By Orlinda Worthington YELLOWSTONE PUBLIC RADIO
Leaders of the Hollywood union SAG-AFTRA, representing 160,000 television and movie actors, voted this afternoon to strike.
As Yellowstone Radio’s Orlinda Worthington reports, this latest picket line, plus an already striking Writers Guild, is striking a blow to Montana’s film industry.
1923, a large-scale production filmed on location in Butte–It’s a prequel to “Yellowstone,” filmed near Hamilton.
Tina Buckingham is the Montana casting director for 1923. It was set to begin filming again June first, for six months. The Writer’s Guild strike canceled that.
“That was a huge income for me. In addition, there were two substantial movies that I’ve lost and then a couple other smaller projects,” she said.
Buckingham says strikes are debilitating not only for her business, but for countless others.
“It’s devastating to this industry because it trickles down. All of the food people, the restaurants, the people that would work on the movie. The lumber companies for building sets, the city for using the streets and the wranglers for the horses and it goes on and on and on. The amount of money lost is tremendous,” according to Buckingham.
Richard Gray is a co-owner of Yellowstone Film Ranch in Paradise Valley. I caught up with him on the road. He told me three projects at the film studio will be canceled by the actor’s strike. Even so, Gray thinks an actor’s strike could help bring both unions to a quicker resolution.
Source : Big Sky