SAG-AFTRA Looking Into ‘All The Money In The World’ Pay Disparity Claims

Films

Sony/TriStar Pictures

EXCLUSIVE: SAG-AFTRA is looking into reports that Michelle Williams was paid peanuts compared to Mark Wahlberg to re-shoot scenes in All the Money in the World. The new footage was necessary afterChristopher Plummer was brought in to the Ridley Scott-directed movie to replace Kevin Spacey, who was fired amid allegations of past sexual misconduct.

“We’re looking into it,” said a source at the actors union, who noted that the guild’s contract only covers minimums that actors can be paid. If Williams was paid at least scale for the reshoots, there’s nothing SAG-AFTRA can do about it, and anything Wahlberg may have negotiated above scale is OK with the union. The fact they’re both represented by the same talent agency — WME — could raise questions, if true, about fair and equal representation.

USA Today reported Tuesday that Wahlberg was paid $1.5 million to re-shoot scenes with Plummer, and that Williams was only paid her per diem – less than $1,000. If true, that could be a violation of the union’s contract if she wasn’t working on a flat-fee deal.

Deadline learned today that before any of the reshoots occurred, Wahlberg took an 80% cut on what he normally earns ($15 million-plus a movie) in order to work with Scott and because it was a potential awards contender. Much of the film’s foreign sales hung on Wahlberg’s attachment.Neither Wahlberg nor Williams nor co-star Timothy Hutton had reshoot clauses built into their contracts. When it was quickly decided that Imperative Entertainment was going to finance reshoots (Sony did not finance) after Plummer replaced Spacey, Wahlberg was already working on his next project Mile 22. He had the ability to negotiate since he already had taken a pay cut. Williams intrinsically wanted the project to work and waived her fee. Those close to the production have argued to Deadline that the pay disparity wasn’t a gender issue, rather that the unprecedented reshoots to meet a December 25 theatrical release forced a rush situation. Reshoots are complicated in production, based on matters like contract days and talent’s willingness to participate. Nonetheless in these #MeToo times, this an embarrassing situation for Imperative Entertainment to be in, as well as WME as there’s been a great call for gender equality in Hollywood. Following the Sony hack during the fourth quarter of 2014, emails revealed that Sony had paid American Hustle female stars Amy Adams and Jennifer Lawrence considerably less than male stars Bradley Cooper, Jeremy Renner and Christian Bale.

Christopher Plummer Ridley Scott
REX/Shutterstock

Scott told USA Today last month that the reshoot was made possible because nobody but Plummer and the crew got paid. Scott said he wasn’t paid for the extra work, and neither were any of the other actors. “Everyone did it for nothing,” he said, adding, “I refused to get paid.”

Then, when asked if the actors didn’t get paid either, he said: “No, they all came in free. Christopher had to get paid. But Michelle, no. Me, no.”

USA Today reported it had since learned that Wahlberg’s team had actually negotiated a deal in which he would be paid $1.5 million for his reshoot, and that Williams wasn’t told.

If Scott and Williams were working on flat deals that pay the same even if a shoot goes longer than expected, their unions – the DGA and SAG-AFTRA – probably wouldn’t be able to claim a contract violation. But the optics of paying the lead actor 1500 times more than the lead actress, if true, would be the latest example of the age-old pay gap between actors and actresses.

WME and reps for Scott, Williams and Wahlberg did not return calls for comment.

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