Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Ethnic Ambiguity

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Ethnic Ambiguity

    Back Stage, NY
    July 19 2004

    Ethnic Ambiguity
    More Roles, But Still a Mixed Bag

    By Simi Horwitz

    With the high visibility of such cultural icons as baseball player
    Derek Jeter, singer Mariah Carey, and action hero Vin Diesel, it's
    not really a big surprise to learn that talent agents, casting
    directors, and talent management firms are now receiving requests for
    actors who are "ethnically ambiguous," of "mixed ethnicity," or have
    a "global look," especially for commercials, films, and television
    shows.

    "Within the past three or four years, it has become a growing trend
    across the board," says Jessica Schoenholtz, a talent manager with
    the New York City-based J. Mitchell Management. "In theatre, the
    casting still tends to be a little more traditional, although the
    ethnically ambiguous actor may be cast when directors or producers
    want to do nontraditional casting.

    "I believe producers, but especially advertisers -- in fashion,
    phones, and fast food, for example -- are getting wise to the fact
    that the world is changing," she continues. "It's a smaller place,
    with lots of intermarriage, and the diversity is only going to
    increase. A network like Nickelodeon often looks for ethnically
    ambiguous actors. Ensemble casting routinely includes the ethnically
    ambiguous."

    Carole Russo of New York's Agents for the Arts agrees, adding, "There
    is more opportunity for actors who are ethnically mixed than ever
    before. I often get requests for actors who are biracial. Sometimes
    it's very specific, like African-American and Caucasian; other times,
    the request for biracial is broadly nonspecific, leaving it wide
    open. The breakdowns for many musicals now include 'all ethnicities,
    unless otherwise noted.' "

    Back Stage talked with several actors who are indeed ethnically mixed
    for their spin on the new opportunities available to them and the
    concomitant obstacles. Most acknowledge more accessibility to roles.

    Joanne HartsHorne, who is biracial (African-American and Caucasian),
    says, "I don't like labels. But being ethnically ambiguous has helped
    me. I certainly get a lot of calls, so I've come to accept terms like
    'ethnically ambiguous.' I sometimes think the term means almost
    anything other than all white, which is also another way of saying
    there's a lot of competition for those roles."

    She adds that she is often cast as a Latino. In fact, HartsHorne has
    had a recurring role as a woman of Brazilian descent on "As the World
    Turns" for more than a year. "They specifically asked for a
    light-skinned African-American to play a character who was half
    Brazilian."

    Actress Alexea Lawson, who is of African-American, Native American,
    Hispanic, and British heritage, has had similar experiences. "I'm
    multiracial and have very little Spanish blood, but producers see a
    Spanish girl when they look at me. They also continue to have
    stereotypical notions of what an African-American looks like. They
    don't seem to accept the idea that a black person can have blue eyes
    or blond hair. But if the casting notice says 'ethnic,' that changes
    the picture. I then become 'culturally unique' and that character
    description has opened doors for me in casting."

    However, within the parameters of "ethnic ambiguity," she hones her
    image depending on the specifics of the role. "If they want 'ethnic
    and funky,' I'll wear my hair curly. If they want 'ethnic and
    preppy,' I'll straighten it."

    By contrast, HartsHorne refuses to "second-guess what producers are
    looking for, although they seem to have clear ideas of what a young
    black girl looks or sounds like. I just go to an audition as me. But
    when the character is African-American, I've been asked more than
    once, 'Can't you look and sound more street?' "

    Filipino performers have traditionally faced casting problems in
    mainstream theatre, observes actress Ching Valdez-Aran. "We are of
    mixed blood -- part Hispanic, part Asian -- and when I started in the
    theatre in 1983, producers had no idea how to cast us. Many producers
    thought of Asians as being Chinese, Japanese, or Korean. I don't look
    like any of these and I don't look Hispanic either. I have never
    heard the term 'ethnically ambiguous' or the 'global look,' but I
    think it's great. And I do think there are more casting opportunities
    today."

    South Asian actors Back Stage has interviewed in the past echo the
    viewpoint [See Back Stage, May 14, "The South Asians Are Coming...In
    Fact, They're Already Here"]. Undoubtedly, there are more roles today
    for South Asians: Consider "Bombay Dreams." But they are also being
    cast as characters from the Middle East. Actress Sarita Choudhury
    enjoyed a featured role in Betty Shamieh's "Roar," a play about
    Palestinians. Similarly, Bombay-born actor Aasif Mandvi took on the
    featured role of Ali Hakim, a Persian peddler, in Trevor Nunn's 2002
    production of "Oklahoma!"

    This was a groundbreaking bit of casting. For starters, Mandvi was
    among the first East Indians to be cast in a major part in a Broadway
    musical. But equally relevant, until this production Ali had been
    played as a Jewish vendor pretending to be Persian -- feeding into
    notions of Mideastern exoticism -- and speaking with a generic
    Mideastern accent. It was a Borsht Belt interpretation. Clearly, Nunn
    was dead set against that vision, determined to present in its stead
    a realistic portrayal of a Persian peddler, admittedly within a comic
    framework. Still, a Persian was not cast in the role but rather a
    South Asian who could "pass" for an Arab.

    Interestingly, while producers and directors have become very
    concerned with accuracy in language, dialect, and accent, they may be
    a little less stringent in their casting. Stereotypes persist.

    Actor Josh Levin-Soler -- part Caucasian Jew, part Hispanic -- says,
    "I have European features, but I'm olive-skinned with dark hair. I'm
    not exactly Latino looking, but I'm certainly not all-American
    looking either. I could probably be cast as an Italian-American,
    although so far I haven't.

    "Recently I got cast in a TV ad for AT&T Wireless," Levin-Soler
    continues. "They were looking for four Hispanics, three from Latin
    America and one from Spain. [The latter] was me. I probably got that
    role because people from Spain may be more European looking than
    those from Latin America. I like the idea of ethnically ambiguous
    casting. I'm sure for some actors it has opened up opportunities. For
    me, it has been more limiting."

    Nora Armani, a performer of Armenian-Egyptian-American heritage, has
    not been restricted by her mixed ethnicity, at least not for the most
    part. Still, she recounts one stunning episode: "A movie
    writer-director who wrote a character in a script based on me would
    not cast me in the role because, he said, 'You are not ethnic looking
    enough.' He wanted a more stereotypic Armenian look than I have. I've
    lived abroad and speak with a British accent, but I look Eastern
    European or Mediterranean."

    Armani also talks about the intangible influences of milieu and
    culture. "I somehow look and sound different depending on where I am.
    When I'm in Hollywood, I become more California. When I'm in Europe,
    I'm more ethnic. I think that's because it's valued there. New York
    is the best place for me. I can be who I am and accepted for it."

    In the byzantine world of casting, Armani feels that great strides
    have been made and she is optimistic about the future, as she is
    about the evolution of the species.

    "There are so many mixes and matches today that we are now creating a
    new breed. I foresee a time when many white actors will not really be
    white."
Working...
X