Hundreds of comedians unpaid by one of UK's biggest comedy festivals
•Hundreds of comedians unpaid by one of UK's biggest comedy festivalsJust nowShareSaveAdd as preferred on GoogleCharlie HaynesEast Midlands InvestigationsBBCBen Alborough said he was frustrated money w...
•It's very frustrating.
•I've got bills to pay like everyone else."Dave NatrissAlborough on stage as the late Sir Terry Wogan as part of a satirical variety showAlborough, who works in comedy full-time, said pay issues were c...
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Hundreds of comedians unpaid by one of UK's biggest comedy festivalsJust nowShareSaveAdd as preferred on GoogleCharlie HaynesEast Midlands InvestigationsBBCBen Alborough said he was frustrated money was not ringfenced to pay actsHundreds of comedians have been unpaid by one of the biggest comedy festivals in the UK.Leicester Comedy Festival attracted about 100,000 spectators and more than 500 acts this year, including Sir Stephen Fry, Sara Pascoe and Rosie Holt, many of whom have not been paid.Organisers said they aimed to pay all performers as soon as possible after the event, which ran from 4 to 22 February, but added the delay was due to cashflow problems that they were trying to resolve.Comedian Ben Alborough said: "I'm owed just short of £2,000. It's very frustrating. I've got bills to pay like everyone else."Dave NatrissAlborough on stage as the late Sir Terry Wogan as part of a satirical variety showAlborough, who works in comedy full-time, said pay issues were common across the board."Between festival registration fees and travel and accommodation and production costs, I have to invest several hundred pounds per individual show," he said.The 33-year-old said he owed his career to the Leicester event after starting out there as a student. "I want the Leicester Comedy Festival to succeed because it's a brilliant thing."But in order to do that, everyone needs to get paid. Artists need to be paid money," he added.Alborough is one of hundreds of performers owed money by the comedy festival. They were set to be paid on 19 April, but instead were sent an email telling them their settlement payment would be delayed. Andrew Max LevyZoe Brownstone, a Canadian stand-up comic, performed at the festivalCanadian stand-up comedian Zoe Brownstone said she was owed £180 by the festival."I've done a few festivals. This by a mile was the most prepared, people donated more [for tickets], leaving the festival...المصدر: BBC News | Source: BBC News
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