yannosh wrote:Rose, I am sorry to say, but you are being reverse racist.
Honor has been repeatedly stated to have nothing in common with Alison BUT the eyes.
That in no for or means makes her a non-caucasian.
I'm not saying Honor should be white. I am saying that excluding white actresses over that reason is JUST as racist as excluding non-caucasians from the roll.
First requirement MUST be ability to pull it off. Beyond that I don't care if they have a inuit transexual for the role. It is all window dressing.
Now, casting all Caucasian cast would be a racist move. But forcing people who have so far been rather more open to working with the fanbase and the author than anyone familiar with Hollywood could hope to expect to thin out the talent pool because most of Hollywood studios mismanage the matter of race of heroes and especially heroines would be plain wrong.
Except white actors don't have a history of being excluded even from roles written for them. Minorities do. Look, I get where you're coming from, but you're wrong.
First of all, Honor is canonically half-Asian - Allison is "of nearly pure Old Earth Oriental extraction." That's a direct quote. So yes, she is half-Asian.
You all know by now that I'm bisexual, right? So I know what it means to be part of a demographic that is constantly and comprehensively erased from media. Let's say, for instance, that Honor was lesbian. I know she's not, but just as a hypothetical. If Honor in the books was written as a lesbian, but in the films she was portrayed as straight, that is the exact same kind of erasure we're talking about here. And, coming from someone who has experienced that kind of erasure, it hurts. And it's cruel. It's not "all window dressing". It's the farthest thing from it.
There are so few roles for minorities as it is - do you have to take this one away from them too, on the old "but what if the white actor can do it just as well?" saw? Well, so what if they can? They can go audition for Star Trek. They can go audition for the next Battlestar Galactica spinoff. They can audition for one of the seventy bajillion Marvel films coming up. They can audition for literally hundreds, if not thousands, of roles written for white actors.
Your argument about Evergreen having to "winnow through" to find actors of Asian descent, as though they were as rare as hens' teeth, just doesn't hold any water. I can think of four actresses off the top of my head who could and would kick butt as Honor Harrington - Kristin Kreuk, Jamie Chung, Olivia Munn, and Moon Bloodgood - without even trying, and that's not including the dozens of other young Asian women who haven't achieved name recognition yet. The idea that finding an Asian or part-Asian actress capable of not only playing Honor but doing her true justice is going to be difficult is ludicrous.
I really don't want to hijack this thread for a social justice debate, but I do suggest you do a bit of research about whitewashing in Hollywood and why it's such a problem. Go read this article. I think it's a good starting point.
And I'd like to ask you just one question: if we were talking about casting a white actor as Queen Elizabeth or Michelle Henke, would this even be a debate?