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BWW SPECIAL FEATURE: How I Got My Equity Card - by Raul Esparza

By: Aug. 28, 2009
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BroadwayWorld.com is proud to present its newest weekly feature, presented in association with and to celebrate the importance of the Actors' Equity Association. "AEA" or "Equity", founded in 1913, is the labor union that represents more than 48,000 Actors and Stage Managers in the United States. Equity seeks to advance, promote and foster the art of live theatre as an essential component of our society. Equity negotiates wages and working conditions and provides a wide range of benefits, including health and pension plans, for its members.

Check back weekly for new entries from stars of stage and screen on how they got their Equity cards!

"I had been working in Chicago for a year at Equity theatres under non-Equity contracts. Sometimes the roles were small, sometimes they were extraordinary. The kicker comes when Frank Galati, the great and generous artist, offers me a beautiful role at the Goodman Theatre in his adaptation of CRY, THE BELOVED COUNTRY. The role is not large, but it is important, and Frank inspired the very best in me. It begins to bother me that I am working harder than many company members and earning far, far less because I am not Equity. As that show ends, I am offered a principal role in ZORBA by a theatre in Highland Park. A major role, not the star, not the lead, but one of the six major roles in the musical. Five of those roles were Equity contracts; I am offered $50 a week on a non-Equity contract. It won't even cover gas money from downtown Chicago to the suburbs not to mention groceries or rent. I have enough weeks under the Equity Membership Candidacy program, so I ask the theatre to offer me an Equity contract. They say NO. They ask, why would you want to join Equity? I say, so I never have to argue over $50 again. They say, you're new in town. If you join Equity, you won't work in Chicago very much. Think about it. I say, I'll take my chances. A few months later, the Goodman offers me another role in their lovely annual production of A CHRISTMAS CAROL. Here we go again: I say I want to join Equity. They say congratulations and welcome aboard. I took my chances, and all these years later, from the Goodman to Steppenwolf to Broadway, I'm glad I'll never have to argue about gas money all by myself again. I'll always have Equity behind me to ensure that I am treated with respect and dignity and never threatened for asking what I am fundamentally worth. "

 




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