Some highlights of The 2013 Golden Globes were wins for Les Miserables, Hugh Jackman, Daniel Day-Lewis, and Anne Hathaway. Check out the other winners in the full list.
Some highlights of The 2013 Golden Globes were wins for Les Miserables, Hugh Jackman, Daniel Day-Lewis, and Anne Hathaway. Check out the other winners in the full list.
C’mon Ryan Murphy! You know how it is for minorities in the film industry! It is harder to find jobs if you are a minority. My question for most filmmakers who cast a person with a disability is why find someone able-bodied to play the role? In this instance, it is Julia Roberts in The Normal Heart. I can see if the character becomes disabled throughout a movie, as it is impossible to have a paraplegic play someone who has to walk in the film without a headache full of special effects. This is not the case with the role Roberts will play. Brookner is in a chair and stays in it throughout the film (based on the award-winning play). It’s just an insult to have a role perfectly geared towards a person in a wheelchair and have someone able-bodied portray them, if only for their name.

The Normal Heart holds a special place in my own heart. Back before I transitioned from female to male, I was an actor and I played the role Roberts holds. Dr. Emma Brookner is an amazing character. Her disability, as a paraplegic, is secondary to who she is. In fact, if I recall, it is not even a real issue. Dr. Brookner is a doctor who goes to the CDC begging them to classify HIV/AIDS as an epidemic. Brookner has thought-provoking heart-wrenching monologues, she delivers with a grace and intelligence. She is the type of person with a disability those of us in wheelchairs have been clamoring to see portrayed on television. The show is about HIV/AIDS and its spread throughout New York City and beyond during the 1980s. Dr. Brookner is the voice of reason.
So, why not cast a paraplegic actress in the role? I understand Roberts is the biggest name in the film, but people will also turn in for Mark Ruffalo, who plays the lead character, Ned Weeks. It is HBO. They will get an audience. Actors with disabilities are begging for roles. They are begging with the same conviction and desire as the character of Dr. Emma Brookner. They demand authenticity and acceptance in a Hollywood that is increasingly ableist. There are not very many roles out there that are made for people with disabilities and typically if they are there, a person without a disability gets the role over them. While I believe there are times where you must choose the right person for the job, the portrayals are usually so over the top and non-cohesive to what disability really is they impart the wrong message on how people with disabilities act, what they think and how we should treat them.
As the movie industry has progressed, they have come to allow minorities to portray themselves. No longer is it acceptable to portray African Americans by anyone other than African Americans. You seldom see anyone not deaf portraying someone deaf (especially thanks to the great performances of the talented Marlee Matlin). It would be unheard of to portray someone without Down Syndrome as having Down Syndrome (though we do see able-bodied actors with other forms of intellectual disabilities). Nobody understands disability or being in a wheelchair like a person who is in one. Even those who spend years with us do not get it or understand how we think or feel completely.
There is a lack of authenticity in the performances of the majority of people portrayed with a disability who do not have them. Often, people with disabilities are not even available as consultants or to help with the writing. It is disingenuous to have such portrayals and has led to many misconceptions and misrepresentations of people with disabilities in the media. Those who have little exposure to people with disabilities look to the media for how to treat, act, view and understand those who are different from them, so I believe, on some level, there is a responsibility to make these portrayals realistic.
Merlin Season 5 premieres on Friday January 4, 2013 with the Season 5 opener, Arthur’s Bane Part 1. In the meantime, check out this clip from the first episode.
All new action series on Cinemax, Banshee, created from a team that includes Alan Ball (True Blood) and Greg Yaitanes (House M.D.). Pilot episode to air January 11,…
King of the Nerds is an awesome-looking reality show that pits nerd against nerd in order to find the King of all nerds!
The Big Picture: Rethinking Dyslexia will air on October 29, 2012 on HBO.
Boardwalk Empire begins the 3rd Season on September 16, 2012 and we’ve got a basic look at what’s going to happen in the first three episodes.
Fans of True Blood won’t want to miss seeing the extended Season Five finale with hints of Season Six. Also, today you can participate in a live chat with TB creator, Alan Ball.
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