“Don’t play me, pay me!”
Written by admin2 on November 19th, 2009Filed under: Campaign Watch, Themes, Auties & Aspies, Irked Videos

Lizzy Clark, represented by Cinel Gabran Management, was the first child with Asperger's syndrome to play an Asperger's syndrome role in a major television drama.
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A provocative new campaign…after the jump
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The mother of the first actress with Asperger’s syndrome to play a fictional character with the condition has launched a campaign to stop actors “playing disabled”.
Lizzy Clark was 14 when the BBC asked her to play the part of Poppy, a teenage girl with Asperger’s, in the television film Dustbin Baby, starring Dakota Blue Richards and Juliet Stevenson. Based on Jacqueline Wilson’s novel of the same name, the film has been shortlisted for an International Emmy, a British Academy children’s award and the Bafta Kids’ Vote awards. The award ceremonies will take place next week.
Lizzy’s mother, Nicola Clark, has said that employing actors who are not mentally disabled to play characters with neurological impairments should stop. It is the “blacking-up of the 21st century”, she said. “We need to break down these barriers. They’re unacceptable and indefensible in a modern-day society, especially when there are so many good, disabled actors who are both ready, eager and able to take on these parts.”
Lizzy, who had never acted professionally before her part in Dustbin Baby, said: “My Asperger’s made some things on the film set difficult at first, like dealing with the sudden noise of the storyboard, but I was soon so focused on acting that I didn’t notice anything else.
“It is not just mentally disabled actors who lose out when non-disabled people are employed to act them. Audiences think they are getting an authentic portrayal of a mentally disabled person, but they’re not. It’s not like putting on a different accent or learning what it was like to be raised in a different era. You can’t understand what it is like to have a mental disability unless you’ve really lived with it. When non-disabled people try to portray us, they tend to fall back on stereotypes that have done our community so much harm in the past.”
According to Independent Television Commission research, 79% of viewers would not mind if a disabled person read the evening news. Six in 10 say that disabled people should appear in a wider variety of roles, including as presenters. There are, however, signs that the tide is slowly turning in favour of Clark’s “Don’t play me – pay me!” campaign. EastEnders recently introduced David Proud, who was born with spina bifida, as Adam Best, the first character in the show to use a wheelchair in real life.
The move is part of a series of measures by the BBC intended to raise the profile of disabled actors and performers. Next week it will start a nationwide search for disabled actors and performers for drama, comedy and children’s shows. It will also launch an online directory of disabled talent … Continue reading this article on guardian.co.uk
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