Terrence Howard Sues CAA Over ‘Empire’ Salary: ‘Sooner or Later You’ve Got to Stand Up’

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Empire” star Terrence Howard is suing CAA for breach of fiduciary duty, saying the talent agency allegedly asked him to take a lower salary for the popular show. He outlined his claims at a Friday press conference.

Howard played music mogul Lucious Lyon for six seasons of the Fox drama, produced by Imagine Entertainment and what was then 20th Century Fox TV. CAA also represented the producers of “Empire” in a package deal that was lucrative for the agency, he says. As such, Howard’s legal strategy asserts, the agency did not act in his best interest by pushing for a higher salary because it had a profit participation stake through its package, so CAA had an interest in maximizing the total profit that 20th TV realized on the series. Since 2020, the practice of talent agencies receiving packaging fees on TV series was essentially banned after the Writers Guild of America waged a nearly two-year battle against the Hollywood’s largest agencies to reform the decades-old practice.

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CAA declined to comment.

The complaint, filed late Friday in Los Angeles Superior Court, asserts that Howard was mostly in the dark about CAA’s packaging fee. It notes that Howard was paid less than “Mad Men” star Jon Hamm and Kevin Spacey during his run on Netflix’s “House of Cards” despite the fact that “Empire” had significantly more viewership than those shows. The complaint also faults CAA for representing “Empire” co-creators and executive producers Lee Daniels and Danny Strong as well as Howard and other actors on the series. The complaint does not cite a specific dollar amount for damages but it does seek compensatory and punitive damages.

“Not only did it become abundantly clear that his agents led him on a path to rely on information that was misleading, he discovered that this was the result of the fact that CAA was not acting in his best interest, but in the in interest of their own financial benefit as well as the interest of the Production Companies and the producers, Daniels and Strong,” the complaint states. “Under normal circumstances, had CAA not been the packaging agent, and had CAA not been concurrently representing the Production Companies, where their sole financial interest would have been the 10% fee from the compensation received by Howard, they would have most certainly fought for Howard in a manner that most producers are accustomed to seeing CAA agents engage in.”

At the news conference, Howard asserted that the situation he experienced on “Empire” also has racial overtones.

“I can’t say for certain this was a racial issue, but I can’t imagine another counterpart – a white counterpart – with the same accolades, name recognition and numbers that I had, receiving the lowball pay that I was receiving,” he told Rolling Stone after the press conference.

“I drank the Kool-Aid. I believed that I was going to get paid, or that I was getting compensated properly, but I wasn’t. I just didn’t want to piss off CAA and Fox. They’re big companies to go to war against. But sooner or later you’ve got to stand up, because they’re just trampling over the rights of the artists,” he said to Rolling Stone.

Howard says that though “Empire” eventually amassed more viewers than “Big Bang Theory,” he was being paid less than the sitcom’s star Jim Parsons. His pay started at $125,000 and topped out at $325,000 per episode, he said.

The press conference was held at the Los Angeles offices of the Cochran Firm, whose lawyers James Bryan and Brian Dunn are representing Howard along with Carlos Moore of the Carlos Moore Law Group.

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