Color Blind Casting Cinderella

Colorblind Casting: Is it as Inclusive as it Seems? | Mediated Culture

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Cinderella loses her glass slipper as she leaves the Ball.

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Rodgers & Hammerstein's Cinderella (1997) provides its audience with the classic tale of Cinderella, the beloved music of the titular duo, and a color-blind world where Prince Charming is Asian, the King and Queen are an interracial couple, and Cinderella is a dark-skinned, Black woman. Yet, does this film's choice of color-blind casting have unintentional ramifications? My Cinderella. By the time the film was greenlit by Disney for ABC, Houston felt that she had outgrown the title role, which she offered to Brandy instead.

Color Blind Casting: Black Actors Who Played White Characters

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The decision to use a color-blind casting approach originated among the producers to reflect how society had evolved by the 1990s, with Brandy becoming the first black actress to portray Cinderella on screen. This afternoon, as part of our Black History Month film festival, we showed 1997's Rogers and Hammerstein's Cinderella. The color-blind casting process led to a diverse finished product that our patrons really responded to.

The Problem with Color-Blind Casting — FOUR KENTS

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Librarian Krishna Grady introduced the film, and talked about the casting director and how producers set out to find the best person for each role, no matter their skin. EXCLUSIVE: Rodgers and Hammerstein's 1997 Cinderella Makes a Strong Case for Diverse-Not Color Blind-Casting Cinderella: The Reunion premieres Tuesday, Aug. 23 at 8p.m.ET.

EXCLUSIVE: The Cast of 1997's 'Cinderella' Reflect on Diverse Casting ...

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By Shanelle Genai. A discussion of the use of colorblind casting in Rodgers and Hammerstein's 1997 production of Cinderella by Stephanie Brownell and Emma Alexander. The producers wanted to use a "color-blind casting" approach, resulting in a black Cinderella (Brandy) and Fairy Godmother (Houston) as well as a Filipino prince (Paolo Montalban) with a black mother (Whoopi Goldberg) and a white father (Victor Garber).

Colorblind Casting - TV Tropes

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Cinderella's stepfamily also has black and white members. The decision to use a color-blind casting approach originated among the producers to reflect how society had evolved by the 1990s, with Brandy becoming the first black actress to portray Cinderella on screen. Amidst the controversies surrounding recent productions like Bridgerton and the Queen Cleopatra documentary, the 1997 film Cinderella stands as a shining example of the power of color-blind casting.

Color-conscious casting becomes theatre norm – Michal Szczepaniak

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Led by the talented Brandy, the film not only celebrated diversity and inclusion, but also captured the hearts of audiences worldwide. Colorblind casting has worked very well in some instances. The 1997 adaptation of Rodger's and Hammerstein's Cinderella offered a diverse, colorful cast that was not centered around the fact that many of them were people of color.

When Grey's Anatomy was produced, none of the characters were written to be of a particular race, and they were also not cast as such. This lead to a fairly. In this second of a 3-part series on diversity in Hollywood, Black industry insiders talk candidly about casting people of color in non.

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