Casting Director Fired After Seeking Actors with That 'Inbreeding' Look
Have you ever seen a movie that featured an actor with physical abnormalities and wondered what the casting call for that role must have looked like? I mean, did they come out and SAY, "We need someone who looks like a freak"? And how does the actor feel about it? Well, a couple days ago a casting notice went out for Shelter -- a Julianne Moore/Jonathan Rhys Meyers thriller about to start filming in Pittsburgh -- that began to answer those questions. It included a call for people to play West Virginia hillbillies. Specifically, they wanted "unusual body shapes, even physical abnormalities as long as there is normal mobility. Unusual facial features.... We are also looking for a ... girl with an other-worldly look to her. Could be an albino or something along those lines.... 'Regular-looking' children should not attend this open call."
The Pittsburgh-based casting director responsible for this, Donna Belajac, has now been fired -- not because of the casting notice, but because of the uproar that followed her comments quoted in a Pittsburgh Tribune-Review story on Tuesday: "Some of these 'holler' people -- because they are insular and clannish, and they don't leave their area -- there is literally inbreeding, and the people there often have a different kind of look. That's what we're trying to get."
She added that "it's not meant to be a generalization about everyone in West Virginia," but that didn't stop people -- including West Virginia Sen. Robert Byrd -- from becoming outraged. The paper's follow-up story on Wednesday included Byrd's declaration that "this casting call reflects the insensitivity and stupidity of a sheltered film industry." (Get it? "Sheltered"? And the movie is called Shelter?? Maybe the pun wasn't intentional.)
Lots of other complaints poured in after the casting call was widely circulated on the Internet, and the film's producers, Emilio Diez Barroso and Darlene Caamano Loquet, responded by firing Belajac and issuing a statement saying the casting call went out "without our knowledge." They also said the film isn't set in West Virginia, and the state won't be mentioned.
Now, it sounds to me like the filmmakers, having found a scapegoat, have hung Belajac out to dry. The casting call said, "In addition to regular folks for scenes in and around Pittsburgh, we are looking for people to populate a West Virginia 'Holler.'" (A "holler" is a secluded rural village.) Where did Belajac get the idea that these scenes would be set in West Virginia if it wasn't in the script or mentioned to her by the producers? Does the script just say "inbred-looking," and Belajac came up with West Virginia on her own? Or did it used to say "West Virginia," and now the producers have back-pedaled and decided to set the freak scenes in Anywhere U.S.A.? I suspect it's the latter.
Too bad for Belajac. And too bad for any abnormal locals who were hoping to be cast!
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
2-28-2008 @ 6:49PM
eugene said...
don't wanna be called a bunch of inbreds? stop inbreeding.
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2-28-2008 @ 7:09PM
Automagv said...
Hillbillies can't read anyway. Screw em. Or rather, let them screw each other.
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2-28-2008 @ 9:35PM
Cincinnati Mike said...
A "holler" is a hollow--a valley.
Interesting the purple outrage that gets generated around here if one of your comments is misconstrued to be remotely racist, sexist or homophobic. But it's open season on Appalachians. Hypocrite much?
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2-28-2008 @ 9:50PM
eugene said...
You're comparing apples to oranges. A racist statement would be something like: All black people have violent tendencies. A factual statement would be: people from the appalachias are more likely to engage in incest and inbreeding then people from other regions of similar socio-economic standing.
See, one statement (the racsit one) relies upon generalizations which have no supporting evidence or, often, are in direct contrast to actual evidence. The other statement draws upon actual studies and evidence.
Once again, if you don't want to be made fun of for inbreeding, stop inbreeding.
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2-28-2008 @ 10:10PM
Philip said...
Eh I'm not from the Appalachians, but I am from the South and this type of comment/thinking is prevalent among most people not from the area or familiar with it. It's exactly in the same vein as homophobia or racism. It's like saying all West Coast people are cock-suckers or booty bandits, right? Same thing. Or take New Yorkers, who for some reason like to shoot unarmed black people, when they're not sticking nightsticks up their asses. Same thing, right? Or is that a generalization? I've had the distinct pleasure of traveling all over the USA, and while it boasts a number of beautiful states, I've found every state to host some form of racist or dullard. Take our friend eugene, whose exposure to places outside the strip mall and his high school lunchroom leave him in want of a broader experience in this world. He, should I run into him in one of those strip malls, would probably leave me shaking my head at how far backward his generation of thinkers is taking us.
But that would be stereotyping too. And it's just plain wrong.
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2-28-2008 @ 10:27PM
eugene said...
Once again, there are actual anthropology studies done that show that there is a higher incidence of incest and thus inbreeding in these applachian communities than in other communities of similar economic and social standing.
You can insult me all you like, which is a typical response when you don't have things like facts to support your claims, but it doesn't change the facts in regards to these communities.
http://www.mcnjournal.com/pt/re/mcn/abstract.00005721-200307000-00012.htm;jsessionid=HH5Pr2TnJSclXl3qyqqwfGm2p5DkZNXNHRhY14LzJ3QsFhGyph8G!-667243907!181195629!8091!-1
http://www.eric.ed.gov/ERICWebPortal/custom/portlets/recordDetails/detailmini.jsp?_nfpb=true&_&ERICExtSearch_SearchValue_0=EJ433473&ERICExtSearch_SearchType_0=no&accno=EJ433473
http://www.marshall.edu/etd/masters/moore-deborah-2004-ma.pdf
So what do we have here? Rhetoric and vulgar insults on your side, peppered by personal attacks and facts and research on the other.
Again, if you don't like being made fun of for inbreeding, stop marrying your cousins.
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2-28-2008 @ 11:04PM
NJ said...
Sorry Eugene, but the highest incidence of incest is in the northwest, not WV. Just admit you're a bigot and let's move on.
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2-29-2008 @ 2:05PM
John Smith said...
Looks like eugene got the best of you guys. Eugene did his homework and left you guys to take jabs at him because you couldn't stand knowing the facts. Collect facts in support of your statements or please don't take up space with your ignorance and 3rd grade (got-you-last) tactics. It just takes up more of our time having to sift through the useless comments to get to the relevant ones.
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2-29-2008 @ 7:52PM
Philip said...
John Smith was the man on the grassy knoll. Really.
Or: just eugene posing as a troll.
C'mon kid, give us some credit lol. You just aren't that swift.
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3-02-2008 @ 12:11PM
J.D. Miller said...
I was driving over the high country of WV back in 1978. Stopped at a grocery store to buy some items (Beer).
I ask the lady running the place how high we were?
She told me that we were a lot higher than her daddy's place.
I felt better right away.
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3-02-2008 @ 11:33PM
Libby said...
Had anyone clicked on the links given by Eugene, it would appear that there are only statistics given on more of sexual assault/child abuse incest victims. There also seem to be no comparisons between other areas of the nation. It just appears to give statistics from Appalachia itself. If I am wrong, feel free to point it out.
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