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Robert Lord uses paint to touch up a sign in the arrivals area during preparations for the 57th annual Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills, California in this January 22, 2000 file photo. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
LOS ANGELES, Jan. 4 (Xinhua) -- A shadow has been cast over the upcoming Golden Globe Awards show after the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) made an announcement Friday that its members would not attend the show either as presenters or award nominees, in support of striking writers.
The SAG members are in "unanimous agreement" that
they would not appear at the show because actors do not want to cross the
Writers Guild of America (WGA) picket lines, SAG President Alan Rosenberg said.
"After considerable outreach to Golden Globe actor
nominees and their representatives over the past several weeks, there appears to
be unanimous agreement that these actors will not cross WGA picket lines to
appear on the Golden Globe Awards as recipients or presenters," Rosenberg said.
"We applaud our members for this remarkable show of solidarity for striking
Writers Guild of America writers."
Officials from the Hollywood Foreign Press
Association (HFPA), which sponsors the Golden Globes, were not immediately
available for comment.
Attorneys for the association began negotiating with
the WGA last week in the hope of striking an interim deal that would permit
union-member writers to work on the awards show -- one of the first major events
of Hollywood's awards season.
The WGA insisted that its members intend to picket
outside the awards ceremony scheduled for Jan. 13 at the Beverly Hilton in Los
Angeles.
The HFPA had earlier petitioned the WGA for a waiver
that wouldhave allowed writers to work on the show, but the WGA rejected
therequest.
The guild also turned down a request from the Academy
of MotionPicture Arts and Sciences for a waiver in connection with the use of
clips from motion pictures and past Oscar shows for the Academy Awards telecast.
The strike began Nov. 5 over a dispute focusing on
residual payments to writers for work distributed via the Internet, video iPods,
cell phones and other new media.
Negotiations to end the strike broke down on Dec. 7
over the WGA's demand to extend union jurisdiction over so-called unscripted
series and animated programs, and to permit work stoppages when other unions go
on strike.