"Glee" Wheelchair Episode Upsets Disabled

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LYNN ELBER | 11/10/09 05:56 PM | AP

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LOS ANGELES — The glee club members twirl their wheelchairs to the tune of "Proud Mary" and in joyful solidarity with Artie, the fellow performer who must use his chair even when the music stops.

The scene in Wednesday's episode of the hit Fox series "Glee," which regularly celebrates diversity and the underdog, is yet another uplifting moment – except to those in the entertainment industry with disabilities and their advocates.

For them, the casting of a non-disabled actor to play the paraplegic high school student is another blown chance to hire a performer who truly fits the role.

"I think there's a fear of litigation, that a person with disabilities might slow a production down, fear that viewers might be uncomfortable," said Robert David Hall, longtime cast member of CBS' "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation."

All of that is nonsense, said Hall: "I've made my living as an actor for 30 years and I walk on two artificial legs."

Hall, 61, chair of a multi-union committee for performers with disabilities, is part of a small band of such steadily working actors on TV that includes Daryl "Chill" Mitchell, star of Fox's "Brothers"; teenager RJ Mitte of AMC's "Breaking Bad"; and ABC's "Private Practice" newcomer Michael Patrick Thornton.

Veteran actress Geri Jewell, who has cerebral palsy, appeared on HBO's now-departed "Deadwood."

Mitchell, 44, whose credits included "Veronica's Closet" and the film "Galaxy Quest" before he was injured in a motorcycle accident and "Ed" after he began using a wheelchair, is also a producer on the Sunday sitcom that's in need of higher ratings if it is to survive.

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For Mitchell, "Brothers" represents more than just another show: He calls it "a movement" that deserves support from the wider disabled community as well as the industry.

"This is what my life is. This is what I want the world to see," he said. "I want to hold the networks accountable. If I can come out and do what I'm doing, they can come to the table."

It's not just TV that falls short of what Mitchell and others seek, including auditioning those with disabilities for roles that echo their situation and for roles in which it is irrelevant. (Then it's up to them to prove they deserve the job, Hall said.)

In the theater world, advocacy groups for the disabled recently objected to the casting of Abigail Breslin ("Little Miss Sunshine") as young Helen Keller in a Broadway revival of "The Miracle Worker," and a hearing actor's selection for a deaf role in the off-Broadway "The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter."

In films, Daniel Day-Lewis received an Academy Award for his portrayal of a man with severe cerebral palsy in "My Left Foot" and Tom Cruise was nominated for an Oscar for playing a paralyzed Vietnam veteran in "Born on the Fourth of July."

Television, however, has a unique place in the country's cultural and social fiber. It deals in volume, is entrenched in most lives as it consumes hours of leisure time and has the daily power to reinforce attitudes or reshape them. Increasingly, it's been expected to reflect America in whole and not just the so-called mainstream.

That was the intent in assembling the cast of "Glee," said executive producer Brad Falchuk, along with getting the best performers possible.

"We brought in anyone: white, black, Asian, in a wheelchair," he said. "It was very hard to find people who could really sing, really act, and have that charisma you need on TV."

He understands the concern and frustration expressed by the disabled community, he said. But Kevin McHale, 21, who plays Artie, excels as an actor and singer and "it's hard to say no to someone that talented," Falchuk said.

"Glee" isn't alone in using an able-bodied actor for a wheelchair role: "Curb Your Enthusiasm" did it twice in a recent episode.

While TV has grown more inclusive of ethnic and gay characters, those with disabilities represent a sizable minority that hasn't fared as well – whether with genuine or fake portrayals.

About one-fifth of Americans age 5 to 64 have a physical or mental disability – more than 50 million, according to U.S. Census figures. But fewer than 2 percent of the characters on TV reflect that reality, according to a 2005 study of Screen Actors Guild members conducted by researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles.

And it's not a small playing field: There are 600 characters or more on the scripted comedies and dramas airing on the five major networks in a typical season.

More than a third of performers with disabilities reported facing discrimination in the workplace, either being refused an audition or not being cast for a role because of their disability, the study found. Many performers fear being candid about their health or needs to avoid pity or being seen as incapable of doing a job.

There can be added production expenses, said veteran casting director Sheila Manning, such as hiring a translator for a performer who is deaf.

"It costs a little more, but look at the positive reaction they're (the networks) getting. I think that more than offsets the cost," Manning said, adding that it's the morally right thing to do.

And producers simply can't complain of a shallow pool of choices.

"There are very talented performers with disabilities. ... We just don't know what producers are thinking," said Gloria Castaneda, program director of the Media Access Office, a California state program that promotes hiring of the disabled in the entertainment industry. It also gives annual awards for positive portrayals.

The cause has union support: A campaign sponsored by three major entertainment guilds and aimed at creating equal employment opportunities for actors, broadcasters and recording artists just marked its first year.

TV's past, oddly enough, was brighter. In the 1980s, actors with disabilities could be seen regularly in a variety of shows. They included Jewell, who costarred on "Facts of Life," and James Stacy, who played a love interest for Sharon Gless on "Cagney & Lacey" and appeared in "Wiseguy" after losing limbs in a motorcycle crash.

R.J. Johnson, a writer and filmmaker, documented the golden period in "Breaking Ground." Among those interviewed in the film was an actress who proclaimed, "We're never going back. It won't happen."

Johnson says that "everything aligned" to encourage producers and directors such as Michael Landon ("Highway to Heaven") to create characters with disabilities and then hire the right actors to play them.

"Then it kind of faded away," says casting pro Manning. "It was a cause, and then it wasn't."

But she sounded a note of optimism, saying, "It's in the public consciousness again, so it's in the production consciousness."

A friend was on the mind of Vince Gilligan, executive director of "Breaking Bad," when the role of Walter Jr. was formed. Gilligan said he was thinking of a dear college pal, a man "with an infectious personality," who died in recent years.

"It must have been I wanted to represent him in such a fashion when I created the character of Walter Jr.," Gilligan told a recent industry forum on the hiring and portrayal of people with disabilities. "There was no reason for him to have cerebral palsy. It just seemed like, 'Why Not?' There's no better reason than that, I suppose."

More is at stake than actors' careers, say advocates.

"When a person with a disability sees a positive image on TV that looks like them, their whole attitude changes. It gives them hope for what they can do in the future," said Castaneda of the Media Access Office.

It counts for their families as well, said veteran writer Janis Hirsch, who works on Fox's "Brothers" and "'Til Death," and who had polio as an infant.

"I am sick and tired of my son not seeing anyone even remotely like me on TV," she said. "The first time my son saw someone use forearm crutches was the giraffe puppet in 'Lion King.' He was so excited. Where else do you see it? You just don't see it."

___

On the Net:

Media Access Office: http://www.disabilityemployment.org/med(underscore)acc.htm

I AM PWD, Inclusion in the Arts & Media of People with Disabilities: http://www.iampwd.org/

LOS ANGELES — The glee club members twirl their wheelchairs to the tune of "Proud Mary" and in joyful solidarity with Artie, the fellow performer who must use his chair even when the music stops...
LOS ANGELES — The glee club members twirl their wheelchairs to the tune of "Proud Mary" and in joyful solidarity with Artie, the fellow performer who must use his chair even when the music stops...
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- MNmommy I'm a Fan of MNmommy 372 fans permalink
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Oh I don't know.

Upon watching the episode, I thought it was very positive and a great teaching moment.

Big fan of the show, and mother to two kids with issues, though not physical.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:43 PM on 11/12/2009
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Where is the acknowledgement that there were two Down syndrome charactors introduced in this episode?
Seems like they listened to the complaints about Artie at the beginning of the show, and are correcting their hiring.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:10 PM on 11/12/2009
- LiberalJo I'm a Fan of LiberalJo 4 fans permalink
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I love this show... and I was glad that the producers finally gave Artie the spotlight.
I found it very inclusive... I always do.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:00 PM on 11/12/2009
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SPOILER ALERT: When Artie is performing Dancing With Myself in the opening credits, watch the hallway stunts. In the full shots of the actor, there are wheelie bars on the wheelchair. When the two really difficult stunts (including a one wheel 360) happen, there are no wheelie bars and it is shot from the shoulders down.

So the actor has a wheelchair stunt double, at least for this episode, and he's named in the credits.

I have been posting on this thread that it's perfectly alright by me if non-disabled actors play disabled characters. I am sticking by that. This is the first time I have noticed any shots that used a double. The actor is still really convincing as disabled, in the way he sits and handles himself in the chair. I don't expect him to learn "Murderball" style skateboard stunts. But they were fun to watch anyway.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:25 AM on 11/12/2009
- jalowe1957 I'm a Fan of jalowe1957 36 fans permalink
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Picky, picky, picky, picky, picky....

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:51 AM on 11/12/2009
- esgabel I'm a Fan of esgabel 26 fans permalink
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As usual it was a great fun show...
Sue! who knew!
This is a tempest in a teapot...
whether the actor is or is not actually in a wheelchair--
it is the storyline,
the heart and the respect that is shown to the matter at hand.
They got each storyline right...
respecting the Father's limitations,
stretching the developmentally disabled student's horizons,
sharing in the frustration of physical barriers
and just being a teenager in the middle of daily drama and poor decision making.
All with great music--thanks Glee!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:28 AM on 11/12/2009
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I thought actors were against type-casting.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:09 AM on 11/12/2009
- KingCujo I'm a Fan of KingCujo 14 fans permalink
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It was a nice show, not offensive to me. Thought it showed sensitivity.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:22 PM on 11/11/2009
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I am celebrating 28 years this year in a wheelchair, paralyzed by an unknown virus. I also began my career as an Arts Administrator in California, and coordinated the first ever panel addressing the issues of the disabled and the arts community, at the California Confederation of the Arts annual statewide conference.

I will say the same thing I said to the attendees at that panel, when this very same issue was brought up in 1990! Acting is a craft based on the art of acting not based on stereotyping or profiling. You should not be required to hire someone who is black, asian, mormon, catholoic, or disabled to fill a certain acting role, based on that alone. It should be based on the art of the craft of acting first and foremost!

The catholic church doesn't argue every time an actor portrays a priest, we (the disabled community) should not complain when a non disabled ACTOR is hired to play the role of someone with a disability!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:22 PM on 11/11/2009
- Libilou I'm a Fan of Libilou 3 fans permalink
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Well said!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:28 AM on 11/12/2009
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Well said, indeed. I was surprised when I first found out that he was not actually disabled. He does well in the role he plays. I love this show!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:26 AM on 11/12/2009
- jaxstl I'm a Fan of jaxstl 3 fans permalink
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I agree, but don't you think with all the gay actors out there we they couldn't find one to put in a leading gay role (ie Milk) j/k kinda!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:15 PM on 11/12/2009
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My best friend is partially paralyzed. We both agree that South Park is the ONLY show that has disabled characters (Timmy, and Jimmy) that are both realistic and just a natural part of the shows plots and ensemble.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:29 PM on 11/11/2009
- BlackJAC I'm a Fan of BlackJAC 58 fans permalink

And yet I've never once seen disabled people fight each other.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:48 PM on 11/11/2009
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My Crip friend loves that episode. :You are PC beyond belief....Watch Murder Ball for a real look at crip society. And yes...that is the work that my friend and others in the crip community refer to themselves....

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:53 AM on 11/12/2009
- BlackJAC I'm a Fan of BlackJAC 58 fans permalink

The robot community is also up in arms about how the producers of BATTLESTAR GALACTICA used biological humans and CGI animation to portray the Cylons rather than actual robots.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:22 PM on 11/11/2009
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Not to mention all those live actors who continue to portray historical dead folks...

Miles "Ironsides" Long

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:02 PM on 11/11/2009
- puna I'm a Fan of puna permalink

What if the writers decided to write a dream sequence for Artie's character to sing and dance without wheelchair? Yes, its possible to pull off with a disabled actor (double/cgi) but a lot cheaper to execute with an actor who can actually stand-up & dance.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:32 AM on 11/11/2009
- Ivriniel I'm a Fan of Ivriniel 11 fans permalink

So a reason not to cast an actor with a disability is that the writers *might* want to write a scene like that sometime in the future?

Absurd.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:57 PM on 11/11/2009
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So their reasoning would be just incase they decided to write a TERRIBLE idea for an episode.

A DREAM SEQUENCE??? REALLY???

Wow

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:37 PM on 11/11/2009
- BlackJAC I'm a Fan of BlackJAC 58 fans permalink

This episode does have a flashback to the accident that crippled Artie.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:19 PM on 11/11/2009
- DevonTexas I'm a Fan of DevonTexas 16 fans permalink
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And I was rejoicing because Glee had a character in a wheelchair. I didn't consider whether the actor was disabled or not, just that the character was present! !

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:05 AM on 11/11/2009
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I know! Who knew we were both going to he.ll? I sure didn't.

Well, I kinda already knew, but not for this!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:42 PM on 11/11/2009
- GO-BAMA I'm a Fan of GO-BAMA 7 fans permalink

I don't understand this. Actors act. The whole point is pretending to be something you're not.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:28 AM on 11/11/2009
- Ivriniel I'm a Fan of Ivriniel 11 fans permalink

There are very limited roles out there for people with disabilities. When the limited roles are given non-disabled persons, then those with a disability never get a shot.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:58 PM on 11/11/2009
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They should start writing more shows with roles in them for disabled characters...like ALF! I mean, you can have a whole team of midgets taking turns to play him.

(Probably help the economy too).

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:39 PM on 11/11/2009

I can appreciate that, but at the same time, there are times when a performer is just right for the role. McHale obviously wasn't cast for star power, or because there was a drive to get a non-disabled performer, he just *fits*.

Honestly, I think the time to campaign for this would have been when the series was being cast. Now that an actor has been cast, it's almost mean to say the role should be taken from him.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:35 PM on 11/11/2009
- KIVPossum I'm a Fan of KIVPossum 44 fans permalink
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Seems some people wake up and spend the rest of the day finding things to be offended about.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:50 AM on 11/11/2009
- CapableOne I'm a Fan of CapableOne 6 fans permalink
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SO true.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:25 AM on 11/12/2009

Right? I've got outrage fatigue...

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:01 PM on 11/12/2009
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