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Get to Know AFL-CIO's Affiliates: Actors' Equity

Actors' Equity

This is the next post in our series that will take a deeper look at each of our affiliates. The series will run weekly until we've covered all 63 of our affiliates. Next up is Actors' Equity Association (Equity).

Name of Union: Actors' Equity Association

Mission: Actors’ Equity Association is a national labor union, founded for the purpose of negotiating strong agreements that protect the wages, hours and working conditions of its members; enforcing those agreements; organizing new work opportunities for professional stage managers and actors, and pursuing appropriate legislation on matters affecting their profession. Actors’ Equity Association values diversity and inclusion, and is aggressive and responsive in seeking equity for all its members. Furthermore, Equity seeks to lead the industry as a voice for the values it has adopted.

Current Leadership of Union: The current president of Equity is Brooke Shields, who was elected in May 2024. She comes to union leadership with a long career that has ranged from acting and modeling to writing and entrepreneurship. Shields’ career in the spotlight began early, modeling for print ads before her first birthday and on the runway by the time she was three years old. She attracted national attention as an actor at age 11 when she starred in Louis Malle’s “Pretty Baby,” and she cemented her icon status with “The Blue Lagoon” when she was just 15 and “Endless Love” the following year. She stepped away from the spotlight to attend Princeton University, where she graduated cum laude with a degree in French literature. Her Broadway debut came in 1994, when she stepped into the role of Rizzo in a revival of “Grease,” for which she received a Theatre World Award for “Outstanding Debut on Broadway.” She has subsequently returned in “Chicago,” “Wonderful Town,” “Cabaret” and “The Addams Family.” She made her directorial debut with the Hollywood Bowl production of “Chicago.” In addition to her theater and film achievements, Shields has maintained a successful and critically acclaimed television career. She is also the author of a number of books. Shields recently unveiled her latest entrepreneurial project Commence, a hair and scalp health brand that targets women 40-plus. 

Al Vincent Jr. serves as executive director.

Current Number of Members: More than 51,000.

Members Work As: Singers, actors, dancers, and stage managers

Industries Represented: Equity has more than 40 contracts in the theater industry, from Broadway to dinner theater to immersive and experimental productions. The union also represents cast members at both Walt Disney World and Disneyland Resort.

History: In the early 1900s, theater acting was alluded to with the phrase “life upon the wicked stage,” as actors and stage managers were forced to rehearse without pay, left stranded throughout the country when shows closed on the road, required to pay for their own costumes and worse. In 1913, 112 actors in New York decided they'd had enough. They formed a union that day and adopted the name suggested by William Courtleigh, Actors’ Equity Association. In 1919, the new union was recognized by the American Federation of Labor and shortly thereafter Equity launched the first actors’ strike in American theater history. During the strike, chorus and ensemble members also went on strike and formed Chorus Equity Association, which would later formally merge with Actors' Equity in 1955. At the conclusion of the strike, the theater producers signed a five-year deal that met most of Equity's demands.

Equity has long fought for civil rights. In 1947, Equity resolved that its members would not play at the National Theatre in Washington, D.C., when the theater banned Black audience members. This was an early bold stance that not only worked (the theater closed and reopened with a nondiscrimination policy), it set the tone that Equity would follow to this day, fighting against discrimination in the theater, both on stage and off, and increasing employment opportunities for actors and stage managers of color, women, seniors and those with disabilities. The union has consistently fought to raise wages, expand benefits and protections, preserve historic and advance other reforms that benefit actors and stage managers in the theater and working people broadly.

Current Campaigns: Equity is actively organizing new workplaces, both theatrical and “theatrical-adjacent,” such as Disneyland, Casa Bonita, and Chippendales—you can contact an Equity organizer to learn more about how to Organize Your Workplace. Equity is celebrating 2025 as A Chorus Year, marking the 75th anniversary of The Legacy Robe, the 70th anniversary of the merger of Chorus Equity Association with Actors’ Equity Association and the 10th anniversary of Swing Day. Equity's Diversity and Inclusion efforts include reports on Hiring Bias and Wage Gaps in the theatre industry, as well as Policy Recommendation Papers shared to promote best practices in diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging. Equity's Student Outreach Presentations allow students to hear information and experiences from a union actor or stage manager to help pre-professionals learn more about the union of professional actors and stage managers as they consider their career options.

Community Efforts: The Actors' Equity Foundation provides grants to nonprofit theaters and institutions serving the arts community, offers workshops and seminars for professional development, and presents annual awards honoring Equity members for their contributions to the industry. The Actors' Equity Association Political Action Committee pursues the political interests of Equity members nationwide. The Theatre Authority is a nonprofit organization that administers and regulates the work of union members at charitable benefit performances. Equity also supports many service organizations, including Actors Federal Credit Union, Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS and the Entertainment Community Fund.

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