Los Angeles Times

Stuntwoman sues Sony over watercraft crash

Laurie Singer, injured in 2016 on ‘Rough Night’ set, accuses studio of negligence and safety failures.

- By Ryan Faughnder ryan.faughnder@latimes.com Twitter: @rfaughnder

A stuntwoman who worked on the 2017 Sony Pictures comedy “Rough Night” has sued the movie studio for negligence over a watercraft accident in which she was hurt.

Attorneys for Lauren Singer Harper, going by the name Laurie Singer, said she sustained serious injuries in 2016 while filming a scene in Brooklyn, N.Y., that called for her to crash a personal watercraft into the beach at 28 mph and launch herself onto the sand.

Singer, of Hillsborou­gh, N.C., served as Kate McKinnon’s stunt double in the raunchy film, which also starred Scarlett Johansson.

The 13-page complaint, filed Monday in New York Supreme Court in Brooklyn, accused the studio, along with the film’s production companies and stunt coordinato­rs, of failing to place safety pads under the sand to cushion Singer’s impact while performing the stunt.

The suit, which additional­ly named financier LStar Capital and production firms Matt Tolmach Production­s and Paulilu Production­s as defendants, also accused the filmmakers of failing to call an ambulance after the incident.

Sony Pictures in Culver City declined to comment.

“The defendant’s actions were reckless, careless, negligent and grossly negligent and showed a gross disregard for the safety of the plaintiff,” Singer’s attorneys wrote in the complaint.

Singer is represente­d by New York-based firm Wittenstei­n & Associates and Chicago-based Romanucci & Blandin, which specialize­s in personal injury matters.

Singer suffered cervical injuries, a traumatic brain injury and vertigo because of the stunt, according to the complaint. She remains incapacita­ted from her usual duties, her lawyers said, and is seeking unspecifie­d compensato­ry and punitive damages and legal fees.

The entertainm­ent industry has been grappling with a handful of recent stunt accidents, some of which have been deadly.

In January, the mother of a stuntman who fell to his death last year while working on the hit TV series “The Walking Dead” filed a wrongful death lawsuit against cable network AMC. John Bernecker, 33, was killed on the Georgia set while shooting a scene for the series’ eighth season.

Last August, stuntwoman Joi “S.J.” Harris died after performing a motorcycle stunt for the superhero sequel “Deadpool 2” in Vancouver, Canada.

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