0 to always give an actor the same type of character to play, usually because he or she is physically suited to that type of part:
Ethnic groups were variously typecast by schemes of physical, psychological, and cultural profiling, as complex as they were specious.
As the stock-market novel of the "sensational sixties" capitalized on villainous speculators, it undoubtedly continued to create typecast crooks but also stimulated spins on them.
A by-product of this conveniently symmetrical account has been that suburbia has been typecast in terms of 'homes in a park'.
They demonstrate growing fascination with the magicality of finance capitalism rather than interest in mere moral exposure and, still more strikingly, propel intriguing twists that break through typecast plots.
Godolphin's honest face adds another spin to the speculator's increasingly typecast progression.
Despite being typecast as old-fashioned, stigmatising means-testing, the pension credit can be applied for over the telephone.
I do not know whether it was typecasting, but he was playing a black sheep.
The areas and the perpetrators are not typecast, and neither are those who have to put up with them.