As actors restart talks and writers return to work, here are key players in the Hollywood strikes

 

Hollywood actors have restarted talks with studios, opening up the possibility that their part in the industry’s double strike could end with the same kind of deal the writers reached to end their pickets last week.

Actors and their employers have been divided on issues of pay, the use of artificial intelligence and self-taped auditions.

Here’s a look at the key figures in the negotiations to end the new strike, and the people who successfully struck the deal to end the last one.

DUNCAN CRABTREE-IRELAND

FILE - Duncan Crabtree-Ireland, National Executive Director and Chief Negotiator of SAG-AFTRA, appears at the 29th annual Screen Actors Guild Awards in Los Angeles on Feb. 26, 2023. (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP, File)
Crabtree-Ireland (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP, File)
This combination of photos shows Disney CEO Bob Iger, left, Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos and Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav. Negotiations between striking screenwriters and Hollywood studios are set to resume Wednesday, the latest attempt to bring an end to pickets that have brought film and television productions to a halt. The two sides have been divided on issues of pay, the size of writing staffs on shows and the use of artificial intelligence in how scripts are created. (AP Photo)
Iger, Sarandos and Zaslav (AP Photo)

Duncan Crabtree-Ireland is having his close-up in Hollywood’s labor fight.

As national executive director and chief negotiator for the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, he leads the team that will either make the deal to return to work or decide to continue striking.

He took an unlikely path to get there. Born in Memphis and raised in London and Dallas, Crabtree-Ireland went to college at Georgetown and law school at the University of California, Davis. He worked for several years as a criminal prosecutor in Los Angeles before taking a left turn and becoming a staff attorney for SAG-AFTRA in 2000.

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“I get asked to talk to law students about careers from time to time, and I always preface the story by saying I can’t, I don’t encourage you to try to replicate this because I’ve no idea how it happened,” Crabtree-Ireland told the AP in an interview. “I never thought I’d be here.”

Source: AP News

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