A
month after stalled contract renewal talks led the voices of "The
Simpsons" to stop work, both the actors and Fox are getting more
"D'oh!"
Terms
of the deal were not announced for the actors who provide the voices
for Homer and Marge Simpson and other characters on the long-running
animated series.
"We
couldn't be happier to have reached a multiyear deal with the enormously
talented cast of 'The Simpsons,'" series producer 20th Century
Fox Television said Friday in a statement.
A
spokesman representing the cast said they had no immediate comment.
Despite
speculation the dispute would shorten the 2004-05 season, the studio
said it was optimistic that all 22 planned episodes could be finished.
The
loss of even a few episodes of "The Simpsons," a bulwark
of Fox TV's schedule, would be financially painful for the network.
Each
cast member was seeking about $360,000 an episode, or $8 million for
the 22-episode, 2004-05 season, the trade paper Daily Variety reported
previously. The actors were earning $125,000 an episode.
The
contract dispute involves Dan Castellaneta (Homer); Julie Kavner (Marge);
Hank Azaria (Moe, Apu and others); Harry Shearer (Mr. Burns and others);
Yeardley Smith (Lisa) and Nancy Cartwright (Bart), the paper said.
The
actors' previous deal, which covered seasons 13, 14 and 15, was reached
without complication.
In
1998, however, the cast - except for Kavner, who had a previous deal
in effect - sought significant pay increases. At that time, the performers
made $30,000 an episode from a show that has proved a huge international
moneymaker.