This reply is awfully late, I realize. You make an interesting point, but I don't agree.
Actors have limits (well, there are a few exceptions -- but very few). Directors looking at actors must make a selection based on what they see as that actor's capabilities and, sadly in some cases, a public's long-held "perceptions" of that actor. Wayne brings with him not only his own identity but an identity the public has given to him based on a very long history, as you acknowledge. I mean, what is THE "proper tone" for a Centurian -- played by Wayne? We GOT that in the film. The "proper tone" for a Centurian played by, say, Dustin Hoffman would be entirely different. What would we have gotten with the line - "... as sure as the turnin' of the earth." - had, say, Dennis Hopper played Ethan Edwards in "The Searchers"?
If the producers insisted on Wayne's playing that role, Stevens could have insisted he not. Maybe he would have been summarily overruled, fired, etc. But . . . it's still his responsibility, and, as Brando said in "Mutiny on the Bounty" ('62) -- "it's an unjust world".
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