Wordpress looks terribly designed, but it does the job and do it well. Strangely it's much more efficient that what we can think by studying at its design.
If you want to use another table you will have to sync its content with the wp database on post updates. May not be easy.
I would take this problem in either one of this directions :
1 do it wp style and optimise
Do your database with custom post type. Create a page called ajax-actors in admin, create a page-ajax-actor.php file that handle the query and send raw results (no header, no footer).
Call www.yoursite.com/ajax-actor with ajax.
This will be "slow", so you have to optimize it.
Make sure you have apc running with enougth ram allocated to it.
Use wordpress supercache or similar plugin / Use a reverse proxy
2 do it using lightweight database
Use wordpress for your editorial content and create a second lightweight database from scratch. This way you can optimize your database for its specific content.
If you are starting a new website, do it using the 1st solution. It will be faster and you'll get your site online sooner. Then you can use the revenue to optimize it or even do a complete reshape.
Should the values of actors be: Brad Pitt or a integer: 232 related to his name?
You should use one table per entity type. Primary key must be an integer. Then you reference this primary key from other tables.
Example :
Table actors
id : integer / primary key
name : varchar / with index
The index on name slows insert but will speedup dramaticaly the search using actor names.
In the movies table you reference the actors by id. Actually, since they are several actors per movie, you'll need a table like this :
Actors_Movie
actor_id : integer
movie_id : integer
role : varchar (what's the name of the character of this actor in this movie)
hope this helps.