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If a role is written for a particular ethnicity, sexual identity, gender or disability, is it the creative community’s obligation to find an actor who ticks that particular box, asks Jessica Gelt.

When Edward Albee’s estate denied permission for a production of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” because the director had cast a black actor to play a character Albee had specified as white, social media boiled over. How can the theatrical canon remain relevant if creative casting isn’t allowed? Why shouldn’t a black man play a white character? Actors are actors, storytelling in the search for universal... Keep reading on LA Times