NEW YORK – Broadway is somewhere between a hard-knock life and easy street for the child performers crowding New York stages this season. Same goes for their non-human co-stars.
Lilla Crawford earns $3,000 a week playing the title role of the $12 million revival of "Annie." Sunny and Casey, the two terrier mixes who alternate as Sandy, are each paid $1,770 a week.
While Lilla may be Broadway's best-paid minor, her two adult co-stars earn more than three times her salary, $10,000 a week, according to a preliminary production budget obtained from the office of New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman via the Freedom of Information Law.
"Most of these kids would do it for free," said David Doan, an agent who represents 10 children on Broadway. "With adults, it's their livelihood. With kids, it's a hobby."
In the case of "Annie," at least the first half of that is true: Katie Finneran had won two Tony Awards before becoming the ogress of the orphanage, Miss Hannigan. Oliver "Daddy" Warbucks is played by Anthony Warlow, a seasoned opera and musical-theater star in Australia. (None of the stars, however, has as much value as the title "Annie" on the marquee.)
"Annie" will soon be doing battle with "Matilda" for the title of top girl on Broadway.
The show, a smash hit in London, is adapted from the Roald Dahl novel about a 5-year-old who outsmarts her idiot elders with the help of a cunning intelligence and, oh yes, telekinetic powers.
The four girls alternating in the title role will earn the Broadway weekly minimum of about $2,000, according to a person familiar with the production.