Do We Call Her Kelsey Asbille or Kelsey Chow?

Do We Call Her Kelsey Asbille or Kelsey Chow?

It would seem that in the case of what name we should call Kelsey Asbille Chow, it depends on what she wants to be called. It’s a confusing conundrum really when people start to change their names and leave it unclear as to what they want to go by and for many fans and journalists it has be kind of frustrating as putting down the wrong name in a column or descriptive piece could very well be taken the wrong way if the celebrity sees it and takes offense. Of course until they decide on a name it becomes a little difficult to really get anything accurate.

Everything she did before 2017 she used her full name.

There’s one very big reason why she felt that dropping her last name was necessary and that was because she felt that she was being typecast due to the last name of Chow. She’d already been cast in a few roles that made use of her surname to place her in very stereotypical roles. Changing her name from Chow to Asbille was a personal choice and one that she believed would get her a lot more roles. The ironic part is that while it managed to get rid of the stereotypical casting she’d had to deal with it opened her up for more criticism by being cast as a Native American in Wind River and the new Yellowstone series.

People are up in arms lately about Asbille being cast as a Native American in Yellowstone.

When it comes to casting certain people for certain roles fans and even those that have no personal stake in it have gone kind of nutty when they see certain folks being cast into roles that they feel are completely wrong. Asbille was cast as a Native American in the movie Wind River and in the series Yellowstone much to the consternation of many audience members who believe that Native Americans are being underrepresented in film. It seems kind of interesting that anyone would say that given the roles that Native Americans have filmed throughout history, long before now and even well after such roles were no longer being given to Caucasians that were dressed up in layers of makeup and poor representations of Native American garb.

As of now Kelsey wants to be known as Asbille and not Chow, but this also seems to say something about her confidence in her acting talents being able to keep her from being typecast. The name you’re given at birth is something that every individual should be proud of for the most part, no matter what others tend to think or do. There’s no doubt that legally her last name is still Chow, but for the purpose of avoiding typecasting she is using Asbille to secure a career that has been building for a number of years now. Try as she might though it almost seems as though she’s being typecast again but on the other side of the spectrum as being cast as a Native American in two separate productions seems about as close as person can come to being typecast without being able to definitively say that they are indeed.

Sadly this seems like a common thing for some people as they get typecast so easily either because they have the look that affords them such treatment or they simply don’t have the acting skills, as of yet, that can help them to break out of their current lot in show business. It’s hard to say that anyone in Hollywood doesn’t have the latter since those that are there and doing the job are those that caught the eye of the producers and the directors and have proven that they belong to be there. Changing your name just to be more popular is not an uncommon practice and has been done for years, but there are times when it seems kind of excessive. So far changing her name has earned Kelsey another type of typecasting and not necessarily one that people have really taken too with any measure of aplomb. It’s believed that not fully representing an ethnicity that calls for individuals that belong to that ethnicity is a big no-no, but quite honestly if a person looks as though they can take on the role and displays the acting ability it seems perfectly fine to let them go with it.

Just being part of an ethnicity does not make a person a good actor.

Some movies and TV shows might call for certain individuals from different races and ethnic groups but that doesn’t mean that they’re necessarily going to find anyone that can really act. The focus at this point becomes finding people who look enough like the individuals they need and hoping that they can act.

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  1. topcat1957
    • Tom
  2. Tom
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