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Directors Guild of America

 
Marketing Dictionary: Directors Guild of America (DGA)

Independent union, founded in 1959 by a merger of the Screen Directors Guild of America and the Radio and Television Directors Guild; headquartered in Hollywood, California. The Directors Guild of America represents directors, assistant directors, floor managers, and some production assistants. The union functions primarily in the negotiation of work agreements for its members. It also sets the minimum wage (scale) for directors and stipulates acceptable working and traveling conditions for its members. Additionally, the dga has established clearly defined guidelines for the director's creative rights on a production. More than 10,000 members of the DGA are involved with theatrical, industrial, educational, and documentary films as well as television, radio, video, and commercial productions. The Artists' Rights Foundation was created by the DGA in 1990 to protect artists' works worldwide. The DGA can be reached at www.dga.org.

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Wikipedia: Directors Guild of America
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DGA
Dga-logo.png
Directors Guild of America
Founded 1936
Members 13,459 (2007)
Country United States
Key people Taylor Hackford, President
Jay D. Roth, National Executive Director
Office location Hollywood, Los Angeles, California
Website www.dga.org
Director Guild of America building on Sunset Boulevard.

Directors Guild of America (DGA) is the labor union which represents the interests of film and television directors in the United States motion picture industry. Founded as the Screen Directors Guild in 1936, the group became the DGA in 1960.

Contents

Overview

As a union that seeks to organize an individual profession, rather than multiple professions across an industry, the DGA is a craft union. It represents directors, assistant directors, stage managers, and production associates in television, and directors, assistant directors, unit production managers, technical coordinators, and location managers (New York & Chicago only) in film as well as similar positions in television commercials production.

The Guild has various training programs whereby successful applicants are placed in various productions and can gain experience working in the film or television industry.

As of 2005, the guild had about 13,000 members. The DGA headquarters are located on Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood, with satellite offices in New York and Chicago.

The agreements signed between the Guild and film production companies make various stipulations covering pay and working conditions for Guild members, and require that all those employed in the relevant fields on a film made by that company are Guild members. Guild members are generally prevented from working for companies that have not signed an agreement with the DGA. This sometimes leads production companies which have no such agreement to form new companies, purely for the purpose of making a particular film, which do then sign an agreement with the DGA.

Not all Hollywood directors are DGA members. Notable directors such as George Lucas, Quentin Tarantino, and Robert Rodriguez have refused membership or resigned from the guild over specific differences. Those who aren't members of the guild are unable to direct for the larger movie studios, which are signatories to the guild's agreements that all directors must be guild members.

Other than wages and basic working condition the DGA has a particular role in protecting the creative rights of the film director. Such protections that the guild provides include defining the director's role, guarding the key concept of "one director to a picture" and the right to prepare a director's cut or edit. Generally each of these protections is to help offset the power that producers can have over a director during the filmmaking process. The Guild is also notable for having blocked the attempts of non-DGA members from participating in directing various projects, notably stopping Quentin Tarantino from directing an episode of the X-Files entitled 'Never Again'.

The rule that a film can only have one single director, adopted to avoid producers and actors lobbying for a director's credit, is strongly defended by the DGA and is only waived for recognized directorial teams (as determined by the DGA) such as the Wachowski brothers, Hughes brothers, Brothers Strause, and the Coen brothers. The Coens for years divided credit, with Ethan taking producing credit, Joel taking directing credit, and both of them sharing the writing credit (even though the two of them shared all three duties between themselves) until The Ladykillers. For instance, the DGA would not recognize Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller as a directorial "team" for Sin City, which resulted in Rodriguez quitting the DGA so that Miller would receive director's credit.

Presidents of the Screen Directors Guild and the DGA

See also

External links

Coordinates: 34°05′51″N 118°21′45″W / 34.097613°N 118.362413°W / 34.097613; -118.362413


 
 

 

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