Bizarre News
Casting director sacked for 'inbred' W. Virginia casting call
By M&C Bizarre Feb 28, 2008, 17:56 GMT

Julianne Moore - © Lee Roth / RothStock / PR Photos
A casting director for the horror film, "Shelter" has been sacked after West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin's film office was livid over the insensitive casting call for extras with unusual features that smacked of being "inbred."
Fox news reports that Donna Belajac Casting's Web site advertised the scene as being set in a "West Virginia 'holler,"' but the producers Emilio Diez Barroso and Darlene Caamano Loquet said the movie location in the film is not in West Virginia and the state will never be noted.
"On behalf of the entire SHELTER production we regret and are deeply sorry for the very insensitive casting call sent out without our knowledge by our casting director Donna Belajac who has been dismissed from this project as a result," Barroso and Loquet said in a statement issued Tuesday night according to Fox.
Manchin spokeswoman Lara Ramsburg said the West Virginia Film Office contacted the producers Tuesday night on behalf of the governor.
"They weren't aware of all that had transpired," Ramsburg said Wednesday. "They quickly became aware."
The casting call said the film was looking for extras who are extraordinarily tall or short, those with unusual body shapes and unusual facial features, especially eyes, and even people with physical abnormalities as long as they have normal mobility.
"It's clear that they have no real understanding of who the people of West Virginia are," Manchin said earlier Tuesday. "And that's not only unfortunate, but in this case offensive. Certainly it doesn't sound like a movie worth watching."
The casting call was for a 9- to 12-year-old white girl with an "other-worldly look ... could be an albino or something along those lines — she's someone who is visually different and therefore has a closer contact to the gods and to magic. 'Regular-looking' children should not attend this open call."
"Shelter" stars Julianne Moore and is being produced by Nala Films in Los Angeles. It is being shot in Pittsburgh but the story's location is not specified.
Belajac went on record with the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review on Monday defending her casting call - not meant to stereotype people from West Virginia.
"We tried to word it in a way that's not offensive," she told the newspaper. "I hope it's not an offensive thing. It's not meant to be a generalization about everyone in West Virginia. That's why we put that it's in a 'holler' in the mountains."
Fox reports that the controversial casting call got criticism from U.S. Reps. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., and Nick Rahall, D-W.Va.; U.S. Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., and Cecil E. Roberts, president of the United Mine Workers union.
"Why must it be automatically assumed by the surgically enhanced 'beautiful people' who populate Hollywood that those who live in the hills and hollows of places like West Virginia are all afflicted with physical abnormalities?" Roberts said.
Capito defended West Virginians, who "are owed an apology for such careless and blatant stereotyping." Rahall said he was appalled at the casting call.
Fox noted that Byrd had this to say: "Unfortunately, some in the filmmaking industry have decided that perpetuating stereotypes and insulting generations of West Virginians means cash at the box office."
COMMENT
blog comments powered by DisqusLatest Headlines in Bizarre
- 1. Bathtub sold for 1.75 million dollars in Dubai
- 2. Thailand Hairiest Girl Pictures
- 3. Thailand Hairiest Girl Pictures
- 4. Most Expensive Dog Pictures
- 5. Most Expensive Dog Pictures
Older Talkback
page: 1
page: 1



mrwalletMar 7th, 2008 - 17:43:00
This whole deal is piece of !. I am so tired of a politically correct world. Got news for you, there are inbred people in WV just like there are inbred people everywhere. It's a fact of life. Get over it. Call a spade a spade. You don't like it? Don't go to the casting call or don't go to the movie but shut the hell up.
Report this comment