PxyShan
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2010
- Messages
- 84
Havig been a character performer at Disney and then another theme park, let me say that I did not have my own set of tights even in the early 2000s, but every costume is washed between people so it was never a big deal to me. At the second theme park I worked at, we rotated costumes throughout the day. There were days people came in sick and I would have to put on their costume less than half an hour after they wore it with no sanitation in between.
For the "fur" characters, you wear shorts, a shirt, and socks underneath. The shirt is changed every set and the shorts several times a day. The heads are sterilized with a chemical called Ster Bac but every performer does it on their own. We even shared the velcro shoes, but used a chemical called Asepticare in between performers.
Some costumes could not be washed, so those had linings. SPectromagic costumes were that way. THe lining snapped onto the garment and let me tell you, even with a washable lining, there were times that those costumes started to get a real funk to them. Whenever that happened, our managers went out ofthe way to try to find a solution, but sometimes you just had to wear the funky smelling costume.
They are very strict with their characters and you are made aware of it when you train. Decide you don't want to wear a chin strap and your head falls off? Fired. Talk in costume in front of guests? Fired. Refuse to go on set for not a good reason? Fired.
From my friends that work there now, the actual working conditions in entertainment are not that much different from what they were in the early 2000's. Based on the wording of the story, this sounds like a bogus reason to refuse the show. IF they costumes were on another rack and they were pushed together, how soiled could the costumes have possibly been? THey do realize that they share the same furniture with the sweaty people in between shows right? If you're going to get something, that is how it will happen. IF as presented, I am on Disney's side on this one.
Yep, yep, and yep. I was also a character performer at Disney. You just get used to some nasty situations with the costumes. And with getting sick all the time (colds and such). Not that Disney shouldn't try harder to make things better, but you don't get to be a performer in FOLK without knowing how things go in the disney character world.
And for a show like FOLK there are not a lot of backup options, if any, at a moments notice, especially if it was a later in the day show. Costuming can only do so much. As a performer you're told all the time that it is your own responsibility to maintain your costume that you have for the day- any issues regardless of whose fault they are are your own to deal with. Again, not ideal, but Disney is clear and consistent about their regulations.
As many have said already, there are so many pieces missing from this story. If I had to guess the three performers who were fired probably had other marks or reprimands on their records, and this was their third strike. Really, its harder than you would think to be fired from Disney, unless you took your head off onstage or something like that. I wonder how their case will go seeing how the article notes that other performers were willing to perform with the soiled costumes.
