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Monday, February 26, 2018

Malcolm Sinclair, British stage and television actor also ...
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Equity, formerly officially titled the British Actors' Equity Association (although Equity was always its common name), is the trade union for actors, stage managers and models in the United Kingdom. It was formed in 1930 by a group of West End performers and, in 1967, it incorporated the Variety Artistes' Federation.

Equity was one of the last of the closed shop unions in the UK. This was criticised in 1981 by the European Court of Human Rights and made illegal in 1988, with the result that it is no longer a requirement that an entertainment professional be a member of Equity.

Equity requires its members to have unique professional names.


Video Equity (British trade union)



History

Like many other British trade unions, Equity operated a closed shop policy--it was not possible for someone to join unless they had sufficient paid work, and most jobs were reserved for Equity card holders. To allow new members to join, there were a limited number of non-card holding jobs on regional productions. Whilst working on these productions, actors held a provisional membership card, and, on completing the requisite number of weeks, could apply for full membership, and thereafter work in the West End, or on film and television.

As a result of reforms of trade unions by Margaret Thatcher's Conservative government, and the introduction of European legislation, closed shop unions became illegal in the UK and Equity discontinued this policy in the 1980s. However, to join, evidence must be provided of sufficient paid professional work.

In 1976, Equity introduced a policy of refusing to sell programmes to the South African Broadcasting Corporation, an action that led to a virtual blackout of British television in apartheid South Africa.


Maps Equity (British trade union)



General secretaries

  • 1930: Alfred M. Wall
  • 1935: Geoffrey Robinson (Heap)
  • 1939: C. B. Purdom
  • 1940: Llewellyn Rees
  • 1946: Gordon Sandison
  • 1958: Gerald Croasdell
  • 1973: Peter Plouviez
  • 1991: Ian McGarry
  • 2005: Christine Payne

Suffragette Alice Hawkins, former Equity Shoe machinist - Her ...
src: britishfootwearassociation.co.uk


Presidents

  • 1932: Godfrey Seymour Tearle
  • 1940: Lewis Thomas Casson
  • 1946: Beatrix Lehmann
  • 1948: Leslie Banks
  • 1949: Felix Aylmer
  • 1969: Ernest Clark
  • 1973: André Morell
  • 1975: Hugh Manning
  • 1978: John Barron
  • 1982: Hugh Manning
  • 1984: Derek Bond
  • 1986: Nigel Davenport
  • 1992: Jeffry Wickham
  • 1994: Frederick Pyne
  • 2002: Harry Landis
  • 2008: Graham Hamilton
  • 2010: Malcolm Sinclair

Equity (@EquityUK) | Twitter
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See also

  • Equivalent associations in the United States:
    • Actors' Equity Association
    • SAG-AFTRA

Suffragette Alice Hawkins, former Equity Shoe machinist - Her ...
src: britishfootwearassociation.co.uk


References


Equity Model Code Of Conduct Signed By British Vogue | HuffPost
src: s-i.huffpost.com


Further reading

  • Lee, Felicity R. (3 February 1999). "British Group Urges Freer Exchange of Actors With U.S." The New York Times. Retrieved 29 June 2013. 

Suffragette Alice Hawkins, former Equity Shoe machinist - Her ...
src: britishfootwearassociation.co.uk


External links

  • Official website

Source of article : Wikipedia