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Broadway stagehand strike comes to end

The union reaches agreement with theater owners and producers after a 12-hour session.

The Nation

November 29, 2007|Josh Getlin, Times Staff Writer

NEW YORK — A crippling strike that had shut down most Broadway shows in the heart of the holiday season ended late Wednesday night as striking stagehands finally hammered out a new contract with theater owners and producers.

The strike, which had entered its 19th day and drained millions of dollars in revenue from the theater district, was settled after a 12-hour bargaining session that had begun Wednesday morning between the League of American Theaters and Producers and members of Local 1, representing about 3,000 stagehands.


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"We are pleased to announce that we have a tentative agreement with Local 1 ending the Broadway strike," said Charlotte St. Martin, the league's executive director. "The agreement is a good compromise that serves our industry. The most important thing is that Broadway's lights will once again be shining."

St. Martin, who emerged to cheers from the Midtown law offices where negotiations had been held since Monday, announced that the 26 Broadway shows temporarily shuttered by the strike would resume performances today. Plans have yet to be announced, however, for new shows whose openings were delayed, including "The Little Mermaid" and "The Farnsworth Invention."

As he left the final bargaining session, Local 1 President James Claffey held up one finger signaling victory, and stagehands gathered outside broke into cheers. "Brothers and sisters of Local 1, you represent yourselves, and your families and your union proud," he said. "That's enough said, right there."

Few observers expected the strike to last as long as it did, recalling that Broadway's last strike, a 2003 work stoppage by musicians, was settled in four days. But both sides dug in their heels, even as the strike all but wiped out the lucrative Thanksgiving holiday week, which has traditionally been Broadway's second most profitable week of the year.

Nine shows were able to remain open during the strike, because they had signed separate labor agreements with Local 1. But most other Broadway productions, plus restaurants, tourist shops, parking garages and other businesses in the theater district, took a major economic hit. Prominent local restaurants, such as Sardi's, said their business had fallen off 30% to 35%. New York officials estimated the strike was costing the city $2 million a day.

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