Voted best looking picket line of 1919--Actors' Equity on strike. The militance of women actors was a major factor in the success of the strike. |
Two long time interests of this blog—labor history and the performing arts in America—intersect
today. On August 7, 1919 the Actors’ Equity Association launched a bitter 30 day nationwide strike for recognition and improved working conditions.
The stage had always been a challenging
career choice. Although a handful of stars working in major
theaters could make a good living,
even become rich, most performers toiled for miserable wages with no pay for rehearsals which could last
for weeks before a major show was
launched and continue during the duration
of a show’s run. Actors often had to pay for their own costumes and make-up. Those in traveling shows usually had to pay
their own train fare and traveling expenses.
And, of course, there was the basic problem of the ephemeral nature of the jobs—they were hard
to come by and fiercely competed for in auditions
and if hired an actor worked at the whim of producers and directors. Labor unionists
considered performers almost impossible to
organize because of this.
But in the first decades of the 20th Century an already tenuous situation was becoming worse as
major producers and theater owners
followed the example of production industries and organized themselves into a virtual trust, the Theatrical
Syndicate which tended to fix wages at
an even lower level for journeyman performers and who could end an actor’s career at the snap of their fingers with a black ball.
In 1910 the National Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, a strong union of stage hands was formed and was soon able to
wring concessions from producers.
Aging matinee idol Edwin Booth, seen here in 1889, lent his name, prestige, and home to the founding of Actors Equity. |
Inspired
by this development The Players, a handful of leading actors
in New York City began secretly meeting at Edwin Booth’s mansion to discuss
organization. Yes that Edwin Booth,
America’s most revered tragedian and
brother of Lincoln’s assassin John Wilks Booth.
That led to a meeting held at the Pabst
Grand Circle Hotel on May 26, 1913 where Actors’ Equity was founded by
112 professional theater actors. They drafted the association’s constitution
and elected Francis Wilson, then a major star and close friend of Booth, as President.
Despite the prestige of its founders, Equity grew slowly and had difficulty
in improving conditions. At first a professional organization which included actor/producers like Booth, it
could make little headway against
the power of the Theater Syndicate.
Following the success of the stage
hands, Equity founder Frank Gillmore
led a movement to transform the organization into a real labor union. Elected Executive
Secretary in 1919, he led Equity into membership
in the American Federation of Labor (AFL) on July 18, 1919.
Actors' Equity strike leaders John Cope, John Stewart, Frank Gillmore, and Francis Wilson lead a New York City march. |
Moving quickly, he secured a pledge from the powerful stage hands
union to honor its picket lines and launched the nationwide strike weeks
later. The strike lasted 30 days, spread
to eight cities, closed 37 plays,
and prevented the opening of 16
others. Producers and theater owners lost millions of dollars.
During the course of the strike Chorus Equity under the leadership of comedienne and future movie star Marie
Dressler was formed and joined the
action after the first 5 days. That prevented producers from trying to put all girl reviews on their stages to keep
the theaters open and fill the seats.
Over the course of the strike Equity
grew from 3,000 members to more than
14,000, almost all of the working actors in major cities.
The Syndicate, its power permanently broken, had no choice but to recognize the union and sign a five
year agreement to improved
conditions of employment. In a tough year for the union movement in
general, it was considered a major
victory.
Equity went on to a long and progressive history. It was
a leader in the Civil Rights movement and in demanding
non-discrimination. Unlike its
cousin the Screen Actors’ Guild under
the leadership of Ronald Regan,
Equity refused to co-operate with the McCarthy Era blacklist of suspected Reds.
It led lobbying for public funding for the arts which
eventually resulted in the creation of the National
Endowment of the Arts. It also led the fight
against AIDS, which heavily impacted its membership.
The union’s history has been punctuated by
strikes, especially a bitter walk out in
1961 that dimmed Broadway lights for 13 days but won the
creation of the Equity-League Pension & Health Trust Funds.
In 1952 Chorus Equity merged with the Actors. Directors
and choreographers split from
the union and set up their own
organization in 1959.
In today’s fractured theater scene with many local and regional theaters,
Of Broadway, Off-off Broadway, and non-profit
companies, Equity only retains tight
control over Broadway productions, touring
companies, and a handful of major
venues in other cities. Equity
performers are allowed to appear on
a limited basis in some non-equity productions, especially top level dinner and regional
theater. Actors working in the lively independent/alternative theater scene,
however, are generally poorly paid
and sometimes work for nothing.
The current Actors' Equity logo. |
This year all actors, Equity members
or not, have been devastated by the Coronavirus pandemic that has shut down
almost all theatrical productions and has or is threatening to permanently close many local and
regional theater companies and venues. Equity has responded by sponsoring
or collaborating with virtual on line programing to raise money for out of work actors and give
them a creative outlet. It is now laying down ground rules for how to safely
reopen Broadway theater
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