Pennsylvania Sun
PennsylvaniaSun.com Thursday 9th February 2012 Volume 040/10
Follow us on Follow us on TwitterFollow us on facebook
  • More United States News

  • Woman sues NYC for $900 trillion for putting kids in foster home
  • 'Troubled' Egypt remains defiant despite US warning to cut aid
  • E-mails bares US nuke regulatory body's chaos on Fukushima crisis
  • Next supercontinent Amasia 'to form at north pole'
  • Mullen refuses to appear Memo Gate probe body
  • Nicole Scherzinger has no regrets over X Factor
  • Chinese dad forces son to run almost naked on snow to man him up
  • Top UK intel official says 'Al-Qaeda now at its weakest state' since 9/11 attacks
  • Warnie attends NY charity fashion gala with Liz Hurley
  • Ex flames Nicole Scherzinger, Lewis Hamilton spotted hand-in-hand
  • JFK ordered 1,200 Cuban cigars hours before authorising them as illegal
  • Human Rights Watch urges US to pressure Pak govt to stop Balochistan violence
    Get United States News headlines emailed to you daily.

    Photog sues Will Smith, Jay-Z's Broadway musical FELA
    Pennsylvania Sun
    Thursday 29th July, 2010  
    (ANI)


    American actor Will Smith and rapper Jay-Z's hit Broadway musical FELA has been sued by a New York photographer after she alleged that one of her pictures was used in the production without her permission.

    The show, co-produced by Smith and Jay-Z, is about a late Afrobeat legend Fela Kuti and features an iconic picture of the singer's Nigerian nightclub as a backdrop.

    Photographer Marilyn Nance, who took the 1977 photo of the Africa Shrine venue, is suing the show's producers for 100,000 pounds alleging that they used the picture without her permission.

    "You have employed our client's registered image without her permission, license or consent," the Daily Express quoted Nance's lawyer Edward Greenberg as writing in the legal papers.

    The suit also claimed that the image was used on souvenir books, the show's soundtrack CD and in a music video.

    A publicist for the production, Richard Kornberg, has recognized the legal action and insisted that Nance should have notified the producers of the problem sooner.

    "We tried to resolve the claim but could not, and are now in the process of replacing that image. Unfortunately, this photographer waited two years to voice an objection to our use of this image. Had she notified us earlier, we would've replaced it then," Konberg told the New York Daily News. (ANI)


      Email this story to a friend

    Have your say on this story

    Your nickname (required)
    Message