USA TODAY International Edition

Pay gap dispute hits Hollywood in ‘All the Money’

Reshoot earned him $1.5M; Williams made $1,000

- Andrea Mandell

Mark Wahlberg got paid $1.5 million for reshoot while Michelle Williams took in less than $1,000.

Mark Wahlberg was paid $1.5 million for reshooting his scenes in All the Money in the World, three people familiar with the situation but not authorized to speak publicly about it tell USA TODAY, while Michelle Williams was paid an $80 per diem totaling less than $1,000.

That works out to Williams being paid less than one-tenth of 1% of her male co-star.

Ridley Scott’s Getty kidnapping drama was hastily reshot the week of Thanksgivi­ng after a cascade of sexual misconduct allegation­s were made public against Kevin Spacey, who had starred in the drama as billionair­e J. Paul Getty.

Scott transfixed the film world by quickly assembling his actors in Europe, reshooting Spacey’s scenes with Christophe­r Plummer — and still making his Christmas release window.

The publicity that followed made All the Money in the World, distribute­d by Sony and financed by Imperative Entertainm­ent, roll into Sunday’s Golden Globes as a relative triumph. But new informatio­n reveals ugly math. The reshoot cost $10 million. In December, Scott told USA TODAY that the undertakin­g was aided by the fact that “everyone did it for nothing.” The exchange went as follows: SCOTT: “The whole reshoot was — in normal terms was expensive but not as expensive as you think. Because all of them, everyone did it for nothing.” USA TODAY: “Really?” SCOTT: “No, I wouldn’t get paid, I refused to get paid.” USA TODAY: “You didn’t pay the actors more to do it?” SCOTT: “No, they all came in free. Christophe­r had to get paid. But Michelle, no. Me, no. I wouldn’t do that to — ” USA TODAY: “The crew, of course, did get paid?” SCOTT: “Of course.” USA TODAY has since learned Wahlberg’s team actually negotiated a hefty fee, with the actor paid $1.5 million for his reshoots. Williams wasn’t told. Wahlberg and Williams are both represente­d by the William Morris Endeavor agency. Actors pay a team of agents, managers and lawyers an average of 10% of their salaries to advocate for them.

Representa­tives for Wahlberg, Williams, WME, Sony, Imperative Entertainm­ent and Scott did not respond to USA TODAY’s requests for comment.

In August, Forbes named Wahlberg the highest-paid actor of the year, calculatin­g his pretax and pre-fee earnings at $68 million. The Washington Post first reported Wahlberg’s reshoot fee.

Williams had told USA TODAY that when Scott’s team called to request the reshoot, “I said I’d be wherever they needed me, whenever they needed me. And they could have my salary, they could have my holiday, whatever they wanted. Because I appreciate­d so much that they were making this massive effort.”

The pay disparity arrives as the entertainm­ent industry continues to be rocked by a flood of sexual misconduct allegation­s against dozens of other powerful Hollywood figures and a rising #MeToo movement.

Two days ago at the Golden Globes, male and female stars wore black in solidarity with the newly establishe­d Time’s Up initiative, which pushes for protection for victims of sexual harassment and gender inequality.

Williams, who was nominated for a Globe for her role, was one of them.

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GETTY IMAGES
 ?? KEVIN WINTER/GETTY IMAGES ?? In December, Ridley Scott told USA TODAY that his actors “all came in free” to reshoot scenes.
KEVIN WINTER/GETTY IMAGES In December, Ridley Scott told USA TODAY that his actors “all came in free” to reshoot scenes.

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