Three year pickup will keep talk show on the air through 2014.
Geri Jewell: It's Always Back to Square One
We need to change that word from 'risk' to 'gift.'"
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In the early '80s, Geri Jewell was hand-picked by Norman Lear for his show "The Facts of Life," making her the first person with a visible disability -- cerebral palsy -- to appear as a regular performer on a primetime sitcom (pictured left).
The show was a huge hit ... and Jewell was a huge. She couldn't go to Disneyland without being bombarded by fans.
She didn't work for another two decades, when she was hired in 2004 for a nine-episode arc on ''The Young and the Restless,'' and that was followed by a prominent stint in the HBO series "Deadwood," as a crippled woman, Jewel (below), who faces the abuse of her intolerant 1867 western town.
"I helped David Milch develop the character, and I said to him, 'How can this be realistic? Cerebral palsy wasn't even diagnosed then,'" she told TheWrap. "He said, 'It was around, we just didn't know what the f--- it was.' Back then, people with disabilities were not seen -- they were kept in a closet or a bedroom and for the most part left to die. Jewel was the exception to the rule, because she challenged everybody in 'Deadwood' with her spirit and moxy and broke barriers." 
But since that series ended, Jewell says she's only been sent out on a scant three auditions in the last three years.
"The only time I get sent out is if they're specifically looking for people with a disability, and that's absurd," she said.
"I'm not sent for any role that has to do with being a woman in the age frame that I am. Why am I not sent out when I've been in the industry for 30 years? I never get the benefit of riding on my success -- the minute the show ends, all of a sudden I'm back at square one again."
Jewell says she's hopeful that disabled performers will be able to appears in roles not specific to their illnesses.
"When have you ever seen a person with a physical disability on 'Brothers & Sisters" or "Desperate Housewives?" Jewell said. "We could be putting a person with a disability in a positive light to be a role model, but no one's doing it. We need to change that word from 'risk' to 'gift.'"

Comments
Kevin Butler Says
I can understand why Poor Ms.Jewel is going thru.
The entertainment industry and the whole community in
general is showing alot of biased towards the disabled.
They refuse to allow the disabled to play characters..without
anydisabilities at all.
They refuse to try and aide these performers in playing characters
in roles that show them as people in different roles and in situations
other than the plight of those who are physically,emotionally and/or
mentally challenged.
The regular working community refuse to allow the disabled to
get job training in anything other than these work adjustment programs.
Where the disabled have to do piece meal jobs and classes that
have little to do with properly preparing these people in skills for the
workaday world.
These work adjustment situations also mainstream psycotic
persons..who are disruptive and dangerous to the persons.
Who are placed into this hopeless and tragedic place.
There is a persons with disabilities act..which is suppose to
help the disabled in getting a proper education,train for a better
job and allow them to get a decent home and respect from the
members of the community.
But?
The disabled are still not getting better jobs in show business
or in any other busines,they're not getting good pay or homes.
They are still not getting an education or the respect that they
deserve.
The entire community should be reminded that these people
..while their skills are limited.
They can still be trained for better jobs and become a valued
part of our lives.
Can't we allow them to show that they can do more than
the sterotyped idea of what they are expected to do?
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