LOS ANGELES — Sean Astin has taken on the presidency of the SAG-AFTRA at a particularly perilous time for the actors union, and for Hollywood. There's the threat of human actors being replaced by artificial intelligence. The ongoing upheavals of streaming. Studio consolidation and realignment.
Nearly three years ago, the actors launched a four-month strike, securing some protections and higher wages. And on Monday, negotiations on a new three-year contract with studio and streamers are already beginning again.
So what actor would want this role?
''In my imagination, growing up, I would want to have been in a place of consequence,'' he told The Associated Press in an interview in his office at the guild's Los Angeles headquarters. ''And so to have the opportunity to be in a role, leading a union of 160,000 people at this moment of consequence when there's turmoil, when there's fear and uncertainty and danger, this is exactly where I want to be.''
A life as an actor and union member
Astin, an elected board member during the strike who left his mark as a fiery rally speaker, won the presidency in September, replacing the outgoing Fran Drescher.
As an actor, the now-54-year-old is known as the leader of a scrappy band of kids in 1985's ''The Goonies,'' an aspiring football player with never-ending grit in 1993's ''Rudy,'' and Samwise Gamgee, Frodo Baggins' steadfast bestie in the ''Lord of the Rings'' trilogy.
He's a SAG lifer, becoming a member as a young boy in 1981. His mother, Oscar winner Patty Duke, who died in 2016, was president of the guild from 1985 to 1988, before it added the -AFTRA in a 2012 merger.