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Theater Producers Have First Amendment Right to Choose White Actor Instead of Black
From Moore v. Hadestown Broadway Ltd. Liab. Co., decided Thursday by Judge Loretta Preska (S.D.N.Y.):
Plaintiff Kim Moore is a black woman who works as an actress. Defendant is a company that produces and stages "Hadestown," a musical that runs on Broadway …. On or about January 30, 2020, Defendant hired Plaintiff to perform as an actress in its production of the Musical. Plaintiff played the role of "Worker #1" as part of the Musical's "Workers Chorus," as well as other parts in the Musical. In the Musical, the Workers Chorus consists of several actors who perform their roles as "Workers" within the Workers Chorus.
As of November 2021, the Workers Chorus consisted exclusively of black cast members, including Plaintiff. As a result, on November 23, 2021, David Neumann, a choreographer and supervisor for Defendant, emailed the entire cast of the Musical to apologize for the fact that the Musical was conveying a "white savior story" due to the exclusively black Workers Chorus.
In his email, Mr. Neumann stated that he, director Rachel Chavkin, and Liam Robinson, another Hadestown executive, were "commit[ted] to open dialogue regarding ongoing casting decisions and the ramifications of what that looks like in our particular story." Specifically, Neumann noted that "certain arrangements of actors on stage (a white Orpheus, a white Hades, and a Worker Chorus of all Black performers)" may have told "an unintended and harmful 'white savior' story." Neumann wrote that, although he, Chavkin, and Robinson did not "view Orpheus as a white savior" in the Musical and "[t]he 'text' of Hadestown may not speak about race," the particular arrangement of the Hadestown cast on stage had nonetheless expressed a "white savior story" because the actors are the Musical's "storytellers" who "become[ ] the story" on stage each performance through their selves, voices, and bodies….
On or about November 24, 2021—the day after Mr. Neumann emailed the entire cast of the Musical to apologize for the Musical's "white savior story"—Timothy Reid, a supervisor and dance caption for the Musical, informed Plaintiff that Defendant was seeking to replace her in the cast with a white woman.
If the facts were as alleged, the court concluded, that was race discrimination, but it was protected by the First Amendment; seems quite correct to me:
A live theater performance, such as the Musical produced and staged by Defendant, constitutes expressive and artistic speech that qualifies for First Amendment protection.,,, The sequence of events Plaintiff describes in her Amended Complaint, with context supplied from Mr. Neumann's emails, demonstrates that Defendant was making its casting decisions with an eye toward how the racial composition of the Musical's cast affected the story Hadestown was telling on-stage. Defendant's executives were aware that the arrangements of actors on stage expressed a message that departed both from the text of the Musical's script and from what Defendant intended to express when it staged the Musical and thereafter sought to change those casting arrangements to change the unintended expression. This clearly implicates Defendant's exercise of its creative expression and artistic decisions….
Deciding whom to cast in a theatrical performance is, of course, an employment decision. Plaintiff argues in her opposition brief that the First Amendment does not affect her claims because employment discrimination laws like the ones pursuant to which she brings this suit "regulate conduct … not speech." …
[But t]he decisions Hadestown makes about whom to cast for which roles—its employment decisions—are inherently expressive because they are tied to the story it intends to tell and its creative expression…. Regulating Defendant's casting decisions thus imposes more than an incidental burden on its speech and implicates its constitutionally protected speech….
[T]he First Amendment forbids the government from "tell[ing] a newspaper in advance what it can print and what it cannot" or "forc[ing] [it] to respond to views that others may hold," and "forc[ing] all manner of artists, speechwriters, and others whose services involve speech to speak what they do not believe." Under the same principles, the First Amendment likewise forbids compelling a theater company to stage a performance in a manner that expresses a story the theater company does not wish to tell….
The court concluded, though, that plaintiff could go forward with her separate claim that she was fired in retaliation for objecting to the defendant's actions:
Although the Court holds … that Defendant's casting decisions are protected by the First Amendment, that protection applies only insofar as Defendant made such casting decisions to tailor the Musical's message. Defendant's casting decisions can only be "inherently expressive," such that they warrant First Amendment protection, if Defendant made them specifically to change the story the Musical conveyed on stage.
Plaintiff's bases her retaliation claims upon her allegations that Defendant terminated her on December 5, 2021, in response to the complaints of racial discrimination she had made in the two weeks prior. There is nothing Plaintiff alleges in her Amended Complaint, or anything apparent on the face of Mr. Neumann's emails, that would lead the Court to conclude that Defendant's alleged decision to terminate Plaintiff for engaging in such protected activity was related in any way to the "inherently expressive" artistic decisions it makes with respect the cast it puts on stage. Instead, the facts Plaintiff pleads to support her retaliation claims amount only to allegations that Hadestown chose to fire an employee who had lodged a complaint to its human resources employee. Such an alleged retaliatory firing is in no way related to the artistic storytelling that confers certain First Amendment protections upon Defendant….
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Now this does have opium dream qualities to it
IF the viewing public hates that choice, money is lost and actor's careers tarnished.
IF the viewing public loves it,who's to even care? Do you go to Rolling Stones concerts and carry a sign that says "Taylor Swift is much better" ??
The same reasoning should apply to casting a male instead of a female actor, by either definition of male and female.
It would.
This decision says creative expression activities, like theatrical performances, are flat-out exempt from all discrimination laws, at least as long as they can show (or perhaps just plausibly argue, or perhaps just argue, or perhaps it’s just assumed and doesn’t have to be even argued) that changing the demographic composition of the performers changes the performance’s message.
I mean, let's go ad absurdum.
Who would ever hire a white man to sing Old Man River?
What about an Othello where there's no racial differences?
What about a story where the only minority is the man playing the Devil himself?
Those would fly like a lead balloon
Sinatra sang OId Man River and plenty of Othellos have been played by whites, so I'm not sure where you are going.
I agree with the decision though-- if you WANT to cast a Black man in Show Boat or Othello, that's a First Amendment protected decision.
I was going to make the same point, and also mention that Patrick Stewart appeared in a "photo-negative" Othello in which he played the lead and everyone else was black. Sinatra's performance of Old Man River was much praised at the time, especially by black people.
I myself (white) sang a parody version (same tune, changed lyrics) in a NYC Bar Association musical comedy roast of a prominent white lawyer. It went over well.
I don't think the burden is upon the theater company to show that [race-based selection] "changes the performance's message." I think the burden would be on the government to show that the decision was driven by racial animus.
It seems wrong that even after this decision, you infer a content-based standard of permissibility in the speech here.
There wasn't a government party in this case.
I think that under this decision, the Ku Klux Klan would be entitled to hire an all-white caste for its propaganda films, specifically to communicate, and hence unequivocally motivated by, a message of racial animus.
Sounds probable.
As long as the Ku Klux Klan is protected by the First Amendment, it would be absurd to suggest they include all races since it's obviously contrary to their beliefs and goals.
Yes. We saw that same rule discussed X months ago here, in the context of beauty pageants.
But of course, only the actual expression itself; you can't say that only white people can be key grips (whatever the fuck a key grip is), for instance.
You mean the gaffer can’t hire a best boy if he wants to?
"The key grip is the head of the grip department and supervises all of the grips on a film shoot."
https://www.filmconnection.com/blog/2019/10/29/what-does-a-key-grip-do/#:~:text=The%20key%20grip%20is%20the,grip's%20requests%20are%20carried%20out.
I mean, c'mon man!
Can't tell if you are agreeing or not. but males as females was done regularly in Shakespeare's time
Regardless, it was standard theatrical practice for men to portray women on stage in mannerism and in costume and for playwrights to write towards this expectation, just as it was convention for audiences to be fully aware of this practice.
To paraphrase, "Oft racist will shall racism mar."; They fired a black woman to avoid offending... black women!
Well, the legal conclusion seems right, anyway.
The lying and mendacious put down of whites was started by 1619 Project but other Blacks such as Henry Louis Gates got after her immediately.
"The historians John Thornton and Linda Heywood of Boston University estimate that 90 percent of those shipped to the New World were enslaved by Africans and then sold to European traders. The sad truth is that without complex business partnerships between African elites and European traders and commercial agents, the slave trade to the New World would have been impossible, at least on the scale it occurred."
It is crucial to Nikki's lying that American history starts with the first footsteps at Jamestown, a completely stupid and transparent attempt to be allowably racist because she is a Black and it's okay if Blacks are racist about Blacks
And without a market for slaves, people in Africa wouldn't have been enslaved by Africans or anyone else.
Lol! Like there wasn’t (And isn’t to this day.) a domestic market for slaves in Africa.
It probably did have some impact at the margins, to be sure; Less reason to just kill out of hand the losers in Africa’s perpetual wars, for instance.
But we may be quite confident that the white [Oh, no you don't, Android! Lower case, I insist!) man didn’t bring slavery to Africa, or keep it going.
I would love to know the mental gymnastics that went on in their minds to think that the solution to their perceived "white savior" problem was to remove a black actor.
Apparently it isn't being white and a savior that makes one a 'white savior', but instead that you had the gall to save non-whites. Whites aren't allowed to do that, it's racist!
Making the saved mixed race takes the edge off of that. Some kind of 'one drop' rule, I guess.
'Saving people that aren't white' isn't the problem, they're talking about a fictional trope, a well-worn cliche, a real Hollywood mainstay. It's what you get when you listen to critiques from people who aren't white and notice that kind of thing. See also 'Magic Negro.'
There's such a thing as being so obsessive about avoiding a trope that you just fall into its inverse.
Read the article. They're pretty much on display.
Okay, I suppose there's one more data point you might need but I would have hoped it was self-evident. If your perceived imbalance is between the stars and the chorus, it's cheaper to replace and retain a member of the chorus than one of your stars.
As usual, it’s not about doing what you can to eliminate racism. It’s about doing what you can to avoid being called racist. In this case, you’d have nowhere to hide from your own bullshit.
Suggestively and unintentionally discriminatory messages becomes more important than actual discrimination.
Here's a horrid thought: are African Americans props as white people shift themselves around on the chessboard of world domination? Meet the new boss; same as the old boss?
Captain Kirk, to Evil Computer: It is racial discrimination to fire a black person because they are black.
Computer: It is racial discrimination.
Kirk: We must fire the black person so we don't look like we are discriminating.
Computer: We must fire the black person so we don't look like we are discriminating, which is discrimination, which looks like discrimination, which does not look like discrimination discrim discr (fotzzzrzz!)
Kirk: Damn, I'm getting good at this!
Only for those wtih no command of history,like you , krayt
"The historians John Thornton and Linda Heywood of Boston University estimate that 90 percent of those shipped to the New World were enslaved by Africans and then sold to European traders. The sad truth is that without complex business partnerships between African elites and European traders and commercial agents, the slave trade to the New World would have been impossible, at least on the scale it occurred."
'Suggestively and unintentionally discriminatory messages becomes more important than actual discrimination.'
If we're talking about the performing arts, discussing 'messages' of any kind is built-in. That's seperate from whether there is racism in the performing arts. I can guarantee you 100% non-white people are acutely aware of disparities between artistic messages and hiring practices.
“ The court concluded, though, that defendant could go forward with her separate claim”
Pretty sure that is a typo for “plaintiff.”
Whoops, fixed, thanks!
303 Creative could potentially be distinguished on grounds that racical discrimination is a compelling interest category while other kinds of discrimination are lesser categories.
But 303 Creative itself didn’t rely on this distinction.
Actually, the 10th Circuit held that it was a First Amendment violation, but Colorado had a compelling interest in preventing discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.
The SCOTUS decision implicitly rejected that.
That’s consistent with what I said. Precedent had only found prohibiting private racial discrimination to represent a compelling interest. The 303 Creative court could have said “this isn’t racial discrimination, so we won’t speak about the compelling interest case and only talk about whether the interest here satisfies a lower-scrutiny standard.” But they didn’t go that route.
Justice Jackson’s hypothetical in the 303 Creative oral argument - my portrait studio only photographs “It’s a wonderful life” type Christmas scenes, and the presence of black people would interfere with the atmosphere I want to create for my photographs - comes particularly to mind.
IN fact THAT WASN'T EVEN THE REAL ISSUE
"Smith and ADF were prevented from running a background check on Stewart to verify the authenticity of his request because it could have put them in conflict with the existing law, he added.
“If she had declined a request, or sent out an email saying ‘hey, I don’t create websites for same-sex weddings,’ she would have violated the law,” he said. “It puts her at extreme risk to go and interrogate somebody for these requests. The whole reason she filed the lawsuit is to get clarity.”"
I’ll take “Show Stoppers” for $500, Alex
“Keeps you standing in front of your mirror, putting on and off one outfit after another until you finally decide to go back to bed, exhausted, because you’ll never be able to find something that offends no one.”
What is, “Wondering, ‘Does this chorus line make me look racist?’”
Correct.
Ha!
LOL
.
This might be enough to get one of the Volokh Conspirators back in that business!
(If his inheritance can afford it.)
This is a very good show, strongly recommend seeing it.
This comes to mind.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8WBH0AxrTSc&t=40m35s
Isn't that illegal or something? lol
The decision was almost a foregone conclusion. Otherwise, white actors could sue for discrimination for not being considered for the roles of slaves in “Roots”, “Amistad”, or “12 Years a Slave”.
On the other hand, isn’t this still in conflict with other decisions? I can remember when a TV show was sued because an actress got pregnant, and that didn’t fit the role they intended for her. She won $5 mil in damages. How was that not protected by the 1A?
http://www.cnn.com/SHOWBIZ/9712/22/melrose.lawsuit/
Easily distinguishable case. For one thing, the movie industry in general and that studio in particular had a long history of successfully accommodating pregnant leading ladies via carefully managed shooting angles, judicious use of body doubles, etc. The studio lost that case not because they can't make choices about who "fits" a role but because they set a clear double-standard of allowing some but forbidding Tylo.
The Tylo case is, however, an example of the principle that "no good deed goes unpunished".
The first amendment allows such "double standards."
I'm surprised that most story authors don't insist on enough control over movie versions of their works to prevent race-swapping that serves no purpose and/or makes the story ludicrous and thus casts undeserved bad PR on the original.
Then again, maybe this is why movie studios prefer source works that are in the public domain.
There are very very few authors with the market power to "insist" on anything about the movie adaptation.
They get paid for the studio getting that control.