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Settlement reached in Broadway strike
Michael Kuchwara
NEW YORK—Broadway stagehands and theatre producers reached a tentative
agreement Wednesday night to end a strike and almost immediately return
to the stage most of the two dozen plays and musicals that have been
shut down for more than two weeks.
The settlement came after two days of marathon, all-night sessions and
months of negotiation between Local 1 and the League of American
Theatres and Producers. The walkout, which began Nov. 10, has cost the
city and theatres millions of dollars in lost income.
Bruce Cohen, a spokesman for the union, confirmed the agreement ending
the 19-day work stoppage. “We’re glad there’s a deal, and everyone
should go back to work and the public should go see a Broadway show,”
Cohen said. Most shows were expected to resume performances Thursday,
the league said.
Charlotte St. Martin, executive director of the league, called the deal
“a good compromise that serves our industry.” “What is most important is
that Broadway’s lights will once again be shining brightly with a
diversity of productions that will delight all theatregoers during this
holiday time,” she said.
Negotiations had moved slowly Wednesday as both sides struggled with
what apparently was the last hangup, the issue of wages — how much to
pay stagehands in return for a reduction in what the producers say were
onerous work rules that required them to hire more stagehands than are
needed.
Much of the talks had focused on how many stagehands are required to
open a Broadway show and keep it running. That means moving scenery,
lights, sound systems and props into the theatre; installing the set and
making sure it works; and keeping everything functioning well for the
life of the production.
Renewed efforts to end the strike came after the usually lucrative
Thanksgiving holiday week, normally one of the best times of the year
for Broadway. Not so this year. Both Local 1 and the league had been
under pressure to find a solution to the conflict as box-office losses
climbed — such big hits as “Wicked” and “Jersey Boys” regularly gross
more than $1 million each week — and other Broadway unions, such as
Actors’ Equity Association, began to feel the effects of no paychecks.
Theatre-related businesses were hurt, too. City Comptroller William
Thompson has estimated the economic impact of the strike at $2 million a
day, based on survey data that include theatregoers’ total spending on
tickets, dining and shopping. The end of the walkout will mean a
scramble for new opening nights for several shows that were in previews
when the strike hit. They include Aaron Sorkin’s “The Farnsworth
Invention,” “August: Osage County” from Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theatre
Company and an adaptation of an unknown Mark Twain comedy, “Is He Dead?”
Disney’s “The Little Mermaid” already has announced it would push back
its scheduled Dec. 6 opening — with a new date still to be set. |