|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
As Broadway stagehand talks resume
IATSE president blasts writers strike
By a reporting team
19 November 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
As Broadway stagehands began their second week on the picket
lines over the weekend, their union, the International Association
of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE) Local 1, and the League
of American Theaters and Producers resumed negotiations aimed
at reaching a deal that would end a strike that has left most
of New Yorks major theaters shuttered.
As of this writing, no agreement has been announced, and picketing
continues at the 27 struck theaters. The talks are the first held
since negotiations broke off on November 8.
The theater owners and producers reportedly remain intransigent
over their principal demands for scrapping work rules setting
the minimum number of stagehands that must be hired for a production.
The effect of the rule change, strikers and their union charge,
would be to drastically reduce wages and jobs on Broadway and
turn many stagehands into part-time employees.

The human cost of the strike made itself tragically felt Friday
night outside the Minskoff Theatre, home of The Lion King,
where Frank Lavaia, the shows 57-year-old prop master and
a veteran stagehand and master carpenter, had a heart attack while
picketing and died later at a local hospital. Striking workers
donned black armbands and continued picketing after a short memorial
service outside the Minskoff Saturday.
When we do the eulogies at every show, we will think
of Frank and there will be tears, said a wardrobe worker
walking the picket line Saturday in support of the stagehands.
He had two sons and a cousin who work here. It is horrible.
She said that five members of her union were on the picket line.
Were all in support of Local 1.
Meanwhile, the economic impact of the strikethe first
in the locals 120-year historyis being measured in
the tens of millions of dollars. The city of New York estimates
that the local economy is losing about $2 million a day due to
a fall-off in revenues for hotels, bars and restaurants in the
theater district. An indication of the direct costs to the theaters
can be gauged by the box office recorded for two of the more popular
shows in the last full week before the strike. During that week,
Jersey Boys and Wicked grossed, respectively, $1,217,333
and $1,335,757.
On the picket line at the Nederlander Theatre, where Rent
had been showing, a stagehand expressed his frustration with the
producers intransigence and their failure to acknowledge
the importance of the stagehands labor.
It takes three years of apprenticeship to become a member,
he said. You have to make a certain amount of dollars over
those three years. Then you have to go the Metropolitan Opera
House and other locations. You have to be trained, because nobody
wants someone rigging up 12 or 13 tons of props for scenery for
a show who doesnt know what theyre doing.
We will stay out here forever, and you can quote me on
that, he said.
The determination and solidarity of the strikers and their
supporters on Broadway stood in sharp contrast to the attack on
the two-week-old writers strike by their national unions
leader, IATSE President Tom Short, who came into New York over
the weekend to participate in the resumed talks.
In a November 13 letter to the president of the Writers Guild
of America-West (WGA), Patric Verrone, Short blamed the union
for causing irreparable damage to the industry at a time
when we can all ill afford to ignore the worsening national economy,
the unstable international climate, and the crises in health care
and the housing market that are affecting many of our working
families.
Short claimed that he had predicted the devastation that
would come from your actions, adding, Those predictions
have now come true.
He further accused the WGA executive director of not being
a responsible labor leader, someone dedicated to the preservation
of an industry that has supported the economies of several major
cities for decades.
Shorts reactionary tirade amounts to a brief for the
conglomerates that control the entertainment industry and a proscription
against any form of struggle that challenges their profit interests.
Their significance for striking stagehands in New York is unmistakable.
The same charges that he levels against the striking writers can
beand have beenturned against the Broadway stagehands
themselves. And there can be no doubt that based on this outlook,
he will work through the negotiations to end the walkout on terms
set by the producers and theater owners.
The record of the IATSE international leadership on this score
is well known. In 2001, following the 9/11 terrorist attacks,
it was Short who quickly negotiated a temporary 25 percent pay
cut for his members that was subsequently forced upon all the
unions in response to the claims by the owners and producers that
it was the only way to revive Broadway. And, in 2003, the international
reportedly sought to force stagehands to cross the picket lines
of striking musicians during their four-day strike. The Broadway
stagehands refused, however, and stayed out of work.
It was also rumored before the Broadway walkout that Short
had seen and approved of the producers final offer and had
assured them he would not authorize a strike
While the content of Shorts letter to the WGA was not
widely known among those walking the picket lines Saturday, several
expressed disgust and sharp disagreement with his attack.
I support the writers strike and everyone on this
picket line supports their strike, a striking stagehand
and utility worker picketing outside the Nedlander Theatre told
the WSWS. This is my perception of what all my fellow strikers
think. Its a shame that the unions have lost a lot of influence
over the years.
An actress in The Lion King and member of the
Screen Actors Guild picketing in front of the Minskoff said:
This is the first time I heard of Short condemning the WGA
strike. I support the writers strike. Maybe some of the
writers make a lot of money, but most do not. They have the same
financial struggles just like any other worker. As a dancer in
this play, I support these guys I work with. Most of the actors
have been on this picket line supporting this strike.
See Also:
Writers' strike ends its second week
Mr. Edwards goes to the picket line
[17 November 2007]
Pickets at CBS discuss perspectives for
writers strike
[16 November 2007]
Striking television writers discuss political
issues with the WSWS
[15 November 2007]
Broader issues facing US film and television
writers
[2 November 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |