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Messages - SM101

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The Hardline / Re: Musicals at an Opera House vs. AEA
« on: May 29, 2008, 11:27 am »
But Equity does care about Ash Lawn Opera Festival, and will not let it's members work on musicals with that company unless they have an Equity agreement established. They are company #2! Regardless of where it is, unless the company is under an AGMA agreement for the musical (in which case Equity still requires them to pay at least the Equity minimum for the production, even if it isn't under Equity's jurisdiction) if it's a musical performed in English, you CAN'T do it unless Equity agrees to it by establishing an agreement with the company. If you're Equity and are working for Ash Lawn, Equity will have a problem with it.

Yes, the principle does apply that accepting non-union work in sister-union jurisdictions is generally not good.  And, I agree that union work is best.  However, originally, we were talking about whether Equity would allow a member-SM to do a musical in a non-union opera house... for instance, someplace like Ash Lawn Opera Festival, a non-union opera house which is doing both CARMEN and MY FAIR LADY this summer.   

Equity would not have jurisdiction in such a case; it would fall under AGMA.  Using Article X - Discipline of Equity's constitution, which defines offenses worthy of disciplinary action, one could argue that Equity could not stop a member working non-union in another juridiction IF the sister-union that HAS jurisdiction gives permission. 

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The Hardline / Re: Musicals at an Opera House vs. AEA
« on: May 29, 2008, 11:20 am »
Wow.
This is the verdict, and there are two situations with the same issue. Company #1 is an educational institution that hires professional stage managers. They produce 5-6 operas a year (it's an opera program) and once a year they do a musical. Because the performers are students, they can't unionize the artists. There are a few IATSE crew members, and the directors/maestros they bring in are in unions (though I'm not sure how that side works with the university). Company #2 is a small "opera" company that performs one opera and one musical a season.

I spoke with Equity and AGMA (I'm a member of both). To confirm what many of you have said, AGMA doesn't care what we do. Granted, they don't seem to offer much support to stage managers in general anyway (if any, other than having contracts for us) and in the past, when I've had problems with companies, they have done nothing to support me and the company got away with many contract breeches in the end. So, AGMA didn't care either way. Equity had this opinion: they prefer their members not work non-union contracts, but understand that we do, occasionally, if we work under AGMA jurisdiction.. so they approve because legally they can't. They just want us to be treated fairly, and many non-union opera gigs pay better than MANY union Equity gigs, offer housing/benefits, etc..

Back to the point. With Company #1, Equity said the only way for me to work the musical legally was to do a Guest Artist agreement. The house seats 1,000+ people, so that was my only option. Come to find out the university had worked with Equity quite often, though not in the opera department as much. Luckily, the university is housing me and I was able to save them a great deal on that end, so adding over $2,000 to my musical contract (in benefits, taxes, etc.) wasn't a problem. The fee was close enough to Equity's requirements already so that side of the contract wasn't an issue.

Company #2 was the same situation with Equity, though I also had the option to do a Special Agreement with Equity because their house is significantly smaller than Company #1. #2, on the other hand, wasn't open to spending an extra penny to give me health weeks, plainly. I wouldn't work for them EVER now knowing their disrespect for unions.

Now, I'm not sure if the University would hire me to do a musical again, and I guess we'll see about that.

I just finished a production with another non-AGMA opera house that paid AGMA rates, they just don't have an agreement with AGMA, though I can see no reason why they wouldn't. They aren't against it though.

I would much rather work for companies that offer union-like benefits and pay well than an Equity contract that pays $200 a week. Would someone explain to me how a job that pays like that is respectful? And why a company that isn't anti-union, but pays significantly better (for theater) isn't in our "best interests" as Equity members? I feel the love from the Equity office everytime I call, and they would die for me in a conflicted situation, but they really need to bridge the pay gap within the contracts they offer.. and either NOT require Equity to house SMs, or say "the institution is required to house all members of Stage Management but won't do it in most instances so don't even try." Even NON-union AGMA houses house most of the time. For the love.

I think the original question left out an important piece in the discussion. What kind of contract, if any, does the "opera" house have? Are they an Opera House only in name, or like us, do they produce all opera and then once in awhile a musical. If it is a non union opera house and not considered as a possible theater for Equity to organize, then there seems no impediment to anyone in any union working there.

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The Hardline / Re: Musicals at an Opera House vs. AEA
« on: Mar 16, 2008, 04:03 pm »
Thank you, I'm planning to call Equity tomorrow. I did a musical with an opera company last summer, but it was an AGMA house.

Does anyone have an experience with this they can share?

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The Hardline / Musicals at an Opera House vs. AEA
« on: Mar 16, 2008, 03:15 pm »
Can an Equity SM call a musical with an non-union opera festival?

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SMNetwork Archives / Re: Set Stuff for sale
« on: Mar 07, 2008, 01:44 am »
are those apparition productions chairs??

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Stage Management: Other / Summer Opera Jobs
« on: Mar 06, 2008, 08:42 pm »
Hi. How much do stage managers make during summer festivals? I'm trying to figure out if my offer is normal or on the low end, but I'm also not comfortable advertising it.

Thank you!

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