Brooke Shields Has Worn Many Hats. Now She’s a Labor Boss.

brooke shields has worn many hats. now she’s a labor boss.

Brooke Shields, the recently elected president of Actors’ Equity Association.

Brooke Shields has a new office. It’s empty, and she hasn’t figured out how she wants to furnish it, or even how often she’ll be there, but it’s a sign of her new and unexpected status, as president of Actors’ Equity Association, the labor union representing theater actors and stage managers in the United States.

Shields’s candidacy was a surprise, even to herself. But when Kate Shindle, who had led the union for nine years, announced in April that she was stepping down, Shields’s music director suggested she consider the opening, and soon enough, she had tossed her hat in the ring, and in May she won the vote by members, defeating two more-seasoned labor activists. She’s already led her first meeting of the union’s council, and came away realizing she has a lot to learn, starting with parliamentary procedure.

Shields, of course, is one of those people who has been famous for so long, and in so many ways, that even she can’t remember a different time. She was a childhood model, a preteen movie star, a sex object and an icon of beauty, all before she went off to college (Princeton, thank you very much). In the years since, she has acted onscreen and onstage, has written books, has spoken widely, particularly about depression, and has become a symbol and a subject for an evolving discussion about how women and girls have been sexualized by the entertainment and fashion industries.

She has had five roles on Broadway, each time replacing a principal in an already-running show (“Grease,” “Chicago,” “Cabaret,” “Wonderful Town” and “The Addams Family”). She has also performed occasionally at regional theaters (“The Exorcist” at the Geffen in Los Angeles, for example) and Off Broadway (in the star vehicles “Love Letters,” “The Vagina Monologues,” and “Love, Loss, and What I Wore,” among others).

Now, at 59, she is thinking a lot about middle age. She is recovering from a foot surgery that attracted attention when she wore Crocs (yellow, matching her dress) to the Tony Awards. She has just started a new beauty business, Commence, with hair-care products developed for women over 40; she is writing another book, also aging-focused; and she is seeking new ways to harness the celebrity she can never shed. That’s where Equity comes in — she says actors and stage managers were extraordinarily supportive of her when she needed to jump quickly into an unfamiliar show. Now she wants to give back.

brooke shields has worn many hats. now she’s a labor boss.

Shields (center as Brent Barrett’s ventriloquist’s dummy at a 2006 anniversary party) has had five roles on Broadway, including playing Roxie Hart in “Chicago.”

Over lunch at B’artusi, an Italian restaurant in the West Village, she talked about her time in theater, and her crash course as a labor leader. These are edited excerpts from the conversation.

How’s the foot?

It’s both feet. It’s going to be OK. This is my sixth surgery. I really blew my feet out on Broadway, from dancing in shows — being thrown in, with no training and raked stages and jamming my feet into the shoes and abusing them. I’m sure it’s hereditary too — it’s probably one more thing I can blame my mother for.

You just started a company, you’re acting, and the Equity presidency doesn’t pay. Why add this position to the mix?

There’s something that I grapple with and have struggled with my entire life: being a public persona. You have this thing you have to live with, and it’s constant. So how do I turn it into something I don’t resent? How do I use Brooke Shields — that thing that is separate from me, that’s a job, and is a commodity of some sort — to make a difference for a community that’s given nothing but love and acceptance to me when it was not cool to cast somebody who had zero Broadway training? My experience with Broadway, and regional theater, and Off Broadway, is this welcoming community. Those are the people that had my back.

Union activism is new for you.

This is going to be a huge learning curve for me. My first time chairing a meeting was something out of Monty Python. I hadn’t learned the vernacular. Robert’s Rules? I’ll get to know them! But if that’s my weakest place, then I’m OK, ’cause I can learn it, or someone who can do it better can do it and I can sit right by them.

You don’t like conflict?

That’s going to be hard for me. In this stage of my life, I’m letting go of the tug of war rope. I don’t like to fight; I like to discuss.

But you’ve taken a job where you’re going to have to ask producers for things they don’t want to give. It’s adversarial.

I’m ready. I’ve had to do it in my company — letting people go, saying no. That’s a skill to practice and learn.

The union just announced a strike against developmental work, saying negotiations were not making progress. What’s the issue?

People aren’t being compensated fairly.

Also, Disney’s theme park performers just voted to unionize with Equity.

We have to figure out what they want in their contracts, and then we have to put forward people who can be good in that negotiation.

What’s your sense of how theater is doing?

It’s not fully recovered, obviously, from the pandemic. But it’s really great to see how many new shows there were. There’s something for everybody. You can have a “Merrily” and a “Stereophonic” and an “Illinoise” and “Appropriate” and “Mother Play.” It’s refreshing that it’s not one note.

Something I often hear from readers is that they wonder why there can’t be more streaming of staged shows.

That’s a tricky one. The part of theater that’s theater is being in person. There’s a different performance every night.

What’s the first show you remember seeing?

My mom took me to “The Fantasticks” and then Mummenschanz. Those were the big ones. And then it was “Jesus Christ Superstar.” I was 9 when I saw “Grease” on Broadway and during the preshow there was a hula hoop contest and the winner of the hula hoop contest would get to meet the cast. By the grace of something, I ended up winning it. And my mom, from that day on, whenever I had a moment of doubt, she would say, “Remember the hula hoop.”

And when was the first time you performed onstage?

I was in one scene in “After the Fall” [a 1974 teleplay]. I walk on, I go sit on Christopher Plummer’s lap, and then I walk off. I was like 8.

You were always doing film and commercial work. Did you do theater at college?

I did every Triangle Show [The Princeton Triangle Club is a musical comedy troupe] in college. I tried out for the dance company, and I didn’t get in my freshman year. That summer I took four or five dance classes a day. I went back and got into the dance company.

Are you going to continue to act while leading the union?

As long as I’m wanted. I’ve got a couple of things right now that I’m working on. Netflix did really well with the last movie that I did. I have a show in development. What would be ideal is to be on a show here in New York because then I could do it all. And never sleep.

What do you want your legacy to be?

I hope I’m able to carry through many of the little changes that can make a bigger difference, and that I leave the association feeling kinder and more inclusive and not angry or fractured.

OTHER NEWS

38 minutes ago

Arsenal open talks with Bologna over Italy star Riccardo Calafiori as Mikel Arteta looks to bolster his defensive options with Chelsea also interested

38 minutes ago

Andy Murray warns that he and his brother Jamie will be no pushovers in the men's doubles at Wimbledon and they've got bigger plans on his SW19 farewell: They want to win it all

38 minutes ago

Man City set to be without star player for start of the Premier League season as Pep Guardiola's plans take a hit

38 minutes ago

Video: Gareth Southgate considers making MAJOR tactical switch for Switzerland quarter-final showdown as England boss aims to finally get his side into gear for do-or-die tie

43 minutes ago

Homecoming? Why Luka's Mavs Should Sign 'DSJ'

44 minutes ago

Lesufi to announce his cabinet today

44 minutes ago

Raiders poll: Would you want Hunter Renfrow back?

44 minutes ago

Romance scams cost consumers $1.14 billion last year. It's a 'more insidious' fraud, expert says

44 minutes ago

Constellation delivers beer profits, but weakness in wine prompts a downgrade

44 minutes ago

German pundit slams key England star for doing 'nothing' at Euro 2024

44 minutes ago

How Andy Reid’s beliefs in Jesus Christ and a second chance for Michael Vick guide the Kansas City Chiefs

44 minutes ago

Analyst Says Steelers Rookie Tackle Troy Fautanu Has Most Pressure On Him

44 minutes ago

Legendary iPhone designer Jony Ive opens up about what it was like working with Steve Jobs

44 minutes ago

Emma Raducanu produces statement straight sets victory against Elise Mertens to advance to the third round of the women's singles at Wimbledon

44 minutes ago

Post-pandemic Paris Olympics signal a return to ‘normal' for athletes and fans

44 minutes ago

Team USA men's and women's basketball jerseys drop online ahead of 2024 Olympics

52 minutes ago

Biden Comments On Possibly Stepping Aside Send Cable News Into A Frenzy; NYT Says POTUS “Cleareyed” About Hurdles Going Forward 

54 minutes ago

Video: Savannah Chrisley reveals mom Julie's heartbreaking words to her after her tax evasion sentence was overturned

54 minutes ago

Video: British DJ is horrified when his Ibiza night out with Jason Derulo and Joel Corry results in an ASTRONOMICAL bar tab - as fans fume at his 'boasting'

54 minutes ago

Gareth Southgate considers making MAJOR tactical switch for Switzerland quarter-final showdown as England boss aims to finally get his side into gear for do-or-die tie

54 minutes ago

Costco pays $2M in false advertising lawsuit - could you be eligible for a payout?

55 minutes ago

Sergio Perez living in a ‘nightmare’ with his chances of staying in F1 questioned

55 minutes ago

AWS unveils $50m GenAI Impact Initiative for public sector

55 minutes ago

3-Team Blockbuster Trade Idea Between Lakers, Heat, And Bulls: LeBron James Would Approve This In A Heartbeat

55 minutes ago

RTÉ boss pushes back against claims that station is to 'privatise' production of Fair City

55 minutes ago

Water Minister Pemmy Majodina's conscientious tongue-twister moment has Parliament in stitches

55 minutes ago

Ford sales growth slows as CDK cyberattack rattles auto industry

55 minutes ago

The Unexpected Downside of Saving for Retirement in a Roth IRA

55 minutes ago

'I come in with my hurleys, get thrown a nappy and a bottle. I love it, that's my switch off'

55 minutes ago

This Pennsylvania 60-year-old has $0 in savings and $26K in consumer debt, but he wants to retire at 65 — here’s his plan

55 minutes ago

Paul George's Awkward Reaction After Getting Trolled By His Friend Gone Viral

55 minutes ago

‘I lost my job and was £3,000 in mortgage arrears – Nationwide tried to take my home’

55 minutes ago

Booktopia collapses into voluntary administration

55 minutes ago

Lando Norris sends Max Verstappen message after extensive Austrian GP ‘review’

55 minutes ago

Tobias Harris and Tim Hardaway Jr. are the ironmen the Pistons need

55 minutes ago

Kevin Garnett Says He Is Better Than Tim Duncan

55 minutes ago

Mariners Trade Proposal Sends $80 Million Former MVP to Seattle in 2-Player Swap

55 minutes ago

Taoiseach re-opens GAA GO debate - 'Far more people are disappointed with how this season has been shown'

55 minutes ago

Hurzeler: ''I like Brighton's DNA''

55 minutes ago

New York Times Strands Hints and Answers for July 3, 2024