Workers say sickness showed up early
Almost from the day the show opened on Broadway in 1994, some
of the performers said they began to get sick. By November
1995, several musicians were so concerned about their health
that they asked for -- and received -- respirators from
Disney's stage manager. Many continue to wear the masks at
work today to filter the air before they breathe it.
One actor, who asked not to be named, said that on stage, the
fumes dry out breathing passages.
"You try to manipulate your work so that you can hold your
breath until you leave the stage, which is something a lot of
us do," he said.
Environmental consultant Ed Olmstead was hired a year ago by
the musicians' union to investigate workers' complaints. He
found that the ventilation system drew air, including smoke
and gas from special effects, from the stage directly into
the orchestra pit.
A preliminary study conducted for the musicians' union
by researchers at the prestigious Mount Sinai School of
Medicine concluded that the show was to blame for the rash of
respiratory illnesses. Medical histories of the performers
showed that "they were doing fine until they began this
assignment at 'Beauty and the Beast,'" said Dr. Jacqueline
Moline, who conducted the study a year ago.
B A C K
Disney: Airborne fumes an issue of discomfort
Disney Theatrical, which produces the "Beauty and the Beast"
stage show, has said the performers may experience discomfort
from the special effects, but are not being harmed. General
Manager Alan Leevee said the show is so safe that he wouldn't
mind sitting in the orchestra pit.
"We've maintained that the conditions in the Palace Theater
conform with OSHA regulations, and that was our concern, that
we met with the requirements dictated by OSHA," he said.
He said Disney has taken steps to improve ventilation systems
in the theater, and has changed some of the show's special
effects to try to make the musicians more comfortable.
However, respirators were not a part of the changes, Leevee
said. While two stage managers said they had purchased
respirators for musicians, Leevee said Disney never
authorized such purchases.
He insisted that only the New York cast has complained
about the effects. But the entire cast from a traveling show
also complained about them in a letter to Disney more than a
year ago, which they all signed.
B A C K
Slow-moving OSHA investigation
Given the body of evidence supporting their claims, many
"Beauty and the Beast" employees have started to ask why the
government is not pursuing their claims more vigorously.
OSHA Assistant Area Director Brian Yellin said his agency was
never given the medical data the musicians' union gathered.
He also said that with OSHA's limited resources, the agency
must give priority to fatalities and catastrophes.
Therefore, the organization's first on-site inspection took
more than a year from the date the initial complaint was
filed. OSHA's final report is not expected before next year.
Whether Disney actually meets federal regulations depends on
how strictly OSHA, which watches worker health and safety,
interprets its own guidelines.
Yellin said that while a company may meet the letter of the
law, if a worker's health is in danger, a company like Disney
could still fall under a rule known as the catch-all or
general duty clause.
"The general duty clause requires an employer to provide a
workplace free of recognized safety and health hazards,"
Yellin said. The word "recognized" in that clause is open to
interpretation.
B A C K
The pros and cons of firework secrecy
The performers have had no luck in trying to find out the
composition of the fumes they are breathing.
M.P. Associates, the manufacturer of the special effects,
refused to provide a list of the ingredients to OSHA for fear
that their industry secrets will be stolen by other
manufacturers.
Meanwhile, OSHA officials said they tried to subpoena the
company to get the ingredients list, but the subpoenas were
refused. It was unclear what subsequent efforts were made.
Thaine Morris, president of M.P. Associates, said the
elements used to create the effects are safe, and that some
could even be eaten without harm.
But industrial hygienist Monona Rossel of the Arts, Crafts
and Theater Safety organization said that pyrotechnics
manufacturers have never done any studies to find out what
the explosions' byproducts are.
"You've turned these poor people, really, into lab rats," she
said.
John Conklin of the American Pyrotechnics Association said
fireworks can cause more than discomfort.
"There's no smoke that is designed for human inhalation, so
any smoke can irritate the lungs," Conklin said.
B A C K
Not even flashy effects may save Broadway
Disney and other Broadway producers may be reluctant to drop
the glitz that special effects provide to stage shows like
"Beauty and the Beast," because they are struggling to
compete with the popularity of ever-more technical and flashy
special effects in movies.
Yet a study this summer by a Boston-based consultant found
that the popularity of Broadway is declining -- compared to
television, movies, sports and gambling -- even with the
pyrotechnics.
Instead of big bangs, Rossel advised, theater should return
to the basics. And engineering consultant Harry Herman, who
has studied the health effects of theatrical fogs, echoed her
sentiments, saying Broadway should simply reemphasize good
acting.
But Moline said the best reason to stop or at least change
the effects is to preserve the health of those being exposed.
"Judging from what we know now," she said, "there should be a
better way to have special effects in theaters that do not
have any potential to have health effects for the workers,
the performers, the stage hands, anyone in the theater
environment who has to be there eight times a week doing
their show."
B A C K