The
actors who provide the voices for the cartoon characters on the long-running
TV show "The Simpsons" have stopped work in a bid to force
a settlement of lengthy contract renewal talks, Daily Variety reported
in its Thursday edition.
The Hollywood trade paper said the six actors have not shown up for
two script readings in the past few weeks, holding up production on
the hit satire's upcoming 16th season.
It
quoted insiders as saying each cast member is asking for about $360,000
an episode, or $8 million for a 22-episode season. Each member currently
earns $125,000 an episode. The highest-paid star in TV is Ray Romano,
who reportedly earns between $1.7 million and $2 million per episode
of his Emmy-winning series "Everybody Loves Raymond."
The
three-year contracts for Dan Castellaneta (Homer), Hank Azaria (Moe,
Apu, Comic Book Guy), Harry Shearer (Mr. Burns and others), Yeardley
Smith (Lisa), Julie Kavner (Marge) and Nancy Cartwright (Bart) expired
several months ago, and their representatives have been negotiating
new ones to no avail, Daily Variety said.
The
last "Simpsons" work dispute was in 1998, at a time when
the actors were making $30,000 per episode. The show's producer, Twentieth
Century Fox TV, hired casting directors in five cities to replace
most of them before both sides worked out a new deal and resumed production.