Tag: Safety

White LGBTQIA+ Early Career Stage ManagerWhite LGBTQIA+ Early Career Stage Manager

“A 16+ hour day might sound absurd, but it was my lived experience when in tech for a new musical during undergrad when SMs averaged 17-18 hours in the building for 10/12s. On average, I find a 15-16 hour day to be the norm for a scheduled 10/12.”

“The more 10/12s in a process, the more time stage managers sacrifice from their sleep and self care patterns, leading to greater fatigue as time goes on.”

“10/12s also mean less safety. Those final hours of rehearsal, especially the last hour, are when people get sloppy, injuries happen, tech is less efficient, and everyone’s patience starts to wear thin. This is the effect of exhaustion, not of laziness.”

“According to most (all?) AEA contracts, actors need a 12 hour turnaround from when their call is finished one evening and when they can be called back the next day. Why are stage managers not given the same consideration, taking into account the extra hours we all work but aren’t reported?”

AnonymousAnonymous

“And there was one night where it was a few minutes to the time we supposed to be released for the day but the director insisted that we run the scene that was just teched before leave. There clearly wasn’t enough time to do this and everyone was dead tired but our stage manager did not stop it. This scene required a transition into another scene where a multi-hundred pound living room set had to be hung maybe 40-50 feet in the air. Now because everyone was rushing to get this done since we were clearly the out of time for that day’s 10/12, the set piece was not hung properly and almost dropped on a cast member who thankfully had moved out of the way in time.”