Strahovski would be inspired.
Get it done!
All too old for the role: I say get a 15-16 year old girl (like Elle Fanning or Chloe Moretz) and you have it made. After all, Supergirl's supposed to be 16, not 23.
Honestly, I hope they don't limit their casting considerations only to Caucasian actresses. It's not like most blond actresses are natural blondes anyway. And heck, in many versions, Supergirl wore a brown wig in her civilian identity, so they could reverse it and have the blond hair be a wig (although it'd have to be really well-secured). Plus we've already had a half-Japanese Superman (Dean Cain) and a half-Chinese Lana Lang (Kristin Kreuk), so there's precedent.
Most importantly, I just hope they cast for talent instead of just looks. An actress who's nice to look at but boring to listen to is not going to satisfy me.
The idea would be like casting a white actress to play the role of the daughter/cousin of a black character, and be just as foolish (and also just as despised.) Half-Japanese and half half-Chinese might be okay.
What do you mean MIGHT? Christopher proved it was fine. ANd i'm with him on going beyond the limited scope of blond white girs
I also have my own personal favorite choice for SUpergirl =
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I say get a 15-16 year old girl (like Elle Fanning or Chloe Moretz) and you have it made. After all, Supergirl's supposed to be 16, not 23.
The series is based on a YOUNG ADULT (age 24) Kara, not on a teenager, and there's no way in heck they'd cast an underage actress to play an adult character because, even if said actress was amazing, there are differences between the way a teenager behaves and the way that a young adult behaves that a teenage actress just wouldn't be able to convey convincingly.
As far as casting non-Caucasian goes, I can see Christopher's broader point and agree with it in principle, but there aren't a whole lot of KNOWN and available actresses in the right age range for the character that aren't Caucasian (sad, yes, but that's just the way that it is right now).
If they go with an unknown actress, I think the probability of getting a non-Caucasian (or mixed-ethnicity) actress in the role goes up.
All too old for the role: I say get a 15-16 year old girl (like Elle Fanning or Chloe Moretz) and you have it made. After all, Supergirl's supposed to be 16, not 23.
There is no "supposed to be." It's an adaptation, a word that literally means change. Adaptations are perfectly free to reinvent the characters and continuity as much as they wish. That's the whole point. Why bother making a new version if it doesn't offer a fresh approach?
The idea would be like casting a white actress to play the role of the daughter/cousin of a black character, and be just as foolish (and also just as despised.)
Except, again, this is a new continuity. They could just as easily cast a nonwhite actor as Superman, as Lois and Clark did with Dean Cain.
Besides, they're Kryptonians. They don't have to have the same ethnic categories and differentiations that we do.
As far as casting non-Caucasian goes, I can see Christopher's broader point and agree with it in principle, but there aren't a whole lot of KNOWN and available actresses in the right age range for the character that aren't Caucasian (sad, yes, but that's just the way that it is right now).
If they go with an unknown actress, I think the probability of getting a non-Caucasian (or mixed-ethnicity) actress in the role goes up.
Exactly. The reason they aren't known is because they aren't being looked for. Inequality doesn't change until people make an effort to change it.
That article linked above suggested Star-Crossed's Aimee Teegarden for the role, but she was totally bland as the lead actress of that series; the real breakout actress, for me, was supporting player Malese Jow, who was charming and talented and pretty and far more compelling to watch. I'd be happy to see her as Supergirl, since she seems to have a good personality for it. Or, for a more conventional blonde type, there's Natalie Hall, who was Taylor on Star-Crossed. Really, just about every supporting female actress on that show was more engaging than Teegarden.
Morpheus 02: Sorry, but I'm a traditionalist on this one, and last time I checked, Superman and his family were white, not black. If you're going to do an adaptation of something from the comic books, why stray so far from the source?
Since they're not casting (and there is not) a black man as Superman (although there is a black version) why cast a non-white person as his cousin? And why can't these people who demand this (not you guys/gals I'm responding to here, but others online) create their own heroes of color?*

*Before anybody bites off my head; yes, I'm a black guy, and I do want to see racial diversity in film and TV. But I don't think that there's a big need for it here in this instance, with this character. It's just creating a future controversy where none is that would derail it in a farrago of criticism about 'reverse racism' and the 'race card' from the usual suspects on and off-line, and for no good purpose.
Christopher: thanks for the heads-up/reminder about her being an adult in this TV show. But then, why call the show Supergirl if she's not going to be a girl? Why not call it Superwoman, and make her look like this:


Or this:

Sounds like a show I won't be seeing.