Las Vegas Review-Journal

Solidarity shown at Oscars

Actors reveal support with more strife looming in industry

- By Andrew Dalton and Tim Reynolds

LOS ANGELES — Hollywood has been able to put on a show of happiness and something akin to normalcy as it struggles to shake off the effects of the dual strikes and one of the most tumultuous years in industry history.

Yet Sunday’s Academy Awards didn’t sidestep the labor strife that left its screenwrit­ers and actors out of work for much of 2023. The acknowledg­ment — prominent amid muted acknowledg­ment of the strikes during other awards shows this season — comes as behindthe-scenes crews could be next to challenge studios, and video game actors may be weeks from their own strike.

In front of an enormous global audience, Oscars host Jimmy Kimmel devoted part of his opening monologue toward vowing to union members and those working behind the scenes that Hollywood’s stars would stand with them — repayment for those workers supporting actors during the strike that brought much of the entertainm­ent industry to a standstill last year.

“We fully support them, obviously, as they did us,” said Fran Drescher, the president of the actors guild, told The Associated Press on the Oscars red carpet.

Kimmel took the opportunit­y to shine an even bigger light on the matter.

“For five months, this group of writers, actors, directors, the people who actually make the films said ‘We will not accept a deal’ … well, not the directors, you guys folded immediatel­y,” Kimmel said during the show, mixing a bit of humor in. “But the rest of us said we will not accept a deal without protection­s against artificial intelligen­ce.”

That’s when he thanked the workers in Hollywood now embroiled in a labor fight of their own, bringing dozens of truck drivers, lighting workers, gaffers, grips and more onto the stage as a thank-you.

“Thank you for standing with us,” Kimmel said. “And also, we want you to know that in your upcoming negotiatio­ns, we will stand with you too.”

There was a time when the Academy Awards would have been the last place for an expression of solidarity like Kimmel’s. The guilds in the current labor struggles formed in the 1930s in large part because of fears that the newly founded Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences would become a cartel of studios used to keep pay low.

Actors, directors, writers and other workers would eventually exert greater control over the film academy, with threats to boycott the Oscars among their tools.

The same fears of being replaced by artificial intelligen­ce that fed the actors and writers strikes may lead to a strike of video game actors, who are also represente­d by SAG-AFTRA.

Actors who work on video games range from voice performers to stunt performers. Their long-term contract expired more than a year ago, and there has been little progress in months of talks. In September, the game actors overwhelmi­ngly gave their leaders the authority to call a strike against the collective of gaming companies that hire them. They last walked off the job for six months in 2016 and 2017.

The Internatio­nal Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees — whose members include cinematogr­aphers, camera operators, set designers, carpenters, hair and makeup artists and many others — plans to resume talks next week with the Hollywood studios, represente­d by the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, the same group actors and writers negotiate with.

 ?? Chris Pizzello The Associated Press ?? Members of the Oscars crew are applauded in appreciati­on for their support during the strike during the show on Sunday.
Chris Pizzello The Associated Press Members of the Oscars crew are applauded in appreciati­on for their support during the strike during the show on Sunday.

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