World, Writing, Wealth discussion
World & Current Events
>
What changes when performing characters are played by different ethnicities and gender than originally conceptualized?
date
newest »


"Last Holiday" was originally written and filmed with a man as the main character, "George". A newer version stars Queen Latifah as the main character, "Georgia", and it's one of my favorite movies ever! Actually it's what inspired me to visit the Czech Republic, which I was finally able to do just months ago!
There is a certain amount of artistic license that the film industry can take imo. Whether it's executed well is another story :D.


My position has always been that diversity should feel natural...I hate it when it feels forced or when it seems to be the biggest promotional tool for a work, but I like it when it feels natural and unforced.
How would it feel if it were my work adapted? It would depend on the story because a lot of times I don't play up the color of a character. With one, maybe two exceptions, their race doesn't define who they are. In Are There Heroes In Hell?, about the only indication I gave to the MC's race was a comment he makes about another prisoner in the camp: "He was black like me." And that was about it. Even some of the white characters wouldn't specifically be white if it weren't for a vague description of an embarrassing moment causing them to blush, or something similar.
It's sort of easier to do in far-future space settings where you can imagine the issue of race being something entirely different to what we're familiar with, but one of the subtler reasons I choose to downplay wherever possible is to give the leeway for casting decisions in the very unlikely event a story gets picked up. If the casting director wants to cast an African American in a role I envisioned as white, they're free to do so. If they have a Hispanic actor who embodies a character I envisioned as black, then they have the freedom to cast him/her without alteration to the source in most cases. Etc.

For me, when a classic is changed it is difficult to adjust. But, much of that is because of the historical content and time period. That is possibly why sci fi, even when no aliens, it is easy to accept a change of race or gender. Ender could have been a girl.

Now we have female King Lear's, or having to have ethnically authentic (not Moors) Othello etc.
I thought it was called acting for a reason and it should not matter except that Hollywood seems to have to have male white leads and remake story settings into America. Still fits in with the Oscars that way - joke!
(Note: Here I've drawn upon articles concerning the casting of Asian-Americans in performing roles in film, but I'm really asking for discussion across the board.)
(Beyond 'nerds' and 'ninjas,' slow progress for Asian actors in Hollywood: http://www.cnn.com/2017/07/06/enterta...)
Kim was in Battlestar Galactica too! ^_^
Thoughts?
As an author, would you want the gender or ethnicity of your characters changed? What if the performance was a live theatrical one? What if the locale was changed from the US to Japan, China, Korea, India, Russia, South Africa?