Some people change their minds a half-dozen times before they decide on a career. Not Zack Weinstein (pictured).
"I can't remember ever wanting to do anything other than act," Weinstein says.
He kept to it even after an accident left him paralyzed from the chest down.
"I started performing around 4, and that was it for me. I never changed my mind."
That single-mindedness paid off big-time: On Tuesday, May 11, Weinstein joins the cast of the popular Fox sitcom Glee in an episode that will have him acting and singing from a hospital bed as a patient with a spinal-cord injury.
"It's the only time I've ever been nervous," he admits. "I've always sung, but they all have awesome voices. And a lot of my friends will get to see Glee three hours ahead of me, cause they're in another time zone. So if I really suck," he chuckles, "I'll know even before I turn the television on."
Weinstein's injury came the summer between his freshman and sophomore years at Skidmore College, in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. He broke his neck while on a river outing with friends; after an intense year of rehab, he returned to campus to continue his Theater Studies courses and keep acting.
"It was the only thing I wanted to do," he shrugs, "I had to see if I could do it."
So after graduation, he and his wife, Anna-Maija Webb, moved to Los Angeles — to an apartment that sits across the street from Universal Studios.
Weinstein says he doesn't have an issue with actors like Kevin McHale, who plays the irrepressible wheelchair-dancer Artie Abrams on Glee but doesn't actually use a wheelchair in real life.
"I just believe that everyone should have an equal opportunity to try for parts, whether they're able-bodied or disabled," Weinstein says. "And the best actor — whoever that is — should get it."
But the playing field isn't completely level, says Alana Wallace, a Chicago actor, choreographer and dancer who performs from a wheelchair built for dance movements. Her troupe, Dance Detour, has worked with luminaries such as Mikhail Baryshnikov, and includes dancers who are ambulatory and those who are not.
"I would love it if everyone was considered equally," she says. "But I can't tell you how many times producers have said, 'When there's a part for a disabled person, we'll call you' — which is maddening, because that's not all I can do!"
Wallace sighs. "Why can't the person in the wheelchair be the hero, the villain, the femme fatale? How often do you see strong, prominent roles for people with disabilities?"
The short answer is "not very often." Meanwhile, there have been a slew of disabled characters played by non-disabled actors over the years: James Franciscus, a sighted actor, portrayed a blind New Orleans lawyer in the '70s drama Longstreet. After Raymond Burr stopped playing Perry Mason, he became Ironsides — a street nickname for the title character's wheelchair. Laura Innes was wary Dr. Kerry Weaver in the long-running series ER; Tom Hanks was Forrest Gump; Tom Cruise and Jon Voight each rolled to the Academy Awards as disabled Vietnam vets in Born on the Fourth of July and Coming Home, respectively; Dustin Hoffman stole every scene as a savant in Rainman; and Daniel Day-Lewis was Christy Brown, the artist with cerebral palsy in My Left Foot.
"None of those performances — which were all brilliant, by the way — would have happened if there was some kind of rule that said only disabled actors can play disabled characters," says actor Michael Patrick Thornton. A spinal stroke almost killed Thornton in 2003. He had to learn to walk again — which he can do for short distances, "but it's exhausting" — and uses a motorized chair to get around.
"Do they consider us equally for parts?" Thornton says, "Obviously no, because disabled actors are so underrepresented on stage and screen."
But that may be changing. This season, Thornton has had a recurring role on the Grey's Anatomy spinoff Private Practice as Dr. Gabriel Fife, a charming, irritating genetic research genius — who happens to use a wheelchair. And after several years in the theater, Thornton says he's pleasantly surprised at the impact television can have.
"I get heartbreaking letters sometimes from moms who say, 'My son has a spinal-cord injury — can you tell me what kind of wheelchair that is that Dr. Fife uses in the show?'"
But he says he also gets heartening ones: "Like the ones who come from people in wheelchairs who say, 'I always wanted to act, but I never saw actors like me onstage, so I went to law school. Seeing you made me go sign up for an improv class.'"
That, he says "is better than any kind of award I could ever get."
The role of Dr. Fife has given Thornton more tangible rewards as well: "I've already gotten inquiries because of the show," he says. And soon he'll start a new movie with Ron Howard.
His ideal acting job would be one in which "nobody ever mentions the chair." It would be just a feature, in other words, like having red hair or being pregnant — part of who the character is, but not the sum total.
Zack Weinstein agrees.
"Has my life changed? Yeah, of course," he says. "How could it not? Am I still me? Of course. With or without the chair, I'm always going to be Zack Weinstein."
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Nondisabled actor playing disabled on "Glee" leads to more awareness of the issue
From NPR: Here's an interview with Zack Weinstein at the Wheelchair blog.