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12[[quoteright:350:[[Series/TerminatorTheSarahConnorChronicles https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cromartie-transformation-edit-border-fixed_1047.png]]]]
13[[caption-width-right:350:[[Creator/OwainYeoman What you can do]] [[MeatSackRobot when your flesh]] [[Creator/GarretDillahunt is purely cosmetic.]]]]
14
15->''"So in this story, Uta has an accident, then he has a plastic surgery. Now, I can simply change his actor. Easy, isn't it?"''
16-->-- '''Akbar''', ''Series/MimpiMetropolitan'', Episode 58
17
18Some element of a show's AppliedPhlebotinum causes a character's appearance, voice, and sometimes even their personality to change completely. On Speculative Fiction shows, this can be almost anything. On real-world shows, this is almost always MagicPlasticSurgery -- which, on TV, works much better than it does in reality.
19
20This is a catch-all for [[TheOtherDarrin the recasting of a character]] [[JustifiedTrope using an in-continuity explanation]]. It [[TropeNamers takes its name]] from ''Series/DoctorWho'', whose eponymous [[Characters/DoctorWhoDoctors Doctor]] is a {{Human Alien|s}} capable of "[[ResurrectiveImmortality regenerating]]" into a new form when on the verge of death. This trope, both in the original show and others which employ it, has two benefits; not only can it increase the series' run by offering a method to depict a functionally immortal main character on a long-running show, it is also a wonderful way to derive drama, with the added bonus of implying that AnyoneCanDie, without having to lose major characters. Depending on the importance of the character, changing them in such a way can serve as a "soft reboot" of an ongoing production.
21
22Compare to: SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute (which introduces a new, separate character who is much like the old one to fill their narrative role), TheOtherDarrin (where the actor is replaced ''without'' any in-universe explanation or acknowledgement that the character now looks different), and LegacyCharacter (which introduces a different character holding the ''title'' of the previous character). See also DyingToBeReplaced (which this can involve if, as in the trope naming example, the process amounts to the death of the original) and ReplacementScrappy, which can be a reaction. For tropes where a character changes because of a transformation, see MidSeasonUpgrade, EvolutionPowerUp, and PlotRelevantAgeUp.
23
24''This is a casting trope, not a {{Reincarnation}} trope. This trope only requires the recasting to be explained in-universe, not necessarily by reincarnation.''
25----
26!!Examples:
27[[index]]
28* ''TheNthDoctor/DoctorWho''
29[[/index]]
30[[foldercontrol]]
31
32[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
33* ''Franchise/DragonBall'':
34%%** Yasuhiko Kawazu voiced Goku and his son Gohan's Great Ape forms in Japanese as opposed to Creator/MasakoNozawa. For the English dub of the original ''Manga/DragonBall'', Creator/JustinCook provided Great Ape Goku's roars while Shane Ray would voice Gohan's ape form in ''Anime/DragonBallZ''.
35%%** For the first ''Dragon Ball'' anime, Piccolo was given this treatment in the Japanese original with Creator/TakeshiAono voicing the original Demon King Piccolo (and later his good counterpart Kami-sama) whereas Junior (the Piccolo that most people are familiar with) was voiced by Creator/ToshioFurukawa, who made the character his own going forward.
36%%** In the Creator/{{Funimation}} dub of ''Anime/DragonBallGT'', Goku is played by Creator/StephanieNadolny in his kid form, Creator/SeanSchemmel in his Super Saiyan 4 transformation, and Shane Ray in his Golden Ape transformation.
37** [[FinalBoss The One-Star Dragon,]] known as Li Shen Long in Japan, was given this treatment in America. By himself, with only the one-star ball, he was christened Syn Shenron and played by Bob Carter. Upon absorbing the other six balls into himself, he is then known as Omega Shenron and is voiced by Creator/ChristopherSabat. ADR director Christopher Bevins' logic in this choice was that since he became an amalgamation of all seven dragon balls, Omega would have the original Shenron's voice which was played in Funimation's English dub by Sabat.
38* In ''Anime/DragonBallSuper'', Zamasu is voiced by Creator/ShinichiroMiki. An alternate version of him [[spoiler:switched bodies with Goku to become Goku Black, leading to his voice actor being changed to Creator/MasakoNozawa]].
39* In the English dub of ''[[Manga/FullmetalAlchemist Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood]]'', when the [[OurHomunculiAreDifferent homunculus]] Greed was [[spoiler:reabsorbed into Father then brought back into a new body]], he changed voice actors from Creator/ChrisPatton to Creator/TroyBaker. Said plot element was in the manga long before the story was adapted into animation and dubbed into English, but Patton's departure seems timed to invoke this trope.
40* ''Manga/{{Inuyasha}}'': In Japanese, [[BigBad Naraku]] was initially voiced by Hiroshi Yanaka when he only showed himself as [[TheFaceless a shadowed figured wearing a baboon pelt]]. At the end of the anime's first season, Naraku assumes the identity of a prince named Kagewaki and makes his body (or at least his face) a ShapeshifterDefaultForm, whereupon he is voiced by Creator/ToshiyukiMorikawa for the rest of the series' run.
41* ''Anime/KingOfPrism'' focuses on an all-male cast but still attempted to keep elements of its predecessor series, ''Anime/PrettyRhythmRainbowLive''. In doing so, [[spoiler:Louis plays the same role Rinne did in ''Rainbow Live'', but since he is male, he is voiced by Creator/ShoutaAoi]]. In ''Shiny Seven Stars'', the third part of the series, it is explained that [[spoiler:Louis is built from Rinne's data and was turned into a new male Prism Messenger since both Shine and Rinne failed to guide male [[IdolSinger Prism Stars]]]].
42* In the English dub of ''Anime/PokemonTheOriginalSeries'', when Ash upgrades his Pokédex from Professor Oak, he's told that it will also have a new voice.
43[[/folder]]
44
45[[folder:Comic Books]]
46* The Bouncing Beatnik of ''ComicBook/AstroCity'' also works like this, a new incarnation manifesting whenever a [[FadSuper counterculture trend]] of sufficient emotional strength comes along -- ragtime, jazz, beatniks, hippies -- then eventually fading away. Different incarnations can be different genders and appear as different races (although they're not actually human).
47* ''ComicBook/Eternals2021'' establishes a resurrection process for the Eternals, which sometimes leads to characters being given vastly different appearances. Sprite and Makkari, for example, change from male to female, while the latter also gains a [[RaceLift darker skin tone]] than previously depicted with. This coincided with the release of [[Film/{{Eternals}} the MCU film]] that same year, giving them justification to depict the characters more in line with the actors playing them.
48* As worship for the gods faded away in ''ComicBook/FinePrint'', some of the gods took on new forms and identities in order to adapt. For example, the two matriarch/patriarch arcubi of the Alaris Family were once known as Alecto of the Furies and Charon (TheFerryman).
49* John Constantine of ''ComicBook/{{Hellblazer}}'' is revealed to be a Laughing Magician, a spirit that reincarnates after each death.
50* ''ComicBook/TheMightyThor'': This is how [[Characters/MarvelComicsLoki Loki]] works since he erased his name from Hela's books some years ago. Thanks to this move, Loki has no afterlife, basically making death as permanent as it's even possible in a comic book for the character. ''A'' Loki will come back sooner or later if the current one happens to die... it just won't be the same person (changed design, personality, etc.).
51* In ''ComicBook/TheSandman1989'', it's revealed that the current Despair is not the original – she was killed, and somehow, a new one replaced her. The other Endless still consider Despair II their sister, however. [[spoiler:Eventually, Morpheus dies too, and his appointed heir, Daniel Hall, takes his place. He refers to himself as "Dream", claiming that both "Morpheus" and "Daniel" are, or at least ''feel'' like, different people than who he is now]].
52* Solomon Grundy works like this. As explained in ''ComicBook/{{Starman}}'', every time he dies, he comes back with a different personality and/or intelligence level (and sometimes even a new appearance). This means he can go from being an evil GeniusBruiser one issue to a KindheartedSimpleton the next.
53* John Ostrander's run on ''ComicBook/TheSpectre'' applies this to Uncle Sam of the ComicBook/{{Freedom Fighters|DCComics}}. Over the centuries, the Spirit of America has taken physical form as the current masculine AnthropomorphicPersonification of the United States: the Minuteman, Brother Jonathan, [[LiteralSplitPersonality Billy Yank and Johnny Reb]], and Uncle Sam. It was Patriot for a brief period in the late 90s, but soon reverted to Uncle Sam again.
54[[/folder]]
55
56[[folder:Fan Works]]
57* ''Literature/TheChroniclesOfNarnia'' fic "[[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/4287583/1/ And Ye Shall Receive]]" basically uses this to reveal that Caspian’s star-wife was actually Susan; she made a deal with Aslan where she would be allowed to return to Narnia [[SadisticChoice with the understanding that her family would come to revile her memory]]. Back on Earth, Susan’s body was possessed by the spirit of a spoilt noblewoman from Narnia while her spirit took on a new form in Narnia, only assuming her original appearance after the other seven friends of Narnia return following ''Literature/TheLastBattle''.
58* ''Fanfic/AColderWar'' explains that the change in Howard Stark's appearance (from Creator/DominicCooper to Creator/JohnSlattery) is the result of a plane crash in 1972; Howard had to have reconstructive surgery afterwards and he jokes that the doctors were missing some of the best bits of his face when they put him back together.
59* This is the main mechanic of ''Roleplay/ProjectionQuest'', with the titular projection shifting between various fictional characters who teach Taylor new powers and skills. Notably, while the personality varies between iterations, Taylor grows close enough to 'Emmy' to notice a consistent identity throughout.
60* ''Fanfic/{{Eleutherophobia}}: A Straight Line Down Through the Heart'' has an InUniverse example. Jean says that in the cheesy soap opera she writes for, an evil scientist injected a character called Emily with a drug that turned her into a different actress.
61* In ''FanFic/Hottie3TheBestFanFicInTheWorld'', [[Film/Ghostbusters1984 Egon Spengler]] is infused with a mutagen made from [[Series/DoctorWho The Doctor's]] DNA that turns him into a human/Time Lord hybrid; when mortally wounded, Egon regenerates into a new form that resembles Creator/MauriceLaMarche.
62* In [[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/12775779/1/Times-Change one]] ''WesternAnimation/DannyPhantom'' fanfic, it's shown that every time a decade ends, Clockwork, the Ghost of Time, undergoes a transformation into a form that fits the tone of the new decade.
63[[/folder]]
64
65[[folder:Film – Animation]]
66* Parodied in ''WesternAnimation/{{Bolt}}''. [[spoiler:When Penny decides to quit acting, the TV show she works for replaces her and explains her change in appearance as the result of reconstructive plastic surgery. Not explained, though, was her sudden de-aging, as she is shorter and has not gone through puberty like the original Penny]].
67[[/folder]]
68
69[[folder:Film – Live-Action]]
70* Parodied in the 2008 ''Film/GetSmart'' movie. Agent 99 (Creator/AnneHathaway) is shown to have undertaken extensive plastic surgery after her cover was blown. She used to look like a 40-year-old blond woman. Now, she's a brunette in her mid-twenties.
71* Creator/HeathLedger's death was dealt with in his unfinished movie ''Film/TheImaginariumOfDoctorParnassus'' this way. Creator/JohnnyDepp, Creator/JudeLaw, and Creator/ColinFarrell played his character in different dimensions.
72* ''Film/JamesBond'':
73** Blofeld, arch-nemesis of Bond, is a villainous example. He was played by several actors over the years, with his changes of appearance being explained by plastic surgery. His portrayal in ''Film/{{Spectre}}'', played by [[spoiler:Creator/ChristophWaltz]], needs no such justification because there was a ContinuityReboot in ''Film/CasinoRoyale2006''.
74** Bond himself is generally considered more an example of TheOtherDarrin, since the films don't explain his change in appearance. However, in the first movie where Bond's actor changed, the film begins with Bond being rejected by a woman. He then remarks [[LeaningOnTheFourthWall "this never happened to the other fellow!"]] Some fans have taken this as evidence for the theory that "James Bond" is an alias passed from one 007 agent to the next. The producers of ''Film/OnHerMajestysSecretService'' did briefly consider the plastic surgery idea for Bond, but (wisely for the long run) dropped the idea. Still, the series was always more episodic and not as worried with continuity before the Creator/DanielCraig era, due to the above mentioned reboot, to make the actor changes less questionable.
75** This theory does happen in the non-canonical parody movie ''Film/CasinoRoyale1967'', where plenty of people are assigned the codename "James Bond".
76* Jobe Smith was played by Jeff Fahey in ''Film/TheLawnmowerMan'' and Creator/MattFrewer in ''Film/LawnmowerMan2BeyondCyberspace''. The clever rationale is that the explosion at the end of the first film badly burned him, and so he looked different after his face was reconstructed using skin grafts. Less clever when, in the ending of the original film, Creator/PierceBrosnan's character discovered that Jobe had completely uploaded himself into the mainframe, leaving only his skin behind in the real world.
77* ''Franchise/TheMatrix'':
78** In ''Film/TheMatrixRevolutions'' Mary Alice replaced Gloria Foster as The Oracle because the character's appearance had changed due to The Merovingian being given her "termination code". In reality, this was an ad hoc handwave made up by the writers because Gloria Foster had died.
79** Because scheduling conflicts prevented Hugo Weaving from returning in ''Film/TheMatrixResurrections'', Agent Smith has been reintegrated into the new iteration of the Matrix and given a new avatar now played by Jonathan Groff.
80* The twist in ''Film/{{Predestination}}'' is that [[spoiler:Ethan Hawke's and Sarah Snook's characters are the same person from different parts of the same timeline.]] The change is the result of a skin graft after the character is badly burned attempting to contain an explosion.
81* ''[[Film/War2007 Rogue Assassin]]'' had the whole point of the mystery of the eponymous Assassin having plastic surgery to remain unknown. [[spoiler:We don't actually see any of the eponymous Assassin's face, and instead the one we THINK is the Assassin was actually his last target who took over his identity.]]
82* ''Film/SinCityADameToKillFor'' features Creator/JoshBrolin as Dwight [=McCarthy=] instead of Creator/CliveOwen. Dwight's story involves him being shot in the face and receiving surgery, resulting in a noticeably different appearance. [[WhatCouldHaveBeen Originally]], Brolin was to play Dwight pre-surgery and Owen was to play him post-surgery, but due to a scheduling issue Brolin ultimately played both versions.
83* A tie-in comic for ''Film/StarTrekIntoDarkness'' shows [[spoiler:Khan Noonien Singh]] getting MagicPlasticSurgery to explain his RaceLift.
84* Creator/TerryOQuinn declined reprising the role as the eponymous AxeCrazy in ''[[Film/TheStepfather Stepfather III]]'' and was replaced by Robert Wightman; the change in appearance is dealt with via a {{Squick}}y [[BackalleyDoctor backalley]] [[MagicPlasticSurgery plastic surgery scene]] at the beginning of the film.
85* ''Manga/{{Tomie}}'' from the live-action adaptations of Creator/JunjiIto's comic of the same name is this. Due to cloning and regeneration no two Tomies look alike.
86%%* ''Film/WhiteWolves'': Brian from the first movie (although he gets a SuddenNameChange) and Ben from the second are each played by different, older actors in the sequel. (Why is this an example of this trope? Sounds like Time Shifted Actor based just on this description. More context needed.)
87[[/folder]]
88
89[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
90* In the TV series ''Series/TheAdventuresOfSuperboy'', Lex Luthor was Nth Doctored through plastic surgery while Superboy himself was Other Darrined. In this case, Luthor's plastic surgery also somehow involved a change in built and an age-up from late teens to at least mid-thirties.
91* The Chronicoms in ''Series/AgentsOfSHIELD'' are semi-robotic aliens with the ability to change their appearances and voices. In season 7 the Chronicom [[spoiler:Hunters are able to disguise themselves in the past by forcefully and violently erasing the faces of humans and replicating their appearances.]] However, the only actual example of this in the show is [[spoiler:with the Chronicom Luke, who is originally played by Luke Baines then is replaced by Tobias Jelinek after Luke steals the face of a police officer in 1931.]]
92* ''Series/AlaDina'': When Paz Padilla exited the series and was replaced by Miriam Díaz-Aroca in the role of the titular genie, it was explained as her body transforming through some form of ThePowerOfLove.
93* On ''Series/AlloAllo'', Herr Flick was played by Richard Gibson until series 9, when he was replaced by Creator/DavidJanson. To explain the change in actors (who looked NOTHING alike) Herr Flick had plastic surgery to radically alter his appearance so he would not be captured by Allied forces.
94* In ''Series/AlteredCarbon'', one's consciousness is contained in a small device implanted at the base of the skull. This has many implications, one of which is that the body has come to be regarded as merely a "sleeve". Kovacs goes through at least four sleeves (and countless others offscreen) over the course of the show.
95* Trance Gemini from ''Series/{{Andromeda}}'' is interesting in that it was to change her ''makeup design'' instead of her actress. Part way through season two she's replaced with a future version of herself who looks completely different (even having a different ''skin colour'', going from purple to gold), but she's still the same actress behind the makeup.
96** She still does act fairly differently however (presumably due to her being older and more mature than her previous self).
97** Indeed, the change is so convincing, and done in such a way that is ''seems'' like a straight-up example of the trope, you really have to go over the credits to convince yourself it's the same actress!
98* Series/{{Arrowverse}}:
99** Mxyzptlk from ''Series/{{Supergirl}}'' is an ultra-powerful being who can shapeshift at will. In Season 2, he took the form of the young and handsome Creator/PeterGadiot when he was trying to woo Kara. In Season 5, he was instead played by the middle-aged and homely Thomas Lennon, as he had long moved on from Kara and approached her as a friend.
100** Music/ChinaAnneMcClain departed from ''Series/{{Black Lightning|2018}}'' midway through the final season to pursue other venues. Jennifer Pierce was subsequently recast with Laura Kariuki for the final seven episodes, with an in-universe explanation of Jennifer experiencing a power overload and turning into raw energy. When she was reconstructed, she had to live with a new body. However [[spoiler:the GrandFinale reveals that this isn't true, with [=McClain=]'s Jennifer returning, and Kariuki's being exposed as an EnergyBeing posing as her.]]
101** After Creator/RubyRose departed from ''Series/{{Batwoman|2019}}'', her character, Kate Kane, was recast with Creator/WallisDay. The creators bothered to explain the change in-universe: Kate was disfigured during a plane accident between Season 1 and 2 and her face was reconstructed to resemble another (dead) person.
102** Eobard Thawne aka Reverse-Flash was initially played by Tom Cavanaugh, but it was revealed that Thawne had [[GrandTheftMe stolen the face of]] scientist Harrison Wells, and when the character reappeared with his chronologically original appearance, he was played by Matt Letscher. Both Cavanaugh and Letscher would alternate playing Reverse-Flash over the course of the various Arrowverse series, largely due to [[TimeyWimeyBall weird time shenanigans.]]
103* ''Series/BabylonFive'':
104** Inverted at the end of Season 1. Delenn uses an ancient machine to transform herself into a being with both human and Minbari characteristics, radically changing her appearance, but is still played by the same actress.
105** ''Babylon 5'' also messed with the trope in a couple other ways. When the first actor to play Draal was unable to return due to illness, a new one was cast, the difference being remarked upon by Sheridan. Delenn replies that the Great Machine had restored to him his youth and appearance of thirty years prior. When the original actress to play [[spoiler:Anna Sheridan]] was unavailable, they recast her with [[spoiler:the real-life wife of the actor playing her onscreen husband]], and although the backstory involved would have made it ridiculously easy to hand-wave the change in appearance, they instead played it as TheOtherDarrin. Fortunately, it was easy not to notice that it was a different actress, since her only previous appearance had been in a single scene, [[spoiler:saying goodbye to John Sheridan in a video recording]].
106*** Helped that they had a convenient replay of the only scene [[spoiler:Anna Sheridan]] had been in, with the new actress instead of the old. JMS ALMOST did an OrwellianRetcon on DVD.
107** The characters migrate with actor availability as well... Carolyn Sykes becomes Catherine Sakai, becomes Anna Sheridan. JS becomes JS. Rather like the senior telepath/s and the second/s in command.
108* German 90's TV show ''Balko'' used this. Following the departure of Jochen Horst, the first actor to play the main character, the next season started with a near fatal car accident, forcing the till then unseen character to undergo plastic surgery, turning him into new actor Bruno Eyron (among the possible new faces given to choose from was also a famous German shepherd dog, '[[Series/InspectorRex Kommissar Rex]]').
109* In ''Series/{{Beetleborgs}}'', Jo becomes the victim of a botched magical spell that alters her face from that of Shannon Chandler to that of Brittany Konarzewski. The change is permanent but a new spell makes everyone but the other heroes (and the viewer, of course) see her old face.
110* Villain Al Hawke returns to ''Series/BirdsOfPrey2002'' played by [[Creator/MitchPileggi a different actor]], his new face explicitly the result of MagicPlasticSurgery to erase the scars of his burns from a previous episode. Unlike other examples, this doesn't explain why his personality, height, etc. all change between appearances, but hey.
111* In ''Series/BlakesSeven'', the character of Travis (first played by Creator/StephenGreif in the first season, then replaced by Creator/BrianCroucher in Season 2) was given a combination of plastic surgery and psychological re-conditioning.
112* ''Series/CrazyExGirlfriend'': After Greg Serrano (as played by Creator/SantinoFontana) left early in Season 2, he later came back in the fourth (and final) season, but this time played by Creator/SkylarAstin. Co-creators Aline Brosh [=McKenna=] and Rachel Bloom explained the swap as it being a result of Greg's original completed character arc, and a reflection of how your perception of people (in this case, protagonist Rebecca's) can change over time.
113-->'''Valencia:''' Okay, you want to talk about change? Let's talk about change. Greg has also changed a ''ton''! He's practically a completely different actor now. And of course I'm saying "actor" in the political and legal sense.
114* At the conclusion of the tenth season of ''Series/{{Dallas}}'', Victoria Principal chose to leave the series and as a result her character Pam was severely burned in a tanker explosion. Pam later reappeared in one episode two seasons later, now played by Margaret Michaels, with [[MagicPlasticSurgery some plastic surgery]] to explain the change in appearance.
115* ''Series/Danger5:'' While not explained, but the Pierre in Season 2 (played by Malawi/Zimbabwean Pacharo Mzembe) meets the Pierre of Season 1 (played by Italian Aldo Mignone), and the original Pierre recognizes him as his future self, which means ''something'' happened between Season 1 and 2 that made Pierre black.
116* ''Series/DeadRingers'': The {{Trope Namer|s}} was parodied in one sketch, when Tony Blair collapses during an interview, and regenerates into ''Creator/DavidTennant''.
117-->'''"Tony Blair":''' New Labour... that's weird.
118* The {{Trope Namer|s}} is the Doctor from ''Series/DoctorWho'', as mentioned above. The show has [[TheNthDoctor/DoctorWho its own page]].
119* Played with in ''Series/{{Dollhouse}}''. Many of the "characters" are, or become, artificial constructs (imprints) that can be moved from body to body. Multiple actors interpret Topher, Dominic, "Taffy", [[spoiler:Dr. Saunders, Clyde Randolf, "Kiki", Margaret, the serial killer in "Belle Chose", and Caroline]] in this way. Generally as much as possible is done to retain the voice and mannerisms of the original, with the exceptions of [[spoiler:Clyde and Dr. Saunders]], who change and evolve as they go along.
120** In particular, Victor was imprinted with Topher enough times to count as a recurring character.
121** In the post-apocalyptic episodes, [[spoiler:Ambrose and Harding]] are played by different actors than normal, explaining that they now jump bodies ("getting a new suit") regularly and have multiple copies of each other. The same thing was done to [[spoiler:Rossum founder Clyde]] when Rossum was first starting.
122* ''Series/DueSouth'' is a rare non-scifi example of this trope: after being UnCancelled for a third season, it transpired that David Marciano, who played Raymond Vecchio, had already relocated with his family and been hired for a new role and so wasn't able to rejoin the show. This being a BuddyCopShow between Marciano and Paul Gross's character Fraser, they were left with something of a problem, but came up with a unique twist. Marciano was replaced by the utterly dissimilar Callum Keith Rennie... and only Fraser, who's just come back from vacation, appears to notice that his partner has become a completely different person. He spends the entire first episode believing he's the OnlySaneMan while "Vecchio" and all their co-workers, and even Vecchio's own sister, profess ignorance to anything unusual. [[spoiler:His boss eventually sets him straight: the real Ray Vecchio has been sent deep undercover in the mob due to his [[IdenticalStranger uncanny resemblance]] to a [[NeverFoundTheBody presumably deceased]] boss whose gang he's infiltrating. The new Ray is a cop with the same first name and no family ties following a recent divorce, who's been brought in to take his place, so that if anyone gets suspicious and goes looking they'll find a Ray Vecchio active within the Chicago PD.]]
123%%* ''Series/GoodWitch'' has Tara's first few appearances she is played by Creator/AshleyLeggat, who was reprising the same role from the made-for-TV movies. She is then replaced by Rebecca Dalton for all subsequent appearances. (Sounds like The Other Darrin, please provide context to explain why it is this trope, or else delete.)
124* In ''Series/{{Gotham}},'' Poison Ivy was onto actor number three as of mid-season four. First, she was a teenager played by the 12-to-13-at-the-time Clare Foley, until a villain who drains people's LifeEnergy and causes RapidAging got a hand on her, not long enough to leave her as the usual ancient-looking corpse but long enough to turn her into the 28-year-old Maggie Geha. [[note]]The writers admit it's because the sex appeal that Poison Ivy is known for in the comics would be {{Squick}}y if they did it with someone so young. The {{Squick}} was not avoided for viewers, who pretty universally say that her merely ''looking'' older makes no difference![[/note]] After a season and a half as Geha, Ivy gets tired of not being taken seriously (she's pretty badass but nowhere near the league of those who control the city's underworld) and concocts a potion to amp up her powers. It causes her to go into a giant pod, and she emerges with a power set more akin to her comics self... and yet a third face, that of Creator/{{Peyton List|1986}}.
125* In ''Series/{{Heroes}}'', MasterOfIllusion Candice's favourite form was originally played by Creator/MissyPeregrym, but in her brief appearance in season 2 she had decided to change identities, and her new preferred form was Creator/RachelKimsey. When she died at the hands of Sylar, her true body was revealed as neither of the two.
126* In ''[[Series/HoneyIShrunkTheKids Honey, I Shrunk The Kids: The TV Show]]'', the Szalinskis' family dog, Qwark, is originally a sheep dog. However, in one episode, he becomes a mutated canine beast after accidentally eating some mutated vegetables Wayne created. The Szalinskis' manage to undo the mutation, but as a side effect, Qwark is transformed into an Irish setter for the remainder of the series.
127* In the second season of ''Series/JessicaJones2015'', [[spoiler:Jessica's mother Alisa]] is unrecognizable to Jessica after having extensive facial reconstruction surgery.
128* ''Series/JoanOfArcadia'' and ''Series/TheCollector'' have different actors play {{God}} and TheDevil, respectively. Lampshaded in the first example, where God points out that he/she/it is in reality, beyond all comprehension and so is simply taking AFormYouAreComfortableWith, one that's not always going to look the same. Sometimes they're [[DeadpanSnarker even snippy]], because it's what [[StealthInsult Joan understands]].
129* Two cases in ''Series/KamenRiderDenO'': When Hana's actress Yuriko Shiratori [[RealLifeWritesThePlot left the show for unknown reasons]], she was replaced by the much-younger Tamaki Matsumoto, and it was explained that [[TimeyWimeyBall her timeline had been rewritten]] to [[FountainOfYouth make her younger]]. When Ryotaro's actor Takeru Satoh moved on to other roles after the third movie, he was replaced with Takuya Mizoguchi (who previously played [[MyFutureSelfAndMe Ryotaro's younger self]] in the first movie), and the TimeyWimeyBall was again used to explain it. Interestingly, both Matsumoto and Mizoguchi bear a striking resemblance to their predecessors, a fact which becomes more pronounced as they [[SheIsAllGrownUp grow up]].
130* In ''{{Series/Lexx}}'', the change from Zev Bellringer (Eva Habermann) to Xev Bellringer (Xenia Seeberg) was explained via the former dying and melting into a puddle of goo, from which the latter was incarnated via the sacrifice of a few hapless astronauts. The reason given for her being so different in behavior and appearance after the resurrection is that the alien who brought her back was working from the imperfect memories of Zev's friends. It's worth noting that Xev still appears to have all of Zev's original memories, and is still part cluster-lizard due to Zev's botched love-slave transformation. Also, in a later episode Xev is briefly reverted to her original "ugly Zev" body, but later restored to Xev.
131* Subverted in a HUGE way by the Australian lifestyle show parody ''Series/LifeSupport''. In Season 3, Doctor Rudi changed actors, from Simon Van Der Stap to Jack Finsterer. However, it turned out that this new Dr. Rudi, who had allegedly had MagicPlasticSurgery, was actually an impostor, and the old Dr. Rudi was out for revenge. It culminated in [[spoiler:a fist-fight between the Rudis at the new Dr. Rudi and Sigourney's wedding.]]
132* In one episode of ''Series/MarriedWithChildren'', the family dog passes away, and at the end of the episode he's reincarnated as a puppy to live with the Bundys (much to his horror) by a jerkish cat who was in charge of his reincarnation case.
133* British children's comedy ''Series/MikeAndAngelo'' had Angelo – an alien – turn into another actor via a regeneration process that was a direct reference to ''Series/DoctorWho''.
134* ''Series/MimpiMetropolitan'': Invoked in the production of a SoapWithinAShow. When Akbar fires [[spoiler:Juna]] yet keeps [[spoiler:Juna]]'s character, Akbar says that it will be said in-universe that the character has a MagicPlasticSurgery, demonstrating that [[spoiler:Juna]] is not irreplaceable to Akbar.
135* George Sunday from ''Series/MyHero2000'' is a StarfishAlien using a fake human body, so when Creator/ArdalOHanlon quit the show in the final season, George lost his body in a poker game and got a new one that looked like Creator/JamesDreyfus. Characters who didn't know he was an alien were told that he left his wife and that she got a new lodger called George Monday.
136* In Series 1 and 2 of ''Series/MyParentsAreAliens'', Sophie Johnson was played by blonde Barbara Durkin. From Series 3 onwards, she was played by brown-haired Carla Mendonça, having "[[ShapeshifterModelock got stuck]]" morphed that way.
137* On ''Series/MysteryScienceTheater3000'': Replacement of voice actors/puppeteers for the robots, as in most puppetry and animation, was usually unexplained. However, the difference in Tom Servo's voice from one actor to another was so severe that it was given an on-screen nod as Joel replaced Servo's voice module. Similarly, in the eighth season Crow T. Robot was the only one who'd stayed on the satellite for five-hundred-odd years, and thus had gone slightly mad; any other vocal differences were given a HandWave in the tenth season when Joel (appearing as TheCameo) suggested that Crow had replaced the bowling pin that formed his mouth.
138** This was also lampshaded in episode 905, where Mike cut himself on Crow, becoming a Were-Crow. In giving Mike the rundown of what being Crow would entail, Crow mentioned that "your voice is gonna change inexplicably every seven years or so."
139*** This was also joked about in an interview with Bill Corbett where he explained his initial lack of puppetry skills (as compared to Trace Beaulieu) by stating that "Crow had a stroke."
140* ''Franchise/PowerRangers'':
141** In ''Series/MightyMorphinPowerRangers'', Rita Repulsa was originally portrayed using stock footage of Creator/MachikoSoga as Witch Bandra from ''Series/KyoryuSentaiZyuranger'' (with Barbara Goodson dubbing her voice) until the beginning of Season 2 when she was shrunken and [[PutOnABus imprisoned inside a small space dumpster]] by [[TheManBehindTheMan her master]] Lord Zedd. When she returned to full size later during the same season (now played by Carla Perez in all new American-made footage), her servant Finster gave her a magical makeover in order to explain her different appearance.
142** Alpha 6's voice chip was damaged when the Power Chamber was destroyed at the end of ''Series/PowerRangersTurbo'', necessitating a repair that gave it a new personality, a new voice and familiar mannerisms (from TotallyRadical {{Scrappy}} to Alpha 5 {{Expy}}), also explaining away the voice actor switch from Katerina Luciani to Wendee Lee. Alpha 6 would get Other Darrined without explanation in ''Series/PowerRangersOperationOverdrive'', where it is voiced by New Zealand-based American actor Campbell Cooley with a deeper voice than ''any'' Alpha has had before, with a flanging effect that makes him sound more like he's going for Alpha 5.
143** When David Yost walked off the set of ''Series/PowerRangersZeo'' due to homophobic bullying, never to return, Billy was briefly recast as a middle-aged version of himself (due to belated effects of the age regeneration he used to escape child form in the "Alien Rangers" story arc). After a couple of episodes spent seeking a solution to Billy's continued aging, Billy's youth was restored and the character written out via stock footage.
144* Holly, the A.I. from ''Series/RedDwarf'' played by Creator/NormanLovett, became a female character (played by Creator/HattieHayridge) at the start of Series III, and stayed female for the next two series, before being PutOnABus and later switching back to male in Series VII.
145** Less noticeable was the recasting of the android Kryten (with Creator/RobertLlewellyn replacing Creator/DavidRoss, who originally was to return but was unavailable). This was mainly achieved when the look of the series was entirely redesigned, with a greatly improved budget allowing for better costumes and prosthetics, plus the fact that Kryten was only in one episode previously. Llewellyn played the part very differently, with this being explained in an OpeningScroll as Lister rebuilding him but being unable to restore his personality; this was further explored in Series VIII Episode 2 "Back in the Red: Part 2" when Kryten's behaviour is 'reset' and his actions and mannerisms noticeably revert to the 'Ross' Kryten (before being restored to his old new self).
146* ''Series/{{Sliders}}'':
147** Quinn Mallory's replacement by his non-identical counterpart from another universe, when Creator/JerryOConnell left the show, is half this and half SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute.
148*** They actually almost never refer to the replacement as "Quinn" or "Q-Ball" (Rembrandt's nickname for the original). Instead, it's always "Mallory". He doesn't seem to mind. Remmy eventually takes to calling him "Fog Boy".
149*** However, before she warmed up to the gang, Maggie called Quinn "Mallory". As she [[DefrostingIceQueen defrosts]] she gets to FirstNameBasis. Now she gets to go back to calling him "Mallory" despite being on friendlier terms.
150** On the other hand, third-season BigBad Rickman is replaced by a new actor after his first appearance, and this is explained as a side-effect of his vampiric medical condition: in his first appearance, his facial features change momentarily whenever he injects brain tissue from his victims. This transformation turns out to have a small but cumulative permanent effect as well. In reality, Roger Daltrey was simply too expensive to keep on as a recurring character.
151* In ''Series/{{Smallville}}'', the recurring character Morgan Edge is initially played by Rutger Hauer, and after a near-fatal accident and MagicPlasticSurgery, he is played by Patrick Bergen, leading to this priceless quote:
152-->'''ComicBook/LexLuthor''': You can change your face, your hair, your voice... but not your DNA. You still sweat the same.
153* Most SoapOpera actor changes are simply TheOtherDarrin (or the result of SoapOperaRapidAgingSyndrome for the younger set), but occasionally they can be Nth Doctors. Example: Jerry Jacks of ''Series/GeneralHospital'' had his MagicPlasticSurgery turn him from Julian Stone to Sebastian Roche... and it was good enough for him to successfully use an alias for a few months.
154** One of the most infamous (and convoluted) versions of this occurred on ''Series/DaysOfOurLives'': When Wayne Northrop -- the actor portraying Roman Brady -- left the show in 1984, his character was PutOnABus via [=shooting/=][[NeverFoundTheBody body snatching]]. Two years later, the younger, taller Drake Hogestyn took over the role. Playing this trope straight, they [[HandWave explained his physical differences]] by plastic surgery needed to recover from the injuries suffered at the hands of [[BigBad Stefano DiMera]]. Then Northrop returned four years after that... ''as Roman Brady''. He'd been held prisoner by [=DiMera=], while [=DiMera=] sent brainwashed mercenary John Black (who, in an extra dash of Soap Operaness, turned out to be Stefano's half-brother) to take over Roman's life and be his spy ([[BecomingTheMask that didn't work so well for Stefano]]). But Northrop only stuck around three more years before leaving again. This time they went straight TheOtherDarrin and brought in Josh Taylor to play Roman (which he has done since 1997).
155*** Parodied on ''Series/{{Friends}}'' (and crossing over with TheBusCameBack) where ''Series/DaysOfOurLives'' exists as a ShowWithinAShow when Joey is brought back to the show by having his character (who had been in a coma for five years) receive a brain transplant from a female character who was being killed off. Dr. Drake Remoray was back, but with Jessica Lockhart's mind.
156* ''Franchise/StargateVerse'':
157** On ''Series/StargateSG1'', you'd think you'd see this with the Goa'uld and {{Good Counterpart}}s the Tok'ra, as they live in human hosts, but it doesn't really happen much (notably, the original BigBad, Apophis, keeps his original host even after years of torture at the hands of Sokar left him horribly scarred.) However, partially-ascended Anubis tends to cause PossessionBurnout. As such, he's got one actor when in a containment suit, followed by a succession of human servants he possesses when the last burns out (after his suit is destroyed in one season finale battle.) At one point, a withered Anubis is talking to TheDragon Baal as a fresh host is brought in. He switches to it and picks up where he left off as the old host falls dead and is dragged out.
158** Used in ''Series/StargateAtlantis'' for [[spoiler:Elizabeth Weir. Previously played by Creator/TorriHigginson, Weir returned first as a faceless, fuzzy-voiced VirtualGhost, who then built herself a replicator body played by Michelle Morgan, who had in the previous season played F.R.A.N., a replicator [=McKay=] made. This allowed them to explain that to save time, Weir simply used the last template in the replicator machine, rather than try to remake her own appearance from scratch]].
159*** Interestingly, [[spoiler:Elizabeth Weir was also an [[TheOtherDarrin Other Darrin]], played by Jessica Steen in the ''Series/StargateSG1'' episode "The Lost City", before becoming a lead character on ''Series/StargateAtlantis'', played by Torri Higginson]].
160* ''Franchise/StarTrek'':
161** ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'':
162*** The episode "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS4E23TheHost The Host]]" plays this trope completely straight with regard to the Trill symbionts, which were portrayed at completely taking over the new host and replacing the existing personality. This dynamic, not to mention the species' appearance, was [[{{Retcon}} completely changed]] from the beginning of ''Deep Space Nine''.
163*** The Borg Queen's hard to tell. She appears to be destroyed in almost every appearance -- even by way of ''retcon'', revealing herself to have been on the cube in "The Best of Both Worlds". Yes, her ''debut'' is an UnexplainedRecovery. She's indicated and proven repeatedly that physical death is a minor inconvenience to her, and it's easy to imagine that her data just goes elsewhere when one body's in mortal danger, though that's not said outright. Coincidentally or not, she's sometimes Alice Krige and sometimes Susanna Thompson, and with so much make-up it's hard to tell who is who.
164*** The ''Star Trek Encyclopedia'' jokes that Data's cat, Spot, changes appearance and gender between episodes because it's an alien shapeshifter or was caught in a TeleporterAccident.
165** ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'' began with the character Jadzia Dax, played by Terry Farrell, who was a joined Trill: she was a [[MergerOfSouls merged consciousness]] of the humanoid host Jadzia and the long-lived sluglike symbiont Dax, forming a single new personality that retained Jadzia's memories pre-joining as well as those of Dax's previous seven hosts. Upon Jadzia's death, the Dax symbiont was implanted in a new host; the show thus introduced Ezri Dax, played by Nicole de Boer. Slightly different from the usual approach to this trope since a joined Trill retains something close to their host's original identity, so they're not exactly (or legally) the same person as the previous hosts. Ezri is therefore treated as a different character, albeit with Jadzia's and the previous hosts' memories and some aspects of their personalities, and she has to grapple with integrating them with her own.
166** ''Series/StarTrekDiscovery'': A particularly unusual case: Adira (though a human), in a flashback, is shown to have become the subsequent host of their own Trill boyfriend's symbiont after he was [[BuryYourGays tragically killed in an accident]]. However, very much ''contrary'' to standard Trill experience, the boyfriend keeps appearing vividly in Adira's thoughts, an A.I. detects him as a separate presence and gives him a holographic form, and he may be somehow regaining physical existence later on. On top of that, Adira ''also'' turns out to be a subsequent host of an admiral who the crew is trying to find.
167* ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'':
168** Demons can possess different human bodies, so any demon character can be played by more than one actor. It happened with Lilith in Season 3 and 4, and then with [[spoiler:Ruby/"Kristy"]] between seasons 3 and 4.
169** It also occurred with villains Azazel and Alastair, and the possibility exists for this to happen with the angels as well. However, it's explicitly avoided with the character of Anna, whose human body was destroyed when she became an angel again, but replaced with an identical one as she'd become attached to it and arranged for it to be remade.
170** The angels don't just switch bodies, they also don't care about the sex of their physical vessels. Castiel's alternative vessel was a 12-year-old girl, Lucifer appeared as a woman in both Sam and Nick's dreams, and [[spoiler:Raphael's second vessel was female]]. Fan theories vary on whether angels simply don't recognize gender in the way humans do or if they have a particular gender preference. But whatever you do, don't bring up the question of what this means for the hetero/homosexuality of ships involving angels.
171** Meg has also gone through several bodies, including Sam's.
172** The difference with demons is that they used to be human, so they understand gender perfectly well.
173* The Terminator known as Cromartie is reduced to a metal skeleton in the first episode of ''Series/TerminatorTheSarahConnorChronicles'', in which he was played by Owain Yeoman, and slowly creates a new flesh covering for himself over the course of the first season, being played by an uncredited stunt artist in the interim stages, and Creator/GarretDillahunt once the work is complete. This was due to RealLifeWritesThePlot, as Dillahunt was always the showrunners' first choice for the role, but was unavailable for the recording of the pilot episode.
174* ''Series/ThatMitchellAndWebbLook:'' Parodied in the live show's "Numberwang" sketch. On the TV series, the two contestants, Julie and Simon, were played by Olivia Colman and Paterson Joseph. Since the live show couldn't get them, Julie and Simon are noted by the host to have "regenerated into two less expensive actors".
175* The death of Philip Gilbert shortly into Creator/BigFinish's ''Series/TheTomorrowPeople1973'' line was framed by having TIM require some repair work after damage received in Gilbert's last episode. John had to rebuild TIM's voice synthesizer, and couldn't quite reproduce the original voice. Gilbert's other recurring roles (He also voiced a family of clones on whose voice TIM had been modeled) were not so lucky, and became {{Fake Shemp}}s.
176* ''Series/TwinPeaks'': Between the original series and ''[[{{Revival}} The Return]]'', the actors that played BOB (Frank Silva) and Philip Jeffries (Creator/DavidBowie) died, while the actor for the Man From Another Place (Michael J. Anderson) refused to reprise his role. However, all three characters are in some way connected to the [[EldritchLocation Black Lodge]], providing a justification for appearances different enough to be played by different actors.
177** BOB spends most of his time [[DemonicPossession possessing the bodies of others]], so they mostly just show his host and some brief glimpses achieved with archival footage.
178** The Man From Another Place changed form to a [[spoiler:bizarre creature that looks like a tree branch made of flesh]].
179** Philip Jeffries is eventually revealed to have become [[spoiler:some kind of steam-blowing MechanicalAbomination]] with his voice provided by a soundalike.
180* In ''Series/TheWorstWitch'', Katy Allen replaced Felicity Jones as Ethel Hallow for Seasons 2 and 3, which was explained by Ethel having given herself a "witch-over". She undoes this spell for the fourth season (''Weirdsister College''), when Jones returns to the role.
181[[/folder]]
182
183[[folder:Music]]
184* When bassist Masokiss left UK all-character cult band Deathsex Bloodbath, they circumvented it by having the performer die onstage and (through low-budget effects) regenerate into her replacement.
185[[/folder]]
186
187[[folder:Pinball]]
188* Used as a major gameplay mechanic in the ''Pinball/DoctorWho'' {{pinball}} game: The Master has effectively trapped six of the (then) seven Doctors in different places, and the Seventh must get them to safety in order to confront the Master, the Daleks, and ultimately Davros.
189[[/folder]]
190
191[[folder:Radio]]
192* ''Series/DeadRingers:'' The radio show has David Dimbleby, outgoing host of ''Question Time'', regenerate much like the Blair / Tennant example in Live Action, mimicking the Twelfth Doctor's regeneration, since David Dimbleby was replaced by Fiona Bruce.
193-->'''Dimbleby:''' ''Question Time''... I let you go...\
194'''Fiona Bruce:''' Oh, brilliant. I'm a woman now. The BBC will get letters!
195** The regeneration of the Thirteenth Doctor into the Fourteenth is itself spoofed, when Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is being interviewed in a rickety BBC stage and asked if he's worried about his predecessor making a comeback. Sunak is injured and regenerates into Liz Truss, who then gets injured and regenerates into Boris Johnson, who himself falls into the exact same hole again and turns into Theresa May.
196* ''Radio/TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxy1978'':
197** To replace the late Peter Jones in the Tertiary Phase, the guide receives an "update" during the first scene of the play. Thanks to some clever editing, the voice of the Guide changes in mid-sentence, and occasionally reverts back for a second, using recycled audio from the original series.
198** Following the death of Susan Sheridan, the Hexagonal Phase explains that Trillian has been merged with her alternate-Earth counterpart, Tricia Macmillan, who had appeared in the Quintessential Phase played by Creator/SandraDickinson (the TV Trillian).
199* In the radio adaptation of ''Literature/HowTheMarquisGotHisCoatBack'', the Marquis (played by Patterson Joseph instead of David Harewood from the radio adaptation of ''Literature/{{Neverwhere}}'') explains to Richard that he sounds different as a side-effect of having his throat cut. He also mentions he sounds like his "younger self", a reference to Joseph playing the Marquis in the TV version.
200* The first actor to play Radio/TheLoneRanger on the radio died tragically in a car crash. To further a) a seamless transition of the character and b) to keep young viewers from being freaked out by the Ranger's sudden vocal change, the producers decided to have the Ranger be seriously injured and spend a few episodes first unconscious and then unable to talk coherently, before introducing the new voice of the Ranger, Brace Beemer. For those who noticed the change, his injuries could provide an in-universe explanation.
201[[/folder]]
202
203[[folder:Video Games]]
204* ''VideoGame/DawnOfWar'' explains the difference in Space Marine voice actors between installments as a product of a mutation in one of the many extra BioAugmentation organs that differentiates [[SuperSoldier Space Marines]] from normal humans. Specifically, the organ in their throat which usually allows a Space Marine to spit acid doesn't work properly, and instead causes their voice to change every few years.
205* ''VideoGame/{{Ingress}}'': Whatever the Shapers did that brought Roland Jarvis back from the dead also changed his appearance significantly, as the Roland Jarvis that died and the one that came out to greet his agents, thanking them for his revival, were entirely different, despite being the same mind.
206* In ''Franchise/MassEffect'' the player can do this to Shepard between the games. The second game justifies this with Shepard dying in the opening and then being reconstructed by Cerberus. The third game, however, has no justification. Other characters will also easily recognize you just by your voice.
207* In ''Franchise/{{Tekken}}'', when Heihachi Mishima's [[Creator/DaisukeGori old voice actor]] died and was replaced with [[Creator/UnshoIshizuka a new one]], they justified it in-universe by having Heihachi reverse his age with an experimental drug. This plot point is introduced in ''[[DreamMatchGame Tekken Tag Tournament 2]]'' and re-iterated in ''VideoGame/ProjectXZone'' and ''VideoGame/PlayStationAllStarsBattleRoyale'' for those out of the loop. However, both ''VideoGame/StreetFighterXTekken'' (which released after ''Tag 2'' but before ''PXZ'' and ''PSASBR'') and ''VideoGame/Tekken7'' have the elderly Heihachi with his new voice, which might come across as strange or dissonant to some players, though ''Tekken 7'' at least has a few flashbacks which feature Heihachi as his younger, ''Tag 2'' incarnation (thereby implying the new voice has always been his).
208[[/folder]]
209
210[[folder:Visual Novels]]
211* According to ''VisualNovel/DisgaeaInfinite'', the Prism Rangers often die and people are often recruited or kidnapped to replace them, explaining why their voice actors constantly change throughout the ''Franchise/{{Disgaea}}'' series.
212[[/folder]]
213
214[[folder:Webcomics]]
215* The ''Webcomic/{{Insecticomics}}'' uses the trope to justify characters being represented by new toys. The most major would be Dreadmoon's [[http://www.insecticons.com/insecticomics/tfcon2005.html upgrade to a repaint of Energon Mirage]] from a [[http://www.insecticons.com/insecticomics/troubleparadise1.html sculpted model]], although Starscream's gone through several new bodies as better toys for him have come out.
216* ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'' goes through several art changes that, because [[NoFourthWall the characters are aware they're in a comic strip]], inherently affects how the universe looks. Pointed out several times, such as when Elan remarks that Roy and Elan each got new accessories from a dragon's den [[http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0198.html before Haley points out that it's just an art upgrade]], and they're supposed to pretend they've always looked like that. So while the appearance of the characters (to us) doesn't change drastically, to the characters, it does.
217* In the Luna arc of ''Webcomic/QuantumVibe'' Dr. Seamus O'Murchadha undergoes a treatment to fix his screwed up metabolism from his last rejuvenation treatment. It also makes him look less like Creator/TomBaker with a weight problem and more like an eight-foot-tall Creator/WilliamHartnell. [[spoiler:A later arc showed that he's changed his appearance, with both rejuvenation and conventional plastic surgery, several times in the past.]]
218* In ''Webcomic/{{Roommates}}'', because it's a MegaCrossover and has a whole cast of {{Living Dream}}s, when a different adaptation of the source material becomes more well known the powers of the universe[[note]]Namely ClapYourHandsIfYouBelieve and ActorAllusion[[/note]] change the appearance of the characters. It's generally not permanent, though, as they are {{Composite Character}}s and by definition encompass all their portrayals. (They possess a ''very'' limited [[VoluntaryShapeshifting shapeshifting]][[note]]They must remain the same character and probably the version can't be too obscure either.[[/note]] ability thanks to this too.)
219[[/folder]]
220
221[[folder:Web Original]]
222* {{Parodied|Trope}} in the ''Website/ClickHole'' article "[[https://clickhole.com/all-the-seinfelds-ranked-1825122591/ All The Seinfelds, Ranked]]", which straight-facedly pays tribute to the various actors who supposedly played the character of Creator/JerrySeinfeld in various seasons, including Creator/JohnCusack, Creator/GeorgeLazenby, Creator/KadeemHardison ("the first black Seinfeld") and Creator/LouisCK, among others. Also, in one season, the supporting cast is mentioned as "Elaine (Creator/KhandiAlexander), George (Creator/LeVarBurton), and Kramer (Creator/EddieMurphy)", without further explanation. What makes this all the more amazing is that the ''actual'' Jerry Seinfeld is on the list... '''as "Peter Harrick"'''.
223* WebVideo/TheDebbieAndCarrieShow featured two different versions of Debbie and two different versions of Carrie over the course of the saga. The original version of Debbie was a girl with pink hair shaped into pigtails, while the original Carrie was played by stock character model "Lizzie". Debbie then changed her hair (making it blonde and wavy) and Carrie began to be played by a custom built model to allow both of them to grow older over time.
224* ''WebAnimation/{{Eddsworld}}'': After Edd Gould's death, Edd the character got zapped by an alien voice changer in ''Space Face Pt. 2'' to explain Tim Hautekiet taking over as the his voice actor. After Matt makes a few attempts to return Edd's voice to that of Gould, the voice-changer breaks and he is stuck with Hautekiet's.
225* ''WebAnimation/InanimateInsanityInvitational'': After Bow's voice actress was replaced due to a RoleEndingMisdemeanor, the creators took advantage of the fact that the character in this season is a robot to provide an explanation for her voice change in episode 10, that of her choosing a new voice out of a catalogue of voices Test Tube gave her (which is also why she does not speak for most of the episode, as her new voice had been processing for that time).
226* In the third installment of ''Theatre/AVeryPotterMusical'', Hermione is first seen wearing a Death Eater mask, which gets her punched in the face by Neville and her nose broken. After a faulty Reparo charm is cast on her face, only then does the mask come off to reveal that she's now played by Meredith Stepien instead of Bonnie Gruesen. Ron notes that she's [[FanservicePack much hotter]], and she asks him ([[BreakingTheFourthWall and the audience]]) to treat her as if she's the same old Hermione.
227* In ''Podcast/WelcomeToNightVale'', Carlos's change of voice actors is explained by his having replaced his own vocal chords to prevent throat spiders, which is apparently important for scientists to do.
228* Used straight but with ''props'' in ''WebVideo/WorldsGreatestAdventures'', for the LivingHat Gordon, who turns from a straw hat to a velvet hat after falling in a time vortex[[note]](read: a duck pond)[[/note]]. Complete with ''Series/DoctorWho''-esque golden light and sound effect.
229[[/folder]]
230
231[[folder:Western Animation]]
232* ''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime'': In "The Prince Who Wanted Everything", Ice King reads Lumpy Space Prince's dialogue in Lumpy Space Princess' normal voice. After she complains, Ice King uses a different voice, resulting in [=LSPrince=]'s voice changing from Pendleton Ward's voice to Peter Serafinowicz's voice.
233* ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball'':
234** The third season premiere "The Kids" has Gumball and Darwin's voices (both provided by [[ChildrenVoicingChildren child actors that were outgrowing the character]]) cracking extensively, leading them to [[GrowingUpSucks come to terms with becoming adults.]] At the end of the episode, their voices finally break even with new voice actors... who sound ''[[NotAllowedToGrowUp younger]]'' than they did before. They then realize they're part of the previously mentioned 1% of people in the world ("[[LeaningOnTheFourthWall most of them on TV]]") that don't age.
235--->'''Gumball:''' ''[enthusiastically]'' [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor We're stuck in these bodies for the rest of our lives!]]\
236'''Gumball and Darwin:''' ''[enthusiasm dies]'' ... [[NotGrowingUpSucks yay?]]
237*** The same thing happens again partway into the fifth season, though much more suddenly, at the end the "The Copycats".
238*** Though even less of an "explanation" than previous cases, Darwin's voice changing again in the sixth season occurs right when Darwin clears his throat.
239** In "The Nemesis", Darwin and Gumball help Rob become a better villain. Part of this involved [[ItMakesSenseInContext using a remote control to change Rob's voice]] to sound [[EvilBrit "more evil"]], which changes his voice from Hugo Harold-Harrison to Creator/DavidWarner. When he tires of this voice at the end of the same season, he uses another remote control to change it back.
240* The ''WesternAnimation/Ben10Omniverse'' episode "Universe Vs. Tennyson" establishes Celestialsapiens, the source species of Alien X and a species of {{Reality Warper}}s, [[CosmicRetcon as the cause of the various redesigns]] and {{The Other Darrin}}s throughout [[Franchise/{{Ben 10}} the franchise]], with Azmuth cited as an example (going from Creator/RobertDavidHall in ''[[WesternAnimation/Ben10SecretOfTheOmnitrix Secret of the Omnitrix]]'' and ''[[WesternAnimation/Ben10DestroyAllAliens Destroy All Aliens]]'', to Creator/JeffBennett doing a Creator/ReneAuberjonois impression in the ''[[WesternAnimation/Ben10AlienForce Alien Force]]''/''[[WesternAnimation/Ben10UltimateAlien Ultimate Alien]]'' era, to Auberjonois himself voicing Azmuth in ''Omniverse'').
241* ''WesternAnimation/{{Ninjago}}'':
242** A non-actor example. In Season 8, the ninja were redesigned to match their [[WesternAnimation/TheLEGONinjagoMovie movie counterparts]]. It's implied in the [[Recap/NinjagoS8E75TheMaskOfDeception first episode]] of Season 8 that [[AlternateTimeline time travel effects]] from the previous season caused this. However, the ninja still sport their old designs in photographs and flashbacks from before Season 8, calling this explanation into question.
243--->'''Cole:''' If someone goes back in time and alters the past, our reality as we know it would change. We could look totally different and not even know it. ''(Takes off mask to reveal new face and hair design)''\
244'''Jay:''' [[LeaningOnTheFourthWall But we don't.]] ''(Also takes off mask to reveal new design)''
245** An actor example also happened in the same episode. As Creator/SamuelVincent replaced Creator/JillianMichaels (to make him sound older like in the movie), the Ninja remark on how Lloyd getting older has deepened his voice.
246* Retroactively applied in ''WesternAnimation/ReBoot'': at the end of season two Bob is sucked into [[EldritchLocation the Web]], and when he came back in season three, slightly degraded by his experience, he switched voice actor from Michael Benyaer to Ian James Corlett because the former was unavailable. When [[TheOriginalDarrin Benyaer became available again]] while producing season four they had him do the voice for Bob in a flashback, a second Bob (possibly the original, possibly a copy, [[spoiler:actually Megabyte]]), and [[spoiler:the real Bob after the damage done to him by the Web is repaired]], implying the different voice was caused by said degradation.
247* In season 4 of ''WesternAnimation/SolarOpposites'', Korvo is voiced by Creator/DanStevens instead of Creator/JustinRoiland. In-universe, this is because Terry accidentally throws a dart into Korvo's throat; this leads to Yumyulack heading upstairs to retrieve the voice-fixing ray, which he uses to fix Korvo's throat and voice. This results in Korvo speaking with a noticeably different voice than before, which the other characters notice in-universe. Korvo's statement in the show's CouchGag [[CosmicRetcon confirms that this even retroactively applies to flashbacks.]]\
248Out-of-universe, this is due to Roiland getting kicked out of the show's production team by Creator/{{Hulu}} due to a RoleEndingMisdemeanor.
249* Glossaryck from ''WesternAnimation/StarVsTheForcesOfEvil'' was originally voiced by Creator/JeffreyTambor. Following being destroyed in "Book Be Gone" and being revived in "Rest In Pudding", he spent the whole third season just saying "Globgor". When Glossaryck finally started speaking in complete sentences again, after which he was voiced by Creator/KeithDavid, Star asked "Is his voice different?", implying he literally does sound different.
250* In ''WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2012'', Leonardo spends the time between the Season 2 finale and Season 3 premiere in a coma. Once he wakes up, his voice actor is different (Creator/SethGreen instead of Dominic Catrambone, who himself was a temporary replacement for Creator/JasonBiggs). Casey comments on his voice being different and Donatello says it's a result of his injuries.
251* Creator/{{Toonami}}, an action block originally on Creator/CartoonNetwork, now on Creator/AdultSwim, had robotic show host TOM 1.0, voiced by Creator/SonnyStrait, get destroyed by an alien BlobMonster during a special event, and was replaced by TOM 2.0, voiced by Creator/SteveBlum. Subsequent versions of TOM's body (usually) had their own explanations via similar on-air events and comics, but Blum would continue to voice all of them.
252* Autobots and Decepticons in ''Franchise/{{Transformers}}'' often upgrade, and occasionally mutate, into newer, more powerful bodies. While generally a [[MerchandiseDriven way to advertise new toys]], this is occasionally (though not usually) used to justify new voice actors:
253** When Megatron was rebuilt as Galvatron in ''WesternAnimation/TransformersTheMovie'', his voice changed from Creator/FrankWelker to Creator/LeonardNimoy. Galvatron in the series proper is again voiced by Welker[[note]]with a slightly different pitch to differentiate the two[[/note]] and this vocal change is explained by him undergoing SanitySlippage due to taking a plasma bath.
254** Scourge and Cyclonus had new voice actors instead of those of Thundercracker and... either of the two characters Cyclonus could be. (Long story.)
255** ''Beast Machines'' Jetstorm has a different voice than [[spoiler:Silverbolt]], because it'd ruin the surprise.
256** Creator/CaseyKasem, who was of Lebanese descent, left ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers'' in protest over the stereotypical portrayal of an evil dictator of an Arab state called "[[UnfortunateNames Carbombya]]". As a result, Teletraan-1, which he voiced, was replaced with Teletraan-2, voiced by Frank Welker.
257[[/folder]]

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