While viewers have soured in their
millions and turned on the soap which restarted at the beginning of last week
after a break of two months due to acrimonious infighting behind the scenes
between the fired principal cast and the SABC and MMSV Productions, the
Generations Actors Guild (SAG) is now going to challenge their dismissal by producer
Mfundi Vundla in the High Court.
In the ever-widening scandal they're helped
in their battle against the SABC and Mfundi Vundla by none other than the
former SABC CEO, advocate Dali Mpofu.
They've now withdrawn their case from the CCMA and is going to the High Court instead.
They've now withdrawn their case from the CCMA and is going to the High Court instead.
The SABC's now acting CEO Hlaudi
Motsoeneng promised the fired Generations
cast three year contracts in June 2013 which more than a year later didn't
materialise.
They also never got payment, known as residuals – and specified in their existing contracts – for the multiple rebroadcasts in South Africa and resales of the soap internationally. They eventually embarked on a stayaway and were promptly fired.
They also never got payment, known as residuals – and specified in their existing contracts – for the multiple rebroadcasts in South Africa and resales of the soap internationally. They eventually embarked on a stayaway and were promptly fired.
The scandal dominated TV and
entertainment headlines since mid-August when the cast was fired, with ugly
mudslinging between Mfundi Vundla and the SABC and the fired cast – something which
has not been lost on viewers.
The reset soap – sans the familiar faces – had a debut last Monday of 7.5 million viewers 15 and older – the demographic most coveted by advertisers, but plunged to a shocking 4.1 million viewers by this past Friday.
The reset soap – sans the familiar faces – had a debut last Monday of 7.5 million viewers 15 and older – the demographic most coveted by advertisers, but plunged to a shocking 4.1 million viewers by this past Friday.
Now the Generations Actors Guild says
the SABC, Mfundi Vundla and MMSV Productions breached some of their rights as
defined in the South African Constitution.
The Generations Actors Guild delivered a legal letter demanding that the "new" Generations be taken off SABC1 by the SABC no later than 10 January 2015.
The Generations Actors Guild delivered a legal letter demanding that the "new" Generations be taken off SABC1 by the SABC no later than 10 January 2015.
Dali Mpofu told the Generations Actors
Guild that besides labour rights, their issue involves contractual and constitutional
issues.
"The decision by MMSV Productions and
the SABC to create a new show while the case with the Generations cast was as
yet unresolved represents a breach of the contractual and fundamental
constitutional rights of the actors and they both did so knowing there was a
pending dispute and hence it was at their own risk," says the actors' attorney,
Bulelani Mzamo.
"The cast had always expressed their
desire to return to work. Their withdrawal of services was taken as a last
resort, based on the fact that this agreement was continuously violated."
"The actors consistently expressed their willingness to return to work. Nonetheless, MMSV Productions hired new actors and commenced with a new production, Generations The Legacy, knowing that they have not resolved the fundamental contractual issues with the cast of Generations. It is on this basis that we are taking the cast to the High Court."
"The actors consistently expressed their willingness to return to work. Nonetheless, MMSV Productions hired new actors and commenced with a new production, Generations The Legacy, knowing that they have not resolved the fundamental contractual issues with the cast of Generations. It is on this basis that we are taking the cast to the High Court."
"Generations
The Legacy should never have been produced and aired while the current
dispute was still unresolved."