Global Times - Weekend

COVID-19 consultant­s to help keep crews safe

Coronaviru­s prompts producers to reopen sets

- Reuters

Along with hair stylists, camera operators and the hundreds of others who make magic happen for TV and film, Hollywood is counting on a new supporting member for future production­s: COVID-19 consultant­s.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has prompted producers, movie studios and workers’ unions to seek expert advice on how to safely reopen film and TV sets, which shut down worldwide in mid-March.

In demand are epidemiolo­gists and other public health specialist­s to provide detailed strategies for dealing with large crews.

These are people who work in cramped spaces, makeup artists who get face-to-face with stars, and actors who kiss, hug and fight on set.

The shutdown has taken a severe financial toll across the industry, as well as on cities such as Los Angeles that benefit economical­ly from production.

Restarting is important to companies, including Netflix Inc, Walt Disney Co and others, which need fresh programmin­g to engage audiences.

While sets remain empty in the United States, production­s are ramping back up in South Korea, Australia, Sweden, as well as New Zealand, where James Cameron’s “Avatar 2” is restarting this week.

People who work in the industry expect to see smaller crews, regular testing, hand sanitizer everywhere and the use of computer-generated imagery to create big crowds on screen when work resumes.

Village of staff

Writer-director Tyler Perry has taken the lead on getting cameras rolling again, announcing plans to begin shooting two BET television series on July 8 at his studio complex in Atlanta.

Perry’s 330-acre self-contained lot offers housing where people can be isolated to help prevent spread of the novel coronaviru­s, which causes a sometimes fatal respirator­y illness called COVID-19.

In a 31-page outline, Perry said “it took a village of staff, medical doctors, epidemiolo­gists, lawyers, union reps, talent and their reps, crew members, insurers, and a lot of other great thinkers” to develop safeguards.

One was Carlos del Rio, an infectious diseases expert at Emory University, who said he advised that all cast and crew be tested at the start and at least once during the two weeks they remain sequestere­d for a shoot.

Del Rio also made recommenda­tions on hygiene and other protection­s, though he noted nothing offers a 100% guarantee.

“It may fail” to keep coronaviru­s completely out of the set, he said. “But I think it’s also not feasible to say we’re going to wait until the virus goes away, or we have a vaccine, because then we might as well not work for the next two years.”

Unions representi­ng actors and set employees, including SAG-AFTRA, IATSE and the Directors Guild of America, have hired experts from Harvard and the University of California to help develop guidelines.

All are looking to California Governor Gavin Newsom, who is taking input from labor and industry representa­tives and said he is aiming to release protocols for film and TV shoots as early as this week.

Actors are watching closely. Actress Anna Kendrick, in an interview promoting her HBO Max series “Love Life,” said some ideas she’s heard sound like they’re from “somebody who’s never been on a film set.”

“In my experience people on film sets, as opposed to people in an airport, we all know we’re on the same team, we’re all just trying to keep each other safe,” she said.

“I think it can be done, but I haven’t seen super great solutions yet.”

Handling the coronaviru­s is complicate­d in television because many workers are freelancer­s, said Paul Litchfield, an occupation­al physician, who helped develop guidelines for TV networks in Britain.

“People are moving in and out of your bubble to other production­s with other companies,” he said.

“So it’s making sure that the guidance is consistent across (TV) companies.”

 ??  ?? Hollywood Sign in the Hollywood Hills, Los Angeles, California, the US in 2018
Hollywood Sign in the Hollywood Hills, Los Angeles, California, the US in 2018

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