How Much Money Do Broadway Actors Make? | Playbill

Special Features How Much Money Do Broadway Actors Make?

A breakdown of salaries for performers—and stage managers and musicians—who work on Broadway.

Graphic by Vi Dang

If you’ve ever wondered how much your favorite Broadway artists earn for the work they do, you’re in luck. Thanks to public standard union contracts, we know what the base salary is for Broadway performers, stage managers, and musicians.

These minimum rates are only for professionals on Broadway and are calculated by the week since, unlike other vocations who report annual salaries, artists will not necessarily be employed by their Broadway show for a full year. These rates also don't reflect that many actors pay out a portion of their weekly salary to agents and managers, and of course pay taxes and union dues and fees as well. Because those figures can be different for every individual performer, we can't include any blanket figures for those realities. These minimums also don't reflect actors and stage managers' ability to negotiate higher rates, particularly when playing principal roles.

Data for actors and stage managers, confirmed accurate by Actors' Equity Association, comes from documents available to members of the union. These figures are valid as of December 19, 2022, and are scheduled to remain through September 25, 2023, after which most of these rates will increase slightly.

Musician pay rates come from the most recent documents available to members of Associated Musicians of Greater New York, American Federation of Musicians Local 802, which include a scale sheet from 2021 and a later agreement establishing 3% increases in 2022 and 2023. Playbill has applied both of those increases to arrive at the current wages. These rates are valid as of March 6, 2023 and are scheduled to remain through March 10, 2024. Local 802 declined to confirm the figures, telling us they "do not want any information on Broadway musicians' pay published." Confident in both our document sources and the importance of pay transparency, the result of our reporting is included below.

Actors
The current minimum salary for an Equity performer on Broadway is $2,439 a week. But that figure can increase depending on the particular demands of any given track. For instance, a chorus role or specialty adds $25 to that weekly minimum, which is more or less standard across the board for Broadway ensembles these days.

Understudying roles also comes with additional pay. Swings, who understudy multiple ensemble tracks, earn $116.15 over the performer minimum, or $20 if a performer is only a partial swing. Understudying principal roles can add $60 to the weekly salary, while understudying chorus roles adds $17.50.

Musicals will also designate performers as dance captains, who are tasked with knowing all of the show’s choreography and ensuring it continues to be performed as it was originally set. Serving as a dance captain adds $464.60 to the weekly salary, while assistant dance captains add $232.30. If a production calls for a fight captain to maintain fight choreography, that performer adds $100 to their weekly salary.

Another interesting way an actor’s base salary can increase if they're specifically on a chorus contract is by agreeing to a one-year rider, essentially saying that the performer will remain with a production for an entire year. For the first six months of that agreement, the performer earns an extra $80 weekly, which becomes $40 for the second six months. At the end of the year, assuming the performer has indeed remained with the production, they get a $2,600 bonus.

Stage Managers
The base weekly salary for a stage manager working on a Broadway musical is $4,007 a week, and $3,444 for a play.

Assistant stage managers make a minimum of $3,165 weekly for a musical and $2,816 for a play. Some musicals also have a second assistant stage manager, who gets a minimum weekly salary of $2,645.

Musicians
Due to the nature of being a professional musician, instrumentalists on Broadway have found it works well to have a creatively flexible work environment that allows them to sometimes play other gigs in addition to playing in the pit of their Broadway show; a skilled substitute musician, who is trained on the show’s score and approved by the conductor, plays in their place when the chair-holder is out. Because of this, a musician’s pay can vary dramatically week to week.

Focusing on the contractual weekly base pay for a musician, which assumes all shows are played by the same musician, the weekly wage for a Broadway musician is $2,143.10. If a musician performs (or “doubles”) on multiple instruments, each additional instrument increases their base salary. The first addition earns the player $267.89 extra a week, with $133.95 more for each additional instrument played.

The base weekly salary for a conductor on Broadway is $3,750.43. Their associate conductor makes a minimum of $2,786.04. Those additions for doubling on instruments apply to conductors

There are also some other situations in which musicians may be required to assume additional responsibilities or make an additional time commitment, which can result in an increase in the base pay. If the orchestra is required to be onstage, they get an additional $104.18 a week. If they’re in costume or have to perform any choreography, that’s an additional $69.47 for each. If they’re required to wear body paint, that increases the weekly salary by $100.71. The first chair trumpet player also gets an extra $100 a week.

 
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