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- GRAPEVINE, Page 17Playing Against Type
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- By PAUL GRAY/Reported by David Ellis
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- The decision by Actors' Equity to forbid a white British
- star from portraying a Eurasian on Broadway may sink the
- musical Miss Saigon, but it revives old issues of fairness and
- competence. Daring casting has produced wildly mixed results:
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- TRIUMPHS
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- Alec Guinness - A PASSAGE TO INDIA. In David Lean's 1984
- classic adaptation of E.M. Forster's novel, the British actor
- faithfully portrayed Professor Godbole, an ascetic Hindu wise
- man.
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- John Lithgow - THE WORLD ACCORDING TO GARP. Cast as a
- transsexual former pro football player, Lithgow gave an
- unsmirking performance and won a 1982 Oscar nomination.
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- Laurence Olivier - OTHELLO. The acting demigod was by no
- means the first Caucasian to play the Moor of Venice, but this
- 1965 release proves that he was the finest of them.
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- Luise Rainer - THE GOOD EARTH. In an era when demeaning
- racial stereotypes were de rigueur, she won a 1937 Best Actress
- Oscar for her dignified depiction of a poor Chinese farmer.
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- Ava Gardner - SHOW BOAT. She received mixed reviews for her
- 1951 portrayal of mixed-blood singer Julie La Verne, a part
- denied to Lena Horne. Gardner's songs were dubbed for the film.
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- TRASH
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- Jack Palance - CHE! His bombastic portrayal of Fidel Castro
- in this 1969 flop gave the movie cult status. The campy effect
- was heightened by the casting of Egyptian-born Omar Sharif as
- Che Guevara.
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- Elvis Presley - STAY AWAY, JOE. Among the King's lazy epics,
- this 1968 flick is notable for the way Presley and co-star
- Burgess Meredith impersonate Native Americans as manic
- subhumans.
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