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read moreMajor theatrical productions to be targeted by members of the Media Entertainment and Arts Alliance (MEAA) after the break down of talks over a new performers collective agreement (PCA).
Theatre patrons can expect to be leafletted by MEAA delegates outside Australian performance venues in the new year, in a campaign to lift the pay of about 6,000 actors and dancers along with protections against workplace fatigue and stability of employment.
MEAA is seeking an across-the-board pay rise of $34, representing a 3% annual increase, on the $1,100.96 weekly salary an ensemble cast member of a major touring show typically earns.
Major productions such as Beauty and the Beast and Wicked in Sydney, and Moulin Rouge and Grease in Melbourne, could be targeted, along with Adelaide and Sydney festival performances and productions by the country’s flagship theatre companies.
As reported by Australasian Leisure Management on 16th November, year-long negotiations for a new performers collective agreement between the MEAA and Live Performance Australia (LPA) - the peak body representing commercial and independent promoters and producers - broke down last month.
As reported by Guardian Australia today, inlike the recent actors’ strike in the USA, under Australia’s Fair Work Act industry-wide strike action is not permitted. Only the employees of individual production and theatre companies would be able to take protected action, so it is unlikely any shows will be disrupted or cancelled during the campaign.
Calling on theatregoers to pressure the LPA and the producers it represents, MEAA’s Director of Equity, Michelle Rae advised “these are people we turn out night after night to see.
“As audiences, we are mesmerised by their skill and we think these people are probably worth thousands of dollars a week. But in actual fact they are just being paid above minimum wages. And for that, they are working nights, they are working weekends, they don’t have a family life balance.
“The producers say an actor’s failure to get a wage increase is the failure of their agent or their union. What we say is that the current system is actually stacked in the producer’s favour.”
At a 16th November performance of Beauty and the Beast at Sydney’s Capitol Theatre, audiences were petitioned outside the venue with MEAA leaflets urging them to email the LPA and demand better pay and conditions for the entertainers they were about to watch on stage.
The MEAA said the LPA has since received more than 1,000 emails supporting the pay rise.
The MEAA has been negotiating for a new PCA with the LPA since the mid-1990s, enabling the union to collectively represent performer members across multiple employers.
A statement on the LPA website said employers in the industry had continued to increase wages over this period and many employers paid well in excess of PCA minimum rates.
The sticking point in current negotiations, which began in September 2022, is the union’s demand the pay rise is applied across the board, meaning those performers who have negotiated margins - individual agreements with their employers that pay higher than the PCA base rate - would also receive a salary increase.
The LPA statement advised “the difference between base rates and margins can vary from a few hundred dollars a week to several thousand dollars a week, depending on the performer’s experience and reputation and their ability to negotiate higher rates of pay (usually through their agent).
“LPA does not agree that the proposed increases should be applied to margins. They should apply to the minimum rates specified in the PCA which mean all performers would receive an equitable increase in pay rates, regardless of their individual margin protections against workplace fatigue and stability of employment.”
The LPA offer stands at a 15.6% pay increase over three years and an increase to Sunday penalty rates, but only for performers on the base PCA rate.
2nd December 2023 - ARIA and PPCA welcome first appointments to Sound NSW Advisory Board
16th November 2023 - Theatre performers look for audience backing for pay rises
20th October 2023 - APRA AMCOS Annual Report reveals closure of 1,300 live music venues
27th July 2023 - Live Performance Australia’s Executive Council announces support for The Voice
17th June 2023 - Live Performance Australia welcomes passage of Creative Australia legislation
27th March 2023 - Live Performance Australia welcomes new NSW Government
30th January 2023 - Live Performance Australia and Australian Live Music Business Council among stakeholders welcoming new National Cultural Policy
7th December 2022 - Live Performance Australia calls for national skills and careers pathway for live arts and entertainment industry
27th August 2022 - Phantom of the Opera opening at Sydney Opera House a dramatic boost for live performance
25th August 2022 - Pollstar rankings show resurgence of Australian live entertainment in first half of 2022
24th May 2022 - LPA looks forward to productive partnership with incoming Federal Government
30th March 2022 - Live Performance Australia says Federal Budget falls short in helping the arts and entertainment industry to rebuild
18th October 2021 - New funding announced to incentivise Newcastle venues to host live performances
18th August 2021 - Victorian Government provides more support to live performance sector
5th May 2021 - Live Performance Australia announces presentation of 2020 Helpmann Industry Achievement Awards
25th March 2021 - Live performance and entertainment bodies welcome Federal Government’s funding extension
23rd March 2021 - Entertainment and Live Performance sector representatives takes argument for industry support to Canberra
28th January 2021 - Frozen the Musical at Sydney’s Capitol Theatre a model for future global performances
23rd June 2020 - MEAA advocate for multi-level support of arts and entertainment sector
8th January 2018 - MEAA looks to protect theatre workers from sexual harassment
18th December 2017 - MEAA survey shows 14% of Australian stage industry workers have been sexually assaulted
13th May 2016 - MEAA says live theatre devastated by Australia Council cuts
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