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Screen Actors Guild

Screen Actors Guild
SAG logo.png
Founded July 12, 1933 (1933-07-12)
Date dissolved March 30, 2012 (2012-03-30)
Merged into SAG-AFTRA
Members 129,092 ("active" members)
54,690 (other members; withdrawn/suspended)
(before merger, 2012)
Affiliation AAAA (AFL-CIO), FIA
Key people
  • Gabrielle Carteris, President
  • David White, National Executive Director
  • Amy Aquino, Secretary-Treasurer
  • Ned Vaughn, 1st Vice President
  • Mike Hodge, 2nd Vice President
  • David Hartley Margolin, 3rd Vice President
Office location Hollywood, California
Country United States
Website www.sagaftra.org

The Screen Actors Guild (SAG) was an American labor union which represented over 100,000 film and television principal and background performers worldwide. On March 30, 2012, the union leadership announced that the SAG membership voted to merge with the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA) to create SAG-AFTRA.

According to SAG's Mission Statement, the Guild sought to: negotiate and enforce collective bargaining agreements that establish equitable levels of compensation, benefits, and working conditions for its performers; collect compensation for exploitation of recorded performances by its members, and provide protection against unauthorized use of those performances; and preserve and expand work opportunities for its members.

The Guild was founded in 1933 in an effort to eliminate exploitation of actors in Hollywood who were being forced into oppressive multi-year contracts with the major movie studios that did not include restrictions on work hours or minimum rest periods, and often had clauses that automatically renewed at the studios' discretion. These contracts were notorious for allowing the studios to dictate the public and private lives of the performers who signed them, and most did not have provisions to allow the performer to end the deal.

The Screen Actors Guild was associated with the Associated Actors and Artistes of America (AAAA), which is the primary association of performer's unions in the United States. AAAA is affiliated with the AFL–CIO. SAG claimed exclusive jurisdiction over motion picture performances, and shared jurisdiction of radio, television, Internet, and other new media with its sister union AFTRA, with which it shared 44,000 dual members. Internationally, the SAG was affiliated with the International Federation of Actors.


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