Trek has been known to cast 'white' individuals as Hispanics.
Why can't we 'cast' a brown-skinned actor? Or even a darker-brown-skinned actor?
There's no reason you can't. As stated, lots of readers cast Olmos as Reyes. You can cast whoever you want in the role. You can cast, oh, Tony Todd as Reyes if you like.
For that matter, Tommy Lee Jones was born in Texas and has Cherokee ancestry. If he'd been born 200 miles to the southwest, he'd
be Hispanic.
And there are certainly cases of Hispanic or other "ethnic" actors playing white characters. For instance, Mexican-Iranian actress Sarah Shahi is currently starring in USA's
Fairly Legal as a character named Kate Reed. Jessica Alba played Sue Storm in the
Fantastic Four movies. Frankie Muniz played Malcolm Wilkerson in
Malcolm in the Middle. And there are a number of Hispanic-American actors who generally play Anglo-Saxon characters -- Martin Sheen and his sons, Cameron Diaz, Edward Furlong, Lynda Carter, Miguel Ferrer, Zoe Saldana, Gina Torres, etc.
Hollywood has always been afraid of the darker-skinned 'other.' We've seen it in films of the 1920s, Westerns featuring white women who fall for Native American men, and so forth.
Okay, first you complain about going off-topic, then you drag the conversation even farther off-topic. The questions you asked were about Trek literature. What has that got to do with Hollywood or the casting of actors?
Obviously. However, those are Asian American actors, portraying other Asian ethnicities.
Again, Christopher, you're not telling me anything new.
I'm telling you that you're presenting inconsistent arguments. If you think the difference between a Texan actor and a Latino character is insurmountable while the difference between a Korean actor and a Japanese character is trivial, that reflects your own racial biases. Actual Asian people would see it very differently. Many Japanese people would be deeply offended by the suggestion that they're interchangeable with Koreans; there's a pretty strong anti-Korean prejudice there.
So the issue here is not about what
I'm saying. It's what
you're saying that needs to be examined more closely.
Black males were primarily casted as Klingons...
Not true. No African-Americans played Klingons in TOS. In the TOS movies, Michael Dorn was the only black actor to play a Klingon. And in modern Trek, we've had Klingons played by Vaughn Armstrong, Robert O'Reilly, Kevin Conway, Gwynyth Walsh, Barbara March, Suzie Plakson, Roxann Dawson, Brian Thompson, J. G. Hertzler, etc. While black actors have often been cast as Klingons, I don't think they've ever constituted the majority.
Would we have Michael Dorn romancing the white Terry Ferrell, Marina Sirtis, or Nicole deBoer if he was out of make-up like Jonathan Frakes or Patrick Stewart?
Why not? Judging from the reactions of female college friends of mine when they first saw a picture of Dorn out of makeup, he's a very handsome guy.