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NEWS & LETTERS, APRIL 2003

Musicians shut down Broadway

New York--Supported by the stage hands and actors unions, musicians striking on Broadway shut down most shows the weekend of March 8. Despite area financial losses and inconvenience, the musicians were quite strongly supported by the public and the media.

Fighting the producers principally over the minimum number of orchestra players, until now the New York local was the only one in the U.S. which had not succumbed to the mechanized (canned music) takeover of the musical theater genre, which has cost countless musicians their livelihood.

On Sunday night March 9, both sides were summoned by Mayor Bloomberg. Within 24 hours a deal was negotiated costing the musicians about a third of their jobs plus other major concessions. This deal is profoundly disturbing and tragic for the union membership, but will most likely be ratified anyway, since they generally recognize that another strike at this time would not be supported by the public.

--Supporter

* * *

The robots have arrived. There they are, standing in the wings, their ugly threatening presence an insult to our very human being. Virtual music indeed!

Behind demands that the size of theater orchestras be cut are profit and financial gain. Behind them is the robot, the machine that would punish the live musician for questioning these demands. The labor strike is the time-honored means of countering the encroachments of the entrepreneur, but theater owners and management say: "Thou shalt not strike. If you do, the robot will play the music for you."

In solidarity the stage hands turned off the lights. The actors made their exits, and theater of entertainment became theater of protest.

The name of the opera is "Class Struggle." The second act is over. The robot, portrayed by a eunuch with a prosthetic heart and brain, is ready to sing everyone else's part, to work the lights, to play in the pit.

Act III hasn't been written yet, but I believe the people will prevail--work will be art, and art will be work, and the robot will bleed ink, oil and plutonium unto death.

--Local 802 member 

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