Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Hallmark Faces Age Discrimination Lawsuit Over Alleged Casting Bias
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 3 months ago on
October 29, 2024

Lacey Chabert at the Hallmark's Countdown to Christmas Holiday Celebration at The Grove on Nov. 15, 2023, in Los Angeles, CA. (Shutterstock)

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

LOS ANGELES – Hallmark Media executive vice president of programming Lisa Hamilton Daly instructed a former employee not to cast “old people” for Hallmark roles, saying that “our leading ladies are aging out,” according to a lawsuit filed against the network this month and obtained by The Associated Press.

Allegations of Age Discrimination

Penny Perry, a 79-year-old casting director who filed the lawsuit Oct. 9 in Los Angeles Superior Court, alleges that she was wrongfully fired from the network known for its feel-good movies because of her age, and despite stellar performance reviews. “Hallmark’s happy endings are stories made for TV only,” the complaint says. “In Ms. Perry’s case, there was no happy ending, and no feel-good episode to wrap up her career with Hallmark. Instead, her finale episode was marred by ageist and ableist harassment, and a callous termination which robbed her of her illustrious career, her pride, and her well-being.”

In a statement, Hallmark denied the allegations, adding: “Hallmark continues to consistently cast and maintain positive, productive relationships with talented actors representing a broad spectrum of diversity, including actors who span many age groups and cross generations.”

Specific Claims About Actors

According to the lawsuit, Hamilton Daly told Perry that they needed to “replace” the “old talent” including 42-year-old actress Lacey Chabert, who has starred in dozens of Hallmark movies, many of them Christmas-themed, and portrayed Gretchen Wieners in Mean Girls (2004), saying Chabert is “getting older and we have to find someone like her to replace her as she gets older.”

The lawsuit adds that Hamilton Daly said of the 60-year-old actress and “Our Christmas Journey” star Holly Robinson Peete: “No one wants her because she’s too expensive and getting too old. She can’t play leading roles anymore.”

Hallmark countered: “Lacey and Holly have a home at Hallmark. We do not generally comment on pending litigation. And while we deny these outrageous allegations, we are not going to discuss an employment relationship in the media,” a company representative told AP in an emailed statement.

Chabert stars in a new Hallmark movie, The Christmas Quest, slated for release Dec. 1, and hosts the reality series “Celebrations with Lacey Chabert,” according to Hallmark’s website. Representatives for Chabert and Robinson Peete did not immediately respond to request for comment.

Personal Harassment Claims

Perry herself endured ageist and ableist harassment at the company, and Hamilton Daly — who apparently repeatedly made reference to age as a negative attribute that did not fit the network’s image — “told Ms. Perry she was too ‘long in the tooth’ to keep her job at Hallmark,” the lawsuit says. It also alleges that senior vice president of programming and development Randy Pope ridiculed Perry for her relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis by mocking her when she mispronounced words or names — a symptom of the condition.

“Unfortunately, Hallmark treated a venerable Hollywood veteran this way and we hope this action will lead to change in Hollywood and all work environments,” said a statement from Perry’s attorneys, Lisa Sherman and Josh Schein.

The allegations arrive amid a period of turmoil for Hollywood, punctuated by historic labor strikes, the pandemic, and the streaming revolution.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Wired Wednesday: Can Congress Rein In Credit Card Fees?

DON'T MISS

Clovis Police Officer Injured During Arrest of Three in Mail Theft, High-Speed Chase

DON'T MISS

Will Clovis Become a Non-Sanctuary City? Diane Pearce Pushes for It.

DON'T MISS

Trump’s Executive Order Intends to Bar Transgender Athletes From Girls’ and Women’s Sports

DON'T MISS

Protesters Across US Rally Against Trump and Project 2025

DON'T MISS

Trump’s Birthright Citizenship Order Put on Hold by Second Federal Judge

DON'T MISS

Merced Sees Back-to-Back Protests Demanding Immigrant Protections

DON'T MISS

CA School Test Scores Trail Those of States Newsom Considers Culturally Backward

DON'T MISS

State Farm Asks for ‘Emergency’ Insurance Rate Increases After LA Fires

DON'T MISS

Rubio Strikes Deal With Guatemala to Accept Deported US Migrants

UP NEXT

Clovis Police Officer Injured During Arrest of Three in Mail Theft, High-Speed Chase

UP NEXT

Will Clovis Become a Non-Sanctuary City? Diane Pearce Pushes for It.

UP NEXT

Trump’s Executive Order Intends to Bar Transgender Athletes From Girls’ and Women’s Sports

UP NEXT

Protesters Across US Rally Against Trump and Project 2025

UP NEXT

Trump’s Birthright Citizenship Order Put on Hold by Second Federal Judge

UP NEXT

Merced Sees Back-to-Back Protests Demanding Immigrant Protections

UP NEXT

CA School Test Scores Trail Those of States Newsom Considers Culturally Backward

UP NEXT

State Farm Asks for ‘Emergency’ Insurance Rate Increases After LA Fires

UP NEXT

Rubio Strikes Deal With Guatemala to Accept Deported US Migrants

UP NEXT

Lawmakers Propose $175 Million in New CalFire Funding

Trump’s Executive Order Intends to Bar Transgender Athletes From Girls’ and Women’s Sports

35 minutes ago

Protesters Across US Rally Against Trump and Project 2025

2 hours ago

Trump’s Birthright Citizenship Order Put on Hold by Second Federal Judge

2 hours ago

Merced Sees Back-to-Back Protests Demanding Immigrant Protections

3 hours ago

CA School Test Scores Trail Those of States Newsom Considers Culturally Backward

3 hours ago

State Farm Asks for ‘Emergency’ Insurance Rate Increases After LA Fires

3 hours ago

Rubio Strikes Deal With Guatemala to Accept Deported US Migrants

4 hours ago

Lawmakers Propose $175 Million in New CalFire Funding

4 hours ago

Box-Office Smash ‘Moana 2’ Drives Disney Profit in the First Quarter

4 hours ago

UN Agencies Concerned Over Pakistan’s Afghan Deportation Plan

4 hours ago

Wired Wednesday: Can Congress Rein In Credit Card Fees?

GV Wire’s Edward Smith talks with KMPH Fox 26 “Great Day” anchor Karl Cooke about the duopoly between Visa and Mastercard and the exorbitant...

38 seconds ago

Wired Wednesday Cover for February 5, 2025. (KMPH Screengrab)
39 seconds ago

Wired Wednesday: Can Congress Rein In Credit Card Fees?

5 minutes ago

Clovis Police Officer Injured During Arrest of Three in Mail Theft, High-Speed Chase

21 minutes ago

Will Clovis Become a Non-Sanctuary City? Diane Pearce Pushes for It.

President Donald Trump speaks after signing an executive order in the Oval Office of the White House, Monday, Feb. 3, 2025, in Washington. (AP/Evan Vucci)
35 minutes ago

Trump’s Executive Order Intends to Bar Transgender Athletes From Girls’ and Women’s Sports

2 hours ago

Protesters Across US Rally Against Trump and Project 2025

2 hours ago

Trump’s Birthright Citizenship Order Put on Hold by Second Federal Judge

3 hours ago

Merced Sees Back-to-Back Protests Demanding Immigrant Protections

3 hours ago

CA School Test Scores Trail Those of States Newsom Considers Culturally Backward

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend