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NewsDecember 2, 2001

LOS ANGELES -- For years, "Lou Grant" television star Ed Asner has worked hard to stay in the business. And it keeps getting harder. "With my gray and balding head, I don't work so much," the 72-year-old actor said. "If I didn't fight vigorously to produce or stick my nose into areas I have never worked in before, I would probably have to go. But I ain't going."...

By Cadonna M. Peyton, The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES -- For years, "Lou Grant" television star Ed Asner has worked hard to stay in the business. And it keeps getting harder.

"With my gray and balding head, I don't work so much," the 72-year-old actor said. "If I didn't fight vigorously to produce or stick my nose into areas I have never worked in before, I would probably have to go. But I ain't going."

Asner is not alone. There are thousands of seasoned actors waiting to get the call to work. But it doesn't come.

Peter Mark Richman, who was a regular on "Dynasty" in the 1980s, said he and others like him are "an endangered species."

"I have lost nothing of my talent, only gained," said the 74-year-old Richman. "But the opportunities to work have become increasingly slim."

The problem is not just the lack of roles for older actors. All too often, they say, they are typecast.

Few chances for roles

During a recent joint legislative hearing that focused largely on the entertainment industry, Asner, Richman and other prominent older actors told lawmakers that the entertainment industry plays a large role in shaping the public's opinion about senior citizens. And if viewers judge by what they see on the screen, most seniors are decrepit, senile beings who can't take care of themselves, they said.

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"They portray us ... five steps from the grave," said Marvin Kaplan, 74, who played Henry on the hit TV series "Alice" for eight years in the 1970s and '80s.

"It's a vicious slander and we don't deserve it," he said.

The actors suggested one way of breaking down the negative stereotypes would be to create more roles for older actors.

While Americans 50 and older comprise 25 percent of the population, those between the ages of 25 and 45 dominate prime-time television, with 64.6 percent of the roles, according to statistics compiled by the Screen Actors Guild. Characters 60 and older make up only 5.6 percent of the TV population.

Men under the age of 40 are 1.5 times more likely to appear in TV and film than men over 40. Women under 40 are almost three times as likely to be represented than women 40 and over, the guild reported.

Ironically, according to statistics, people over 55 watch more television than other adults and they prefer programs that feature lead characters in their own age group.

Network officials from NBC, ABC and CBS did not return calls for comment.

Leaving older people out of films and TV shows also contributes to the "degradation of quality drama and comedy in our country," said Asner, a multiple Emmy award winner.

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