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Actors' union sues ‘Fortnite' over AI Darth Vader

Actors' union sues ‘Fortnite' over AI Darth Vader

Business Times19-05-2025
[LOS ANGELES] An actors' union is suing the makers of the Fortnite video game over the use of AI to create an interactive Darth Vader, it said on Monday.
Fortnite announced last week it had got permission from the family of James Earl Jones to make a chatty Star Wars villain based on the late actor's voice work in the smash hit space opera series.
Using AI models, developer Epic Games introduced the Emperor's consigliere into Battle Royale, a player-versus-player version of Fortnite in which squads form to defeat other contestants online.
Users were quick to adopt the Sith Lord on their missions, posting clips of their interactions with one of cinema's most famous bad guys.
Many delighted in the character's apparent wit, laughing as he tells them off for poor technique, or suggesting that they are cheating.
'The empire has no need for fast food,' he chides one player who asks what his McDonald's order would be.
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'If I were forced to endure such a culinary experience, I would take a Chicken Selects Meal with large fries and a Coca-Cola drink.'
But actors' union SAG-AFTRA was not amused, claiming the use of AI in video games puts performers out of work.
'We celebrate the right of our members and their estates to control the use of their digital replicas and welcome the use of new technologies,' a statement said on Monday.
'However, we must protect our right to bargain terms and conditions around uses of voice that replace the work of our members, including those who previously did the work of matching Darth Vader's iconic rhythm and tone in video games.'
The union, which says it represents around 160,000 people, says Epic's subsidiary did not talk to its negotiators over how AI would be used in the game.
SAG-AFTRA said it had filed a claim for unfair labour practice with the National Labor Relations Board, a federal agency that protects workers' rights to organise and to negotiate.
Epic Games did not immediately respond to AFP's queries, but a statement released last week cited Jones's family saying they were pleased with the project.
'We hope that this collaboration with Fortnite will allow both longtime fans of Darth Vader and newer generations to share in the enjoyment of this iconic character,' the family said.
Performers have become concerned about the use of artificial intelligence in films, TV and video games.
Improving technology makes it increasingly possible to digitally recreate the audio and visual likeness of an actor.
The strikes that crippled Hollywood in 2023 stemmed in part from fears that studios would seek to use digital models to replace human performers and creators.
Video game actors began their own strike against major players in the sector in July 2024. AFP
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Tributes pour in for Black Sabbath frontman Ozzy Osbourne

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Star Wars actor Kenneth Colley dies at 87
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Star Wars actor Kenneth Colley dies at 87

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He continued to interpret a wide assortment of roles, including an impudent left-wing journalist in a 1987 stage adaptation of John Hale's spy novel The Whistle Blower (1984), but he mostly played villains, which, he told the magazine Star Wars Insider in 1987, was 'fine by me'. 'If you can burrow in deep and find some life there,' he said, 'that makes it interesting – you want to know more about this uniform.' Kenneth Colley was born on Dec 7, 1937, in Manchester, England. He began acting at the Bromley Repertory Company, where he worked as an assistant stage manager, according to British newspaper The Guardian, and joined The Living Theatre in Leicester in the early 1960s. He also trained with the Royal Shakespeare Company and with late English actor Laurence Olivier's National Theatre Company. In the 1960s, Colley played bit roles in various TV series and televised theatre productions, including ITV Play Of The Week; the anthology drama series Thirty-Minute Theatre, taking on the parts of Charles I and Hitler; and BBC Play Of The Month. He played a stammering accordion player in Pennies From Heaven (1978), a major in The Danedyke Mystery (1979) and Jesus in the film Monty Python's Life Of Brian (1979). Colley married Mary Dunne in 1962. She died in 2018. Information on his survivors was not immediately available. His other notable performances include the Duke of Vienna in Measure For Measure, a 1979 BBC Shakespeare production; Adolf Eichmann in Wallenberg (1985); and a cranky recluse in a Nancy Meckler 2000 revival of Brecht's 1939 play Mother Courage And Her Children, a role he 'brilliantly played for one scene only', as late theatre critic Sheridan Morley wrote in The International Herald Tribune newspaper. In a hot streak during the 1980s, Colley acted in American actor-director Clint Eastwood's Firefox (1982); in Giro City (1982), a drama about investigative journalism and censorship starring late English actress Glenda Jackson; as the titular vice-admiral in the British historical miniseries I Remember Nelson (1982); and alongside late American actor Gregory Peck in the TV movie The Scarlet And The Black (1983). 'In one year, I worked with Clint Eastwood, Gregory Peck and David Prowse,' he recalled in 1987. 'I got a crick in my neck from always looking up toward the stars.' NYTIMES

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