Representation theory (at least the origin of this terminology) aims to exhibit a model (a represetative) in the group of matrices for an abstract group which is known by only its group law. So complex representations is a satisfying beautiful theory with Schur's theorem, Frobenius reciprocity, Artin, Brauer theorems and various results about irreducible degrees for finite groups.
But my concern is that the field of complex numbers is extraneous to groups. Do we have theorems like $\sum_j d_j^2 = |G|$ when $d_j$ runs though all irreducible degrees of $G$ over an unspecified algebraically closed field. Because the complex case uses character theory with Hermitian structure on the vector space of complex-valued class functions I am not sure if this result is available for a general field.
I have not studied what is known as modular representation theory. Are all non-modular cases no different from the theory over complex numbers? (always working over algebraically closed field). Do the degrees of irreducible representations divide the order of the group whatever the base field is?
Instead of asking for questions individually of this nature let me ask:
Is there an analogue of Lefschetz principle of Algebraic Geometry that is valid for finite group representations? so that to study non-modular representations it suffices to study complex representations.