nearly monotone original take, with even her first scenes demonstrating a tonal range far greater than the original. In some ways, this makes Violet more relatable up front.
^Martin, Theron (February 5, 2018). "Kakegurui โ Episodes 1โ12 streaming". Anime News Network. Retrieved August 21, 2018. I wasn't sure at first about the key performance of Erika Harlacher as Yumeko, but she gradually grew on me as she nailed Yumeko's most ecstatic moments.