Posts tagged with "Brooke Shields"

Meet one of America’s newest union leaders: Brooke Shields

September 3, 2024

Brooke Shields has taken over America’s stage actors’ union at a moment of crisis.

While show-goers have flocked back to concerts and sporting events, live theater attendance still lags pre-pandemic times—sidelining the industry longer than others shuttered by the coronavirus pandemic, reports The Washington Post.

The storied Actors’ Equity Association unionrepresenting 51,000 stage actors and managers from Broadway to San Francisco—also is fighting a high-profile battle for its first contract for Disneyland Resort performers in Anaheim, California. And there’s an ongoing strike against theaters for higher pay for shows in development.

Plus, the union’s top legislative priority is to get Congress to rewrite tax policy so that unreimbursed business expenses are tax deductible again—a 2017 change that hit the industry hard.

“It’s usually money that is the factor that gets us shafted,” Shields, 59, said in an interview with The Washington Post. “What I have come to see is that those that can [afford it] really seem to give the least at times.”

It may seem surprising that the model and actress would step up to take on such a demanding unpaid position. Indeed, Shields won the union’s highest office in May, beating out two more seasoned union activists. But she says she plans to use her celebrity to put money into actors’ pockets, saying that the position “was something that I could give my energy to more than anything,” especially as her two daughters left home for college last month.

Shields has been in the spotlight for nearly half a century, first becoming a card-carrying union member with the Screen Actors Guild around age 11, during the filming of the controversial film “Pretty Baby.” More recently, she has starred in a top Netflix movie, launched a hair-care company, written books and been the subject of a Hulu documentary chronicling her experience of sexual objectification as a child and teenager.

Since 29, Shields has appeared in five Broadway musicals. She replaced leading actors as Betty Rizzo in “Grease,” Roxie Hart in “Chicago,” and Morticia Addams in “The Addams Family.”

“It wasn’t a popular idea,” Shields recalls, but Actor’s Equity backed her through it. She’s also had roles in regional theater and off-Broadway productions.

This spring, fresh off last year’s strike victories for Hollywood screen actors and writers, Shields ran for the newly open president’s seat, hopeful that she could use her platform to “ask for more for the members.”

“I felt that [our union] needed to be … seen as formidable,” Shields said. “I can respectfully shout out things that need to change. … There has to be good value for [fame]. Otherwise you’re probably just getting a table at a restaurant.”

The years leading up to the pandemic shattered records for attendance and earnings on Broadway, with blockbusters hits like “Hamilton” and “The Lion King” grossing more than $100 million in a season. But the pandemic reversed those fortunes, with many Actor’s Equity members still unable to meet their pre-pandemic working hours or qualify for health insurance.

“A lot of people still have not recovered from the pandemic,” Shields said. “We have people with [medical] treatments that they need to be continuing. … So they’re forced to have two and sometimes three jobs. A salary on Broadway is almost impossible to live on in today’s New York City … and you’ve got regional theater all over the country that has to be heard.”

Shields plans to spread the message that arts and entertainment are an economic driver—not only in big cities like New York and Chicago, but also in much smaller cities like Birmingham, Alabama, and Grand Rapids, Michigan.

“When it comes to politics, it’s always interesting to me how the arts and education are the easiest ones to cut, Shields said. “We can’t lose sight of that; otherwise we become the type of country we don’t want to be.”

“I look at unions as parents,” Shields said. “When your voice isn’t necessarily strong enough or going to be heard, they can step in and speak for you. I’ve been a member since I was a little girl. And my mom would say, if I can’t help you, we can go to [the union], and they will.”

Research contact: @washingtonpost

With ‘Commence,’ Brooke Shields hopes to help women feel optimistic about aging

May 10, 2024

Brooke Shields defined beauty for a generation of women, but she has never let her beauty define her. While many of us watched her grow up in front of the camera, as an adult, she’s pursued myriad interests without people’s preconceived notions slowing her down. Now, the actress, mother, model, and author is adding another title to her resume—entrepreneur, reports WWD.

In June, Shields will launch Commence, a hair care line formulated for women 40-plus that was born out of the findings of Beginning Is Now, the community-centered content platform she launched during the pandemic.

While she has been in the public eye since the age of 11 months, for Shields, who will turn 59 this year, the move marks a whole new chapter.

While menopause has become a hot topic in the last few years—and the number of celebrity beauty brands has exploded, too—Commence is neither, says Shields.

Instead, her goal is to give voice to women at a time in their lives when it seems like not very many people are listening. “When I hit this age, I had a sense of accomplishment, but also this excitement that there is more to look forward to,” she said. “I wanted this optimism to be something that we all shared with regards to how we age.”

Shields says she originally started Beginning Is Now because she wanted to understand how other women were experiencing the physical and emotional changes that come with middle age. The camaraderie that resulted surprised—and inspired—her. The platform, too, will be rebranded as Commence.

“Typically women are described as being petty and jealous and bitchy and backstabbing,” she said, “and this was the opposite. You saw these women reveling in each other’s uniqueness and strength and diversity.

“This period of life is a beginning. It’s a call to action,” continued Shields, during a wide-ranging conversation with WWD’s ‘Beauty Inc’ in early April. “This is about looking at your life in its entirety and saying, ‘How do I want to walk through this period?’

With Beginning Is Now, Shields built a community one-million strong of women, who were attracted not to her celebrity but to her candor. “People want to count us out. It’s not, ‘I am woman hear me roar.’ It’s, ‘I am woman, hear me more,’” Shields says.

Indeed, Shields is giving her fans a lot to hear, whether with a new Netflix rom-com, “Mother of the Bride,” which was released on May 9—or with Commence.

Her timing couldn’t be better, says Madonna Badger, an advertising and brand consultant who has worked across myriad brands in beauty and beyond, and recently created the Futura Collective with former Grey New York CEO Debby Reiner.

“For those of us who came of age in the ’80s and ’90s, Brooke Shields was one of our major cultural icons. It was a time when everyone had to be perfect and skinny; and at first, that is what Brooke seemed to be,” said Badger. “Then, she opened up and we got to hear how her life was really.”

A 2023 documentary, “Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields,” detailed the ups and downs of Shields’ life, including her mother’s alcoholism, the objectification of Shields as a sex symbol when she was barely a teen, and a rocky first marriage to tennis star Andre Agassi.

“We learned that her life was hard, and that she had gone on to own her own narrative at a moment when all of us as women are reclaiming our own,” Badger continued. “It’s very empowering. We see ourselves in that story.”

Shields hopes that that level of connection, combined with the insights gleaned from conversations and content on Beginning Is Now, will help Commence cut through a cluttered hair care landscape.

“This is me learning who I am today and encouraging people to revel in their own individuality and diversity,” Shields says.

Research contact: @wwd