Not Throwing Away Their Shot:1 Copyright Authorship and...
Transcript of Not Throwing Away Their Shot:1 Copyright Authorship and...
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Not Throwing Away Their Shot:1
Copyright Authorship and Royalty Pools for Broadway Actors
by Kyle Serilla2
INTRODUCTION:
“The revolution’s happening in New York.”3
Hamilton: An American Musical is not just a hit. It’s a phenomenon. With its hip-hop infused
score, “color-conscious” casting,4 and a charismatic writer/leading man as its face, Hamilton is
the rare exception to the rule: a stage musical that has embedded itself into the national zeitgeist.
Productions soon will cover, not only the country, but also the globe.5 With such success,
Hamilton productions will likely be running for decades and decades. There are likewise
hundreds of millions to be made, possibly billions.6 Relatively late in Hamilton’s path to success
the parties that would share in some of that money changed.7 Well, at least slightly.
In April 2016, it was announced that Producer Jeffrey Seller had agreed that more than two
dozen actors and dancers, who were apart of the show’s development and first productions,
1Cf. LIN MANUEL MIRANDA, My Shot, on HAMILTON AN AMERICAN MUSICAL ORIGINAL BROADWAY CAST
RECORDING (Atlantic Records 2015) (“Not throwing away my shot”). 2 Kyle Serilla is a 2018 candidate for Juris Doctor, Intellectual Property Certificate at IIT Chicago-Kent College of
Law. Before attending law school, he was a casting consultant and casting associate for both union and non-union
theatrical productions in Chicago. 3 LIN MANUEL MIRANDA, The Schuyler Sisters, on HAMILTON AN AMERICAN MUSICAL ORIGINAL BROADWAY CAST
RECORDING (Atlantic Records 2015). 4 Spencer Kornhaber, Hamilton: Casting After Colorblindness, The Atlantic, (Mar. 31, 2016) https://www.theat-
lantic.com/entertainment/archive/2016/03/hamilton-casting/476247/ (“Hamilton is not, by the common definition,
colorblind. It does not merely allow for some of the Founding Fathers to be played by people of color. It insists that
all of them be.”); see Teresa Eyring, Standing Up for Playwrights and Against ‘Colorblind’ Casting, American
Theatre (Jan. 7, 2016) http://www.americantheatre.org/2016/01/07/standing-up-for-playwrights- and-against-
colorblind-casting/ (“Color-conscious casting intentionally considers the race and ethnicity of actors and the
characters they play in order to oppose racism, honor and respect cultures, foster stronger productions, and
contribute to a more equitable world.”). 5 David Gelles & Michael Paulson, ‘Hamilton’ Inc.: The Path to a Billion-Dollar Broadway Show, NY TIMES, (June
8, 2016) https://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/12/theater/hamilton-inc-the-path-to-a-billion-dollar-show.html
(discussing how “Hamilton” productions will soon total five: New York, Chicago, two national tours, and London). 6 Id. (“But there is a demonstrated path to riches for the few musicals able to translate Broadway success into long-
running and international popularity: “The Lion King” and “Phantom” each claims to have grossed more than $6
billion worldwide, and “Wicked” has passed $4 billion.”). 7 Michael Paulson, ‘Hamilton’ Producers and Actors Reach Deal on Sharing Profits, NY TIMES, (April 15, 2016)
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/16/theater/hamilton-producers-and-actors-reach-deal-on-sharing-profits.html.
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would share some of the musical profits, including future productions.8 This re-writing of the
actors’ contracts after the show’s cemented success, stunned the industry.9
Although Actors’ Equity Association (“AEA”), the union for actors and stage managers, had
sought a workshop contract10 in the early development of Hamilton that would allow for profit
sharing, no agreement on profit sharing was ever made.11 “The actors instead signed modified
lab contracts that gave them a right of first refusal to their roles, but not royalty participation.
They began asking the producers to reconsider, and grant them a share of the profits, in August,
as the show was opening on Broadway.”12 The actors hired a lawyer.13 “It took them eight
months after the Broadway production opened to win an agreement; they had argued that it was
not fair, given their contributions to the show, to exclude them from sharing in its success.”14
The New York Times reported that Hamilton’s success had “prompted an uncomfortable debate
within the theater industry about money and credit for performers who help create hit shows.”15
Along with royalty debate, the legal community has debated whether actors are eligible for
copyrights in their created work. This paper looks into the legal status for actors’ contributions to
Broadway musicals. Part one of this note gives context to the highly collaborative nature of
musical theater. The second part of this note looks at the creation and success of the musical A
Chorus Line; the production that brought the workshop and actors’ inclusion in royalty pools to
8 Id. 9 See Id. 10 See Workshop Agreement Overview, ACTORS’ EQUITY ASSOCIATION, (Amended April 4, 2014)
http://www.actorsequity.org/docs/rulebooks/Workshop_Overview.pdf. 11 Paulson, supra note 7. 12 Id.; see Daniel Kuney, Actors' Equity Developmental Workshops, Labs & Readings, Jump Start Entertainment
(Jan. 13, 2016) http://www.letsjumpstart.com/blog/actors-equity-developmental-workshops-labs-readings
(comparing AEA agreements for developing work including workshop and lab contracts). 13 Gelles, supra note 5. 14 Id. 15 Paulson, supra note 7.
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Broadway. The third part of this article reviews the possible arguments for copyright authorship
for Broadway actors. The fourth part of this article reviews the use of royalty pools for
Broadway productions and argue for their wider use.
I. The Collaborative Nature of Musical Theater: “the room where it happens"16
“Perhaps more than any other art form, theater depends on collaboration.”17 Thus, musical
theater with even more contributors than a typical play is that much more collaborative. The
artistic team traditionally comprises of a composer, a lyricist, a book writer, a director, and a
choreographer, all working to craft a show that works. In a world of collaboration these strict
categories of authorship do not always stay clear and neat.
Stephen Sondheim is credited with lyrics for the classic West Side Story. Yet, in working so
closely with composer Leonard Bernstein, Sondheim apparently wrote some music and Bernstein
offered up some lyrics. Sondheim was offered a co-composing credit but turned it down
apparently out of humility – a costly decision he still laughs at with regret.18
The creation of the the iconic “Rose’s Turn” from Gypsy is another famous story involving
Sondheim where authorship lines blur.19 When director /choreographer Jerome Robbins realized
he did not have the time to stage the climatic surreal ballet sequence that would show the
character Rose’s mental breakdown, it would have to be a song.20 Composer Jule Styne,
16 LIN MANUEL MIRANDA, The Room Where It Happens, on HAMILTON AN AMERICAN MUSICAL ORIGINAL
BROADWAY CAST RECORDING (Atlantic Records 2015). 17 ROBERT VIAGAS, ET AL, ON THE LINE THE CREATION OF A CHORUS LINE 21 (2006). 18 STEVEN SUSKIN, OPENING NIGHT ON BROADWAY: A CRITICAL QUOTE BOOK OF THE GOLDEN ERA OF THE
MUSICAL THEATRE, 697 (Schirmer Books 1990); See Stephen Sondheim Interview, YOUTUBE (SEP 21, 2011)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yW7gTYtTN50. 19 See STEPHEN SONDHEIM, FINISHING THE HAT COLLECTED LYRICS (1954-1981) WITH ATTENDANT COMMENTS,
PRINCIPLES, HERESIES, GRUDGES, WHINES AND ANECDOTES, 75-77 (2010). 20 Id.
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however, could not attend the meeting to discuss the new song.21 Thus, Sondheim and Robbins
stayed up late into the night and the outlined musical number where different segments of songs
that were heard earlier in the score would be mashed together as a kind of musical metaphor
showing Rose’s mental breakdown.22 It was fitting that a non-traditional number would have a
non-traditional birth; the writing credits are traditional, however: “Rose’s Turn,” music by Jule
Styne and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim.23
Interestingly Benj Pasek and Justin Paul, one of the most successful new songwriting teams
for Broadway and the screen, share non-traditional billing for their songs as “Music and Lyrics
by Benj Pasek and Justin Paul.”24 Some insiders assume Paul, who is often seen playing piano
for the duo’s press and concerts, is responsible for the music and Pasek is responsible for their
lyrics.25 When asked about their writing process the duo uses “we” often but do allude to Paul’s
emphasis in music and Pasek’s in lyrics.26 While one could say that it is their process that
appears to be non-traditional, thus creating their billing, it could be said that they simply have a
more realistic idea of what collaboration entails.27
Actors can also inspire authors as their muses. Traditionally, musical comedies were star
vehicles written for specific performers. The brassy voiced Ethel Merman had many shows and
scores written for her, Gypsy, for example. Sondheim wrote Sweeney Todd with Angela
21 Id. 22 Id. 23 See Id. 24 See, e.g. BENJ PASEK & JUSTIN PAUL, DEAR EVAN HANSEN: VOCAL SELECTIONS (Hal Leonard 2017). 25 See, e.g. Seth Rudetsky, DECONSTRUCTING: Dear Evan Hansen, YOUTUBE (Playbill Video 2017)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SlPZLDC_ZB8 (attributing to the music to Justin Paul and lyrics to Benj Pasek
for “Waving Through a Window” from Dear Evan Hansen). 26 See Rebecca Milzoff, How We Wrote It: Benj Pasek and Justin Paul on Imagining a 'Dear Evan Hansen' Anthem,
BILLBOARD (June 10 2016) http://www.billboard.com/articles/news/broadway/7825749/how-we-wrote-it-benj-
pasek-and-justin-paul-on-imagining-a-dear-evan (“Paul: Then we’ll start to musicalize that phrase. If we can find a
way to tuck it into a chorus, or some musical phrase, when we’re staring at the blank page it helps to have
something. And we build out around that; I’ll start to fill out some music around the chorus, Benj will fill in some
lyrics, we go back and forth.”). 27 See also Id.
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Lansbury in mind and Sunday in the Park with George for Bernadette Peters. He was known to
write material post-casting for the specific abilities of those cast.28 The short phrases of
Sondheim’s only real “hit” song “Send in the Clowns” was written around the thin voiced Glynis
Johns.29 Even as the draw for new musical theater has moved somewhat away from stars, writers
have their muses.30 Pasek and Paul wrote their 2017 Tony Award winning Dear Evan Hansen
score for Ben Platt, who won his own Tony Award for his portrayal.31
It is not surprising then that actors, who are also in the rehearsal room, would have influence
on the piece, even in small ways. Actress and singer Barbara Cook introduced the famous and
notoriously difficult coloratura aria “Glitter and Be Gay” in Leonard Bernstein’s Broadway
operetta Candide.32 Barbara Cook has told the story numerous times, where in rehearsal she
suggested a musical phrase go down in pitch with a portamento rather than a sustained high note
to better match the lyric “Here I droop my wings.”33 Bernstein agreed immediately.34 Cook tells
the story more to show Bernstein’s skill as a collaborator and her own youthful gall, rather than
wishing to assume any credit.35
While muses or subjects would not be considered “authors” under U.S. copyright law, and a
mere suggestion like Barbara Cook’s can be set aside as a de minimis contribution, actors
contributions can be more substantial.
28 SONDHEIM, supra note 19, at 278 (“I had tailored songs before to the talents and limitation of particular
performers (“Everything’s Coming Up Roses” for Merman, “The Ladies Who Lunch” For Stritch) so writing one for
Glynis was not difficult. Her chief limitation was an inability to sustain a note.”) 29 Id. 30 Milzoff, supra note 26 (“Paul: I mean, we wrote it for [Ben Platt] . . . for his voice.; Pasek: We’d been working
with him for two years; we definitely had him in mind.; Paul: …. You can do the test in your head of, can I hear Ben
Platt’s voice? Or I don’t buy it.”). 31 Id. 32 Glen Hoffman, Barbara Cook on Candide: Rehearsing Glitter and Be Gay, VEVO (Sony Music Entm’t 2015)
https://www.vevo.com/watch/barbara-cook/barbara-cook-on-candide-rehearsing-glitter-and-be-
gay/USSM21501124. 33 Id. 34 Id. 35 See Id.
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For example, actors are sometimes required by an author to create material. Improv and ad
libs are tools of actors and singers. With music especially there are times where ad libs of
musical runs are called for. 36 For example Henry Krieger’s R&B and pop score for Dreamgirls
is full of “ad lib” notations where the singers are expected to create appropriate runs:37
Nevertheless, due to the popularity of the original cast album the first performer’s ad-lib gets
crystalized as part of the musical work. In such situations actors in subsequent productions will
perform the same ad-lib because it is seen as part of the original. All the music, however, is
attributed to Henry Krieger.
Outside of music for the theater, it is easy to see that an actors’ contribution to staging could
be a standard part of future performances.38 A director may ask all the actors to spread out on the
stage and everyone’s chosen position is now apart of the show. Or a choreographer asks the
ensemble to strike a pose at the end of a roaring dance number and everyone’s choice position is
now apart of the show. Often blocking and staging is written down by stage managers or
assistant directors so it can be recreated. Today, with Broadway’s long running shows and the
international business of commercial musical theater, the recreation of original staging can
36 “Ad Libs” are often referred to as “riffs” by musical theater professionals. This style of singing was common in
African American gospel and R&B. It was popularized by Whitney Houston, Mariah Carey and later by the
television show American Idol. 37 E.g. HENRY KRIEGER & TOM EYEN, Opening Act II, DREAMGIRLS – PIANO/CONDUCTOR SCORE, 233 (Tams-
Witmark 1981). 38 This issues of whether directors are entitled to copyrights or whether stage directions are copyrightable are beyond
the scope of this note. For more information, see Talia Yellin, New Directions for Copyright: The Property Right of
Stage Directors, 24 Colum.-VLA J.L. & Arts 317 (2001); David Leichtman, Most Unhappy Collaborators: An
Argument Against the Recognition of Property Ownership in Stage Direction, 20 Colum.-VLA J.L. & Arts 683
(1996).
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spread all over the world and last for decades. Although contributions to blocking or dance may
be the most concrete examples because documented in order to be recreated, actors’
contributions can appear in many forms. An actor’s facial expression or inflection in a certain
line or reaction can just as easily be seen as a contribution to a work that could be continued on
with additional productions.
II. A Chorus Line and the Birth of the Broadway Workshop: “Who Tells Your Story"39
One of the most collaborative (and infamous) processes of Broadway lore was the creation of
A Chorus Line. Like Hamilton, it started at The Public Theater, giving it a downtown edgy
creditability. Also, like Hamilton, A Chorus Line’s contract left its actors feeling as if they had
been cheated out of some rights to the piece. “A Chorus Line remains the poster child for
collaborative authorship problems.”40
Michael Bennett, an up and coming New York choreographer and director in the 1970s
wanted to create a musical about dancers.41 When a few acquaintances wanted to start a dance
ensemble, Bennett took it upon himself to lead discussions at their first meetings and to record
the discussions.42 Bennett steered the conversion to personal topics and said “I really want to talk
about us. Now I don’t know whether anything will come of us, or whether there is anything
interesting…. I think maybe there is a show in there somewhere.”43 These conversations would
39 LIN MANUEL MIRANDA, Who Lives, Who Dies, Who Tells Your Story, on HAMILTON AN AMERICAN MUSICAL
ORIGINAL BROADWAY CAST RECORDING (Atlantic Records 2015). 40 Sarah Howes, Creative Equity: A Practical Approach to the Actor’s Copyright, 42 WM. MITCHELL L. REV. 70,
108 (2016). 41 EVERY LITTLE STEP (Endgame Entertainment 2008). 42 VIAGAS, ET AL, supra note 17 at 20. 43 MICHAEL RIEDEL, RAZZLE DAZZLE THE BATTLE FOR BROADWAY 147 (2015).
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become the inspiration for A Chorus Line. Some dialogue was lifted word for word from the
original taped conversations.44
Having already started work on the piece, including plans to hold casting sessions where
actors would see their own words on the audition sides,45 Bennett told his lawyer, and later A
Chorus Line producer, John Breglio, about his plan for the show.46 Breglio was worried that
there would be “twenty authors and twenty lawsuits.”47 Thus, Bennett had all those involved in
the tapings to sign one-page “releases”48 in exchange for one dollar, and all the actors did.49 In
1975, after two workshops and an off-Broadway run, A Chorus Line moved to Broadway.50 Not
only was it a critical and financial hit, much like Hamilton, it was a cultural phenomenon, the
likes of which only comes out of the theater every few decades. “Bennett asked his lawyers to
draw up a new arrangement that divided the 37 dancers and actors involved with “A Chorus
Line” into three groups.”51 The first, Group A, were part of the original tape sessions and/or were
part of both workshops.52 Group B were only there for the tape sessions.53 “Group C included
those in the show who had not been with it from the early stages.”54
44 EVERY LITTLE STEP, supra note 41 (showing where the transcript from the taped meeting matched lines from A
Chorus Line); VIAGAS, ET AL, supra note 17 at 33 (“Many of the first things said in the tape session made their way
into the final text of A Chorus Line.”). 45 DENNY MARTIN FLINN, WHAT THEY DID FOR LOVE: THE UNTOLD STORY BEHIND THE MAKING OF A CHORUS LINE
48 (1989). 46 RIEDEL, supra note 43, at 148. 47 Id. 48 In numerous sources, the Chorus Line agreements are often called “releases” or “waivers.” Although a copy of the
exact language used in this document is not available, from what is know legally the document appears to be more in
line with a “assignment” where whatever property right the actors had in their stories and words said on tape were
transferred to Michael Bennett. Because the majority of the sources found refer to the agreements as "releases,” thus
paper does so as well. 49 RIEDEL, supra note 43, at 149. 50 Campbell Robertson, ‘Chorus Line’ Returns, as Do Regrets Over Stories Signed Away, N.Y. TIMES, Oct. 1, 2006. 51 Id. 52 Id. 53 Id. 54 Id.
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This new agreement split among them a half-percent of the production’s weekly
box office gross revenues, as well as a similar portion of the income from
subsidiary rights; it gave the 19 dancers in the A Group double the shares of
everyone else. In all, Mr. Bennett gave the 37 dancers roughly a tenth of his own
royalties from the original production and around a third of the rights income he
was entitled to as the show’s conceiver, director and choreographer. He also
received a share of profits and rights income as a producer.55
Some of the Chorus Line actors cite the arrangement as a mere conciliation for their actual
contribution as “authors.”56 As actor Wayne Ciltento put it, “We were the authors of the show,
and we should have been paid accordingly.”57 The difference in share would have been huge.
Typically, authors share around forty-percent of a royalty pool.58 Many felt that that they had no
other option than to sign the releases and that the power dynamic of continuing to work for
Bennett led to an unfair agreement akin to an adhesion contract by giving up their life stories for
a dollar.59
This agreement also represented a milestone in Broadway actors’ rights and payment. “This
kind of agreement was new because the extensive workshop process was new[.]”60 It is not that
“workshopping” a theater piece was new.61 At least one of the actors involved in A Chorus
Line’s development had been in workshops in California.62 Nevertheless, the workshop was a
new idea to the commercial Broadway musical. “The Broadway workshop” was a new
developmental concept compared to the single alternative: the “out-of-town tryout system.”63
The out-of-town try out had dominated Broadway productions’ development for almost the past
55 Id. 56 See Id. 57 Id. 58 Online Study Guide: Royalty Pools, Association of Theatrical Press Agents & Managers, 1 (2004)
http://atpamnmam.tripod.com/Royalty_Pools.PDF [Hereinafter “Royalty Pools”]. 59 See Id; please note that the legal is issue of “story rights” is beyond the scope of this paper and is not developed
further. 60 Robertson, supra note 50. 61 See VIAGAS, ET AL, supra note 17 at 89. 62 Id. 63 Id. at 88.
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century. Authors wrote material and that material was performed outside of New York, often in
cities such as Boston or Detroit. That material and the production was re-written and tweaked
until it was (hopefully) ready for its Broadway debut.64
A Chorus Line’s two developmental workshops were extremely collaborative.65 In early
stages, composer Marvin Hamlish would play a musical theme he was working on and the
dancers would improvise movement.66 A method for both composer to find the “sound” of the
piece and the choreographer to find the “dance style” of the piece from with what the dancers
came up.67 The process was very collaborative, and Bennett really used the dancer/actors to
create the piece. Ultimately, due to the collaborative process, the actor/dancers’ contributions are
reflected, at least in part, by Bennett’s agreement to give them some of his royalties and rights.
Moreover, the actors in “Group C” who did not participate in the original taping nor the
workshops received a portion of the royalties and rights Bennett gave.68 This shows that in the
eyes of Bennett they too had made a contribution to the success of the show by “creating a role”
on Broadway. The Broadway industry uses the term “creating a role” to mean the first person to
play a role. Even the jargon itself shows that that the industry at large sees some of an actor’s
creative contribution in being the first to perform a role. Here Bennett shows the importance of
being first on Broadway as an important contribution to the creation of A Chorus Line by giving
some of his own royalties and rights to “Group C.”
After A Chorus Line brought the workshop process to Broadway, “a similar, but less
generous agreement that was hammered out for Mr. Bennett’s next musical, ‘Ballroom,’ has
64 Id. 65 Id. at 104-93. 66 Id. 105. 67 Id. at 105, 108. 68 Supra, note 54.
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become standard on Broadway.”69 A Chorus Line’s creation was a particularly extreme version
of collaboration and Bennett’s bestowment of his rights and royalties do account for this
collaboration, even though many actors still feel the bestowment skirted some legitimate story
rights issues. As A Chorus Line producer Breglio puts it: “Up to this day, the dancers continue to
receive a share of Michael’s unprecedented generosity from A Chorus Line – the most money
ever paid to Actors’ Equity members for participating in a workshop.”70
III. Actors as Authors Under Copyright Law: “Helpless!"71
To create a copyrightable work (1) an author must create (2) an original work (3) that is fixed
in a tangible medium (4) and capable of being perceived, reproduced, or communicated.72
Additionally, copyright only applies to the expression of ideas and not the ideas themselves.73 At
one time the actors’ copyrights debate centered around the fixation element,74 but now the debate
has shifted to the authorship and originality elements. Three hypothetical scenarios exist in
which an actor could obtain a copyright: (1) the actor as a copyright in his or her own
performance; (2) the actor is a joint author of the work along with other authors; and (3) the actor
is also an author of the work independent from his or her performance of the work. The third
scenario is not relevant to this discussion because the copyright is unrelated to the person’s work
as an actor. Like with Hamilton, Lin Manuel Miranda’s copyrightable work as composer,
69 Robertson, supra note 50. 70 JOHN BREGLIO, I WANNA BE A PRODUCER: HOW TO MAKE A KILLING ON BROADWAY… OR GET KILLED 105
(2016). 71 LIN MANUEL MIRANDA, Helpless, on HAMILTON AN AMERICAN MUSICAL ORIGINAL BROADWAY CAST
RECORDING (Atlantic Records 2015). 72 17 U.S. Code § 102(a). 73 17 U.S. Code § 102(b). 74 Howes, supra note 40 at 91 (“Fixation is old news with the advent of recording equipment.”).
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lyricist, and book writer is separate from his performance of the title character. The two previous
scenarios are discussed below.
A. Garcia v. Google & an Actor’s Copyright in His or Her Performance: “the world turned upside down”75
Although a recent case coming out of the Ninth Circuit initially gave some hope an actor’s
copyright in his or her performance, that glimmer of hope was quickly shot down.
In Garcia v. Google, Inc.,76 non-union actress Cindy Lee Garcia was hired by producer Mark
Basseley Youssef for a low-budget amateur film with a working title of “Desert Warrior.”77
Garcia performed four pages of the script she was given and was paid.78 To Garcia’s dismay, she
found that Youssef had partially dubbed her performance and used it in an anti-Islamic film titled
"Innocence of Muslims" which was uploaded to YouTube.79 The protests of the film “generated
worldwide news coverage,” and Garcia received death threats.80 Garcia filed takedown notices
under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.81 When Google refused to act, “Garcia applied for
a temporary restraining order seeking removal of the film from YouTube, claiming that the
posting of the video infringed her copyright in her performance.”82 Thus, Garcia argued she had
a copyright in her five-second performance that was separate and distinct from the work as a
whole.83
75 LIN MANUEL MIRANDA, Yorktown (The World Turned Upside Down), on HAMILTON AN AMERICAN MUSICAL
ORIGINAL BROADWAY CAST RECORDING (Atlantic Records 2015). 76 Garcia v. Google, Inc., 766 F.3d 929 (9th Cir. 2014). 77 Id. at 932. 78 Id. 79 Id. 80 Id. 81 See generally 17 U.S.C. § 512. 82 Garcia, 766 F.3d at 732. 83 See Id.
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“When the district court rejected Garcia’s request in part because she “was unlikely to
succeed on the merits[,] because she'd granted Youssef an implied license to use her performance
in the film,” Garcia appealed.84
In 2014, Chief Judge Kozinski, writing for the Ninth Circuit, created a stir within the
intellectual property legal community by writing “[a]n actor's performance, when fixed, is
copyrightable if it evinces ‘some minimal degree of creativity. . . 'no matter how crude, humble
or obvious' it might be.’”85 Kozinski elaborated:
Of course, by hiring Garcia, giving her the script and turning a camera on her,
Youssef implicitly granted her a license to perform his screenplay. This doesn't
mean that Garcia owns a copyright interest in the entire scene: She can claim
copyright in her own contribution but not in "preexisting material" such as the
words or actions spelled out in the underlying script. Garcia may assert a
copyright interest only in the portion of "Innocence of Muslims" that represents
her individual creativity, but even if her contribution is relatively minor, it isn't de
minimis. We need not and do not decide whether every actor has a copyright in
his performance within a movie. It suffices for now to hold that, while the matter
is fairly debatable, Garcia is likely to prevail based on the record and arguments
before us.86
In 2015, a Ninth Circuit en banc panel reversed Kozinski’s holdings and said actors have no
copyright in their performance and thus no copyright interest in the films they make.87 The court
noted that “[m]andatory preliminary injunctions, similar to the one issued today, are ‘particularly
disfavored.’”88 Therefore, a “higher degree of scrutiny” was used by the court.89 “This higher
degree of scrutiny requires courts to be ‘extremely cautious’ and ‘deny such relief unless the
84 Id. at 732-33. 85 Id. at 934 (citing Feist Publ'ns, Inc. v. Rural Tel. Serv. Co., 499 U.S. 340, 345, (1991) (quoting 1 Nimmer on
Copyright § 1.08[C][1])). 86 Id. at 135 (citations removed). 87 Garcia v. Google, Inc., 786 F.3d 733 (9th Cir. 2015) (en banc). 88 Id. at 940 (quoting Stanley v. Univ. of S. Cal., 13 F.3d 1313, 1320 (9th Cir. 1994)). 89 Id. at 940 (quoting Stanley, 13 F.3d at 1320).
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facts and law clearly favor the moving party.”90 “As a result, the majority may only reverse if it
were illogical or implausible for the district court to conclude that the law and facts did
not clearly favor Garcia.”91 The court’s adherence to this “higher degree of scrutiny” guided
their deference to the lower court’s decision. Moreover, the Ninth Circuit’s reasoned that a
movie is one work under the copyright act and that an actor’s performance cannot be separated
out.92 It is of note that Garcia never argued she was a joint author in the work and that “Garcia
argue[d] that she never intended her performance to be part of a joint work” and neither decision
determined otherwise.93
Additionally, the panel pointed to a “flood gates” argument, where a movie would become a
“copyright of thousands” with so many parties giving contributions.94 The panel noted that even
if Garcia had met the originality element, she was barred from copyright because the fixation
was done by Youssef and his crew.95
Kozinski was not silent in his discontent which he put into a scathing dissent: “[T]he
majority is wrong and makes a total mess of copyright law, right here in the Hollywood Circuit.
In its haste to take internet service providers off the hook for infringement, the court today robs
performers and other creative talent of rights Congress gave them.”96
The Second Circuit in 16 Case Duse, LLC v. Merkin,97 the court held that Merkin, a director,
did not have a separate copyright for his contributions in a film because a film is one work.”98
90 Id. at 940 (quoting Stanley, 13 F.3d at 1319-20) (internal quotation marks omitted in original and emphasis added
in original). 91 Id. at 940-41 (citing Stanley, 13 F.3d at 1320). 92 Id. at 741. 93 Id. at 933. 94 Id. at 732-33. 95 Id. at 733-34. 96 Id. at 479 (Kozinski, J., dissenting). 97 16 Case Duse, LLC v. Merkin, 791 F.3d 247 (2nd Cir. 2015). 98 Id. at 259.
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The court pointed to the Garcia en banc panel decision’s reasoning to determine the director did
not have a separate copyright.99 The court stated “[o]ur conclusion in the present case does not
suggest that motion picture directors such as Merkin may never achieve copyright protection for
the creative efforts . . . [b]ut a director’s contribution to an integrated ‘work of authorship’ such
as film is not itself a ‘work of authorship’ subject to its own copyright protection.”100 The court
went on to agree with the Garcia en banc panels’ policy argument “that the creation of thousand
of standalone copyrights in a given work was likely not intended [by Congress].”101
The Second Circuit in TCA TV Corp. v. McCollum,102 the court determined that Abbott and
Costello’s iconic Who’s on First? comedy routine did not “merge” into a film’s “unitary whole”
for copyright purposes.103 The court disguised Garcia by stating that the facts of TCA were not
“analogous” because while Garcia’s performance “so integrated into the film, Who’s on First?
was a free standing routine that existed years before and years after separate from the film.104
Thus, the worry that “‘[t]reating every acting performance as an independent work’ would be a
‘logistical and financial nightmare’” did not exist here.105
In general, the case does not bode well for a stage actor copyright. Although, Garcia en banc
panel’s afterthought of a fixation argument seems to be on shaky ground logically,106 the panel’s
other reasoning may be hard to argue with. If according to Garcia (en banc) and Case Duse an
actor’s or director’s contribution cannot be separated from a film in a typical scenario, then an
actor’s performance is unlikely to be seen as separate from stage musical. Case Duse, however,
99 Id. at 258-59. 100 Id. 101 Id. at 259. 102 TCA TV Corp. v. McCollum, 839 F.39 168 (2nd Cir. 2016). 103 Id. at 192. 104 Id. at 191. 105 Id. at 191 (quoting Garcia, 786 F.3d at 743.) 106 Howes, supra note 40 at 83-84 (finding illogical conclusions from Garcia’s fixation stance).
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left room for some leeway in this doctrine by not declaring a hard rule. TCA took up this leeway
and showed that a single contribution can exist separate from a whole. TCA shows that just
because a contribution exists within a whole it can still be separate and discrete in terms of
copyright. Yet, TCA appears to be an exception to rule and ultimately may be more less useful to
this discussion because its facts are more analogous to “the third scenario” listed above in this
paper for an actor obtain a copyright: the actor is an author separate from their performance.
Additionally, the Garcia en banc panel grounded their decision in the “higher degree of
scrutiny” required by procedure policy. It may be possible for Kozinski’s views to see the light
of day under a lesser required scrutiny. Furthermore, it could be argued that Case Duse erred by
relying on Garcia’s (en banc) reasoning because the reasoning was filtered through such high
scrutiny. Moreover, by looking at Case Duse and TCA together it appears that the Second
Circuit, the home of Broadway, is not tied to hard rules and is willing to look at the factual
situation to guide their reasoning to create some sense of general equity or fairness in the
copyright doctrine.
Even with a lesser degree of scrutiny in an actor’s favor, a general policy argument of not
wanting to divide up individual copyrights to a larger work to create more certainty in the
copyright law may a larger barrier for the actor copyright.
B. An Actor’s Copyright as a Joint Author: “you don’t have the votes”107
The Copyright Act defines joint work as ““a work prepared by two or more authors with the
intention that their contributions be merged into inseparable or interdependent parts of a unitary
107 LIN MANUEL MIRANDA, Satisfied, on HAMILTON AN AMERICAN MUSICAL ORIGINAL BROADWAY CAST
RECORDING (Atlantic Records 2015).
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whole.”108 Joint authors are tenants in common and each author can grant nonexclusive license
without permission of other co-authors.109 Contributions, however, do not need to be equal.110
“Even a person whose contribution is relatively minor, if accorded joint authorship status, enjoys
a significant benefit.”111
1. Tests for Joint Authorship
In evaluating the contributions of authors claiming joint authorship status, two major tests
emerged from academia: (1) the “de minimis test;” and (2) the “copyrightability test.”112
First, Professor Melville Nimmer proposed a de minimis test focused mostly on the intent of
the collaborators.113 Nimmer “took the position that all that should be required to achieve joint
author status is more than a de minimis contribution by each author. ‘De minimis’ requires that
‘more than a word or line must be added by one who claims to be a joint author.’114 Under this
test, one collaborator could contribute only copyrightable ideas and still be a joint author so long
as the final work was copyrightable.”115 The intent for both parties to collaborate is what
ultimately matters.
Second, Professor Paul Goldstein’s copyrightability test or “copyrightable subject matter
test,” requires (1) the collaborators intended to be joint authors; and (2) each collaborator’s
contribution to be “original expression that could stand on its own as the subject matter of
108 17 U.S.C. § 101. 109 Childress v. Taylor, 945 F.2d 500, 505 (2d Cir. 1991); Erickson v. Trinity Theatre, Inc., 13 F.3d 1061, 1068 (7th
Cir. 1994); Nimmer § 6.02, at 6-7 to 6-8. 110 Trinity, 13 F.3d at 1068. 111 Id. 112 Id. at 1069; Michael Landau, Joint Works Under United States Copyright Law: Judicial Legislation Through
Statutory Misinterpretation, 54 IDEA 157, 168-171 (2014) (comparing tests the two tests). 113 Trinity, 13 F.3d at 1070. 114 Id. (quoting Nimmer § 6.07, at 6-21). 115 Id.
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copyright.”116 Goldstein points to the use of the word “author” in the definition of joint work as a
reference to “work of authorship” or copyrightable material as support for his theory.117
“Goldstein justifies this position by arguing that any material that does not meet
‘the Copyright Act's copyrightability standard falls within the public domain, which any author
is entitled to use without having to share proceeds from the work's exploitation.’118
2. Actor Unfriendly Case Law
The debate between the two tests came to the courts in the early 1990s but fizzled fast as the
copyrightability test was adopted by the Second, Seventh, Ninth and Eleventh Circuit119
Copyrightability has become the majority view in the courts that have dealt with this subject.
Some of these foundational cases for joint authorship deal with actors not meeting the standards
of the copyrightability test. Additionally, from the case law it is unclear if an actor could meet
the standards, outside of a traditional author role.
The Second Circuit in Childress v. Taylor120 held that actress Clarice Taylor was not a joint
author to a play about comedienne Jackie "Moms" Mabley where she had collaborated with
playwright Alice Taylor.121 Taylor had the initial idea for the play, was to play “Moms” Mabley,
gave ideas for scenes that were part of the final play and contributed major historical research.122
Although the court noted that Taylor’s contributions were not eligible for copyright, in applying
the copyrightability test, “the court decided the case solely on the ‘intent’ issue.”123 There was no
116 PAUL GOLDSTEIN, COPYRIGHT: PRINCIPLES, LAW, AND PRACTICE § 4.2.1.2, at 379 (1989); see Trinity, 13 F.3d at
1070 (discussing “the copyrightability test”). 117 Landau, supra note 112 at 169. 118 Id. at 169-170 (citing GOLDSTEIN, supra note 116 at at 4:17). 119 See Childress, 945 F.2d at 507; Trinity, 13 F.3d at 1071; Ashton-Tate Corp. v. Ross, 916 F.2d 516, 521 (9th Cir.
1990); M.G.B. Homes, Inc. v. Ameron Homes, Inc., 903 F.2d 1486, 1493 (11th Cir. 1990). 120 Childress v. Taylor, 945 F.2d 500 (2nd Cir. 1991). 121 Id. 508. 122 Id. at 502. 123 Landau, supra note 112 at 178 (citing Childress, 945 F.2d at 508).
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evidence that Childress, an experienced playwright, had ever intended the actors to be joint
authors.124
Similarly, the Seventh Circuit in Erickson v. Trinity Theatre125 held that actors were not joint
authors of three plays they had collaborated on with playwright Karen Erickson under the
Childress copyrightability test.126 Although the court easily determined that there was no intent
to be joint authors by the parties for two of the plays where Erickson held sole control of the
works as playwright, the third play, Time Machine, was “more problematic.”127 For Time
Machine there was testimony from actress Paddy Lynn that at least two scenes were developed
through a collaboration process.128 Moreover, the theater had evidence of Erickson’s intent to be
co-author with Lynn.129 “Initially, Ms. Erickson attributed the script to both herself and to Ms.
Lynn. Ms. Lynn also received royalties for performances of the play.”130 Although Erickson
denied she intended Lynn to be her co-author, Erickson “conceded that Ms. Lynn was credited
on publicity materials as an author but denied that she approved such credit. The later change in
attribution, Ms. Erickson claims, merely corrected the initial error.”131
Nonetheless, in discussing the copyrightability prong, the court noted that while the
development of the plays had included improvisation and suggestions from the actors, the actors
could not prove that any of their “contributions to Ms. Erickson's [plays] could have been
independently copyrighted.”132
124 Childress, 945 F.2d at 508. 125 Erickson v. Trinity Theatre, 13 F.3d 1061 (7th Cir. 1994). 126 Id. at 1072-73. 127 Id. 1071-72. 128 Id. at 1072. 129 Id. 130 Id. at 1064. 131 Id. 132 Id. at 1072.
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On the other hand, in Systems XIX, Inc. v. Parker,133 the district court found that the plaintiff,
a recording studio and music producer, “demonstrated the existence of triable issues of fact with
respect to the intention of the parties” to create a joint work in a sound recording for a judicial
determination of the plaintiff’s rights under the Copy Right Act.134 The defendants, a rapper and
his record label, argued that there was no direct communication with the plaintiff in the creation
of the live concert recording, and thus no intent could exist to create a joint work.135 The
plaintiffs had pointed to evidence showing that the defendants “understood the inherently
collaborative nature of producing live performance.”136 Agreeing with the plaintiffs, the court
reasoned that “[i]t makes no difference whether the authors work in concert, or even whether
they know each other; “it is enough that they mean their contributions to be complementary in
the sense that they are embodied in a single work to be performed as such.”137 The court rooted
its more liberal view of intent for joint works in the idea that “sound recordings by their nature
are usually joint works.”138 The court pointed to support from the Copyright Office and the
Copyright Act’s legislative history.139 Additionally, the court stated that “the subjective standard
under Childress” did not apply.140 The court distinguished the “playwright/research assistant
relationship in Childress” from the “producer /performer relationship” at hand in Systems
because the “relationship here was under the specific contemplation of Congress as as joint
authors of a sound recording under the Act.”141
133 Systems XIX, Inc. v. Parker, 30 F. Supp. 2d 1225 (N.D. Cal. 1998). 134 Id. at 1229. 135 Id. at 1228. 136 Id. 137 Id. at 1229 (quoting B. Marks Music Corp. v. Jerry Vogel Music Co., 140 F.2d 266, 267 (2nd Cir. 1946). 138 Id. at 1228. 139 Id. 140 Id. 141 Id.
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Although Systems does show an opening in the joint work legal framework for a less strict
stance on the intent element, it is rooted Congress’ recognition of sound recordings as special.
For Broadway actors to utilize this line of reasoning they would not only need to show that the
development of a musical is “inherently collaborative” and accepted as such in that industry, but
also that Congress recognized that relationship as special. Although there may be some
arguments through analogies of relationships, the Congressional recognition appears to be a hard
hurdle to cross.
Ultimately, the copyrightability standard appears to not be actor friendly. For the Broadway
actors, the Second Circuit’s Childress is law over joint authorship and there is no reason to think
that this cornerstone case is moving any time soon. Furthermore, even with Broadway musicals’
collaborative processes, the strict nature of titles and duties for Broadway staff may also be a
barrier for Broadway actor copyrights.
In Thomson v. Larson, a Second Circuit case following Childress, the court held that an
independent dramaturg142 who helped Jonathan Larson mold his musical Rent for Broadway was
not a joint author of a “new” version of the musical.143 Although Larson had died before the full
success of Rent, the court determined that Larson never intended to be co-author with Lynn M.
Thomson partially because as “dramaturg” Thomson’s control was inherently given to Larson,
the writer.144 Although Thomson argued that she should have the right to separate out her
copyrightable material from the work or be able to use that specific material, the court dodged
142 The Role of the Dramaturg, LITERARY MANAGERS AND DIRECTORS OF THE AMERICAS,
www.lmda.org/dramaturgy (last visited Nov. 27, 2017)(“Dramaturgs and literary managers serve the field as experts
on our dramatic past and as advocates for writers of today and the important work of the future.”) 143 147 F.3d 195, 206-07 (2nd Cir. 1998). 144 Id. at 202-05.
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these matters on technicality: “Because these issues were not raised [at the district court level]
and therefore are not properly before us, we express no opinion on them.”145
In looking at this case in terms of Broadway actors, if a dramaturg whose role is more closely
related to the traditional process of writing can be so easily excluded from joint copyright, there
appears to be little hope for actors whose traditional role is farther away. The Childress’ case law
uses billing and titles as evidence of intent. For actors this sort of evidence would likely put them
low on the hierarchy of control, unless they can adequately argue that writers intended the actors
to be co-authors.
C. Actor’s Copyrights? “Say No To This”146
Ultimately, copyright law feels stacked against the Broadway actor copyright. Now it is not
to say that creative lawyers in the future will not create new arguments in favor of actors’
copyrights. Proponents of actors’ copyrights feel that Garcia and Childress are simply bad
law.147 If the Ninth Circuit’s initial Garcia holding seemingly come out of nowhere to shock the
legal community, there’s no reason to say that it will not happen again. On the other hand, the
feeling that the law is against an actors’ copyright might be justified because of policy concerns.
Additionally, imbedded in actor copyrights are innate problems.
As stated above, a Broadway actors’ copyright could lead to potentially hundreds of
copyrights in one musical, especially if the musical had more than one workshop or changed
casts. As a joint author, every applicable actor would be able to license to the whole work. This
145 Id. at 206. 146 LIN MANUEL MIRANDA, Satisfied, on HAMILTON AN AMERICAN MUSICAL ORIGINAL BROADWAY CAST
RECORDING (Atlantic Records 2015). 147 See Howes, supra note 40 at 80-85 (arguing that in Garcia “Bad Facts Managed to Make Unexpected Worse
Law”); Landau, supra note 112 at 211-22 (arguing that the that the Childress line of cases misconstrue the statute);
Faye Buckalew, Joint Authorship in the Second Circuit: A Critique of the Law in the Second Circuit Following
Childress v. Taylor and as Exemplified in Thomson v. Larson, 64 BROOKLYN L. REV. 545, (1998).
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may actually make directors and producers want to limit cast changes in developmental stages to
reduce future rights holders. Ultimately, this would seem to be a hindrance to creative expression
and go against the Constitution’s stated purpose of the Copyright Act: “To promote the Progress
of Science and useful Arts.” 148 A producer circumvented this problem by the having the actors
sign a work-made-for-hire agreement, coupled with an assignment of any copyright interest. By
solving this copyright issue, it would create an additional point leverage for the actors or their
union to negotiate for higher pay for the assignment.
Moreover, even assuming intent, not all actor contributions will rise to the needed copyright
threshold allowed for joint authorship under the copyrightability test. This could open the doors
for additional lawsuits to determine legal authorship and create a need for case-by-case judicial
input. Additionally, for the consciousness producer who wants to do the correct thing under the
law and for his investors, the uncertainty makes it hard for the producer to plan.
It is not to say that actors have no recourse to be compensated for their contributions to a
work. This can be done through contract law.
IV. Royalty Pools for Actors: “Satisfied"149
“Section 201(b) of the [Copyright] Act allows any person to contract with another to create a
work and to endow the employer with authorship status under the Act. A contributor of non-
copyrightable ideas may also protect her rights to compensation under the Act by contract.”150
Goldstein’s copyrightability test can be viewed not as excluding contributors from rights but
148 U.S. Const. Art. I. § 8, cl. 8. 149 LIN MANUEL MIRANDA, Say No To This, on HAMILTON AN AMERICAN MUSICAL ORIGINAL BROADWAY CAST
RECORDING (Atlantic Records 2015). 150 Trinity, 13 F.3d at 1071 (internal citations removed).
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rather pushing them to contract law by incentivizing contributors to get what they want.151
“Thus, anyone who contributes to the creation of a work, either as patron, employer, or
contributor of ideas, has the opportunity to share in the profits produced by the work through an
appropriate contractual arrangement.”152
On Broadway, actors can be compensated for their contributions to the development of a
musical through sharing in royalty pools, much like in the A Chorus Line agreement discussed in
Part I. Unlike A Chorus Line and Hamilton, these pools are created before the production goes to
Broadway no matter if it is successful or not.
Additionally, royalty pools are conducive to the Broadway musical because usually
development happens under one producer or producing partnership. They players typically
remain the same. This is opposed to Broadway plays which usually have a less direct gestation
period often relying on multiple regional theaters for development. It is not to say that Broadway
musicals never come out of regional theaters, Hamilton did, but they tend to be large established
theaters like The Public and often have commercial producers, like Jeffrey Sellers, contributing
“supplemental” income at the developmental stage. Moreover, the royalty pool is not conducive
to films or television because the developmental process is so different and the sheer number of
participants is too many. Films and television use the residual system, which while similar to
royalty pools, combines larger groups to divide certain contracted percentages, which are usually
set by the union.153
151 See Id. 152 Id. 153 A further discussion of residuals for film and television is out of the scope of this paper.
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A. The Workings of Royalty Pools: “The art of the trade. How the sausage gets made.”154
Prior to 1980, “creatives” on Broadway were paid a percentage of the Gross Weekly Box
Office Receipts which often left little for investors.155 “Theatrical investors began to question
situations in which royalty participants could make a significant amount of money in royalties
before the show had returned its investment.”156
Thus, the modern Broadway royalty pool was created.157 Here royalty participants together
would split the Weekly Operating Profits with the investors158 (see Figure 1).
Figure 1.159 (note: actors are not included in this pool example)
“The original intent of the royalty pool was to create a scenario where royalty participants
‘delay’ their compensation by agreeing to share in weekly profits with investors through a
payment system in which royalties increase as gross receipts go up.”160 When the show is losing
money, this prevents the producer from having to pay royalties.161
154 MIRANDA, supra note 16. 155 BREGLIO, supra note 70 at 85. 156 Royalty Pools, supra note 58. 157 See Id. 158 Id. 159 Id., at 2. 160 Id. at 4 161 Id.
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Broadway actors usually become royalty participants through being cast in a developmental
workshop. Actors Equity, the stage actors’ union, includes a royalty provision for its standard
workshop agreement.162 The provision provides for profit shares of the box office as well as
future rights from future productions that of which the actor most likely will not part of the
cast:163
In addition to the salary the Actors earn during the Workshop sessions, they also
earn a share in the future success of the show. For their contributions to the
development of the show, the Actors share in contingent compensation that takes
two forms. First, the Actors share in the weekly box office gross when the show is
produced under contract; that is, the Actors as a group shares a percentage
(usually 1%) of the gross box office receipts. . . . [Second,] [a]ctors also share in
any subsidiary rights income which is generated by the play. For example,
subsidiary rights income can come from royalties from foreign productions, stock
and amateur rights, or from the sale of motion picture rights. The Actors' share of
subsidiary rights is usually 1.5% of net receipts.164
Although Actors Equity includes this provision, it is not always allotted for actors’
developmental contributions. First, as a contract provision these terms can be negotiated and
changed. Second, Actors Equity has another standard contract for “developmental labs” which
has higher pay for actors but does not include royalty provision.165 The developmental lab has
become more popular and “producers have largely opted to pay actors who help develop shows
more up front, in exchange for not granting them a share of profits if — as happens relatively
rarely — the show becomes profitable.”166 Conversely, for those shows that do become
profitable, a small share can change an actor’s life. “The best-known example, often cited by
actors in the current debate, is ‘The Book of Mormon.’ The actors involved in the initial
162 Workshop Agreement Overview, supra note 10. 163 See Id. 164 Id. 165 Kuney, supra note 12. 166 Paulson, supra note 7.
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workshops for that show, which opened on Broadway in 2011, still get regular checks, in some
cases for several thousand dollars a month, to reflect their contributions to its success.”167
B. Royalty Pools for Actors Should Be More Widely Adopted: “Wait For It”
Royalty provisions for actors can be interpreted as a payment for creative contributions,
especially those that may not fit the copyright mold. Those who share in a royalty pool consist
of, for the most part, creative personnel and investors. Although it could be argued that actors are
investing their time and should be compensated for what that time brings, actors are
compensated for their time via standard pay. It seems clearer that actors fit into the creative side
and that their contributions are creative, too.
Additionally, royalty pools live separate from copyrights. There are no preemption issues
because typically nothing is being taken away from the copyright holders. Unlike the agreement
in A Chorus Line where the actors’ royalties came from the director, typically when actors are
included in pools the producer allocates a small percentage of their producer’s share of the pool
to actors.168
With Broadway becoming international where productions spread over the country and world
like franchises, actors should be compensated in their part of that success. Some would argue
that the developmental lab contract, spoken of above, does so by paying actors upfront but with a
hit, the revenue can go on for decades and is exponentially more than that allotted by the
developmental lab contracts.
Currently, the developmental lab contract seems simple to be a way around not dealing with
royalty provisions for actors. In wake of Hamilton’s post-Broadway royalty provision, Disney
167 Id. 168 See Paulson, supra note 7.
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has taken some flack from actors because it developed its upcoming Frozen stage musical
without any profit-sharing.169 For Disney this is business as usual because it is the same process
it has had for its last four stage musicals.
One of two actions should be taken. First, Equity should fight to remove the developmental
lab from its standard contracts and fold it into its workshop contract. At least, this would force
the parties to negotiate the royalty provision out. Second, Disney or other producers need to
make a real case for the difference of the developmental lab and the workshop. It could be
argued that with a piece like Disney’s upcoming Broadway stage adaptation of its animated film
Frozen, since it already exists as a movie musical, the actors’ contribution is different than with
other works due to the nature of the material and the process. This author is not convinced that
the process would be actually that different but that debate has not even been initiated.
Part of this is because of the general low bargaining power of actors. There is an endless line
of out-of-work actors who want to be on Broadway. Additionally, although all Broadway actors
must be union, the Actors Equity union has a reputation for being weak in terms of negotiating
outside of their standard contract provisions.
On the other hand, Broadway actors do have some realities in their favor to create some
change. First, a history of royalty pools and a general respect for Broadway performers as
creative beings exists in the industry. Second, it behooves producers to adopt royalty provisions.
It appeases the acting community and could stop actors obtaining aggressive lawyers in the
future to continue to fight for actor copyrights.
Lastly, although its reach is growing, Broadway is still small industry: literally and
figuratively. This sort of adopted change in a small industry seems much more possible as
169 Id.
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opposed to a larger industry such as the film industry. Its heart is only a few blocks. Its major
players are relatively few. With Hamilton, we have already seen a major Broadway producer
give in to actors’ reasonable demands when they did not give away their shot.
CONCLUSION
Although copyrights for Broadway actors seem unlikely to gain any traction in the current
legal regime, royalty pools give an alternative means of compensation for the creative
contribution Broadway actors provide to develop new work. With hit stage musicals generating
income for decades, a wider inclusion of royalty pools for developmental processes should be
included in actors’ contracts to properly compensate their creative contribution over time.
INTRODUCTION:Figure 1. (note: actors are not included in this pool example)CONCLUSION