Herbert Sorrell
Visual Artist
1897 – 1973
Who was Herbert Sorrell?
Herbert Knott "Herb" Sorrell was a Hollywood union organizer and leader. He headed the Conference of Studio Unions in the late 1940s, and was the business manager of the Motion Picture Painters union, Local 644 until the 1950s.
At age 12 he found employment in a sewer pipe factory in Oakland, California, and later in Oakland he worked with union leader Harry Bridges. At one point he tried boxing as a career. He moved to Los Angeles in 1925, became a scenery painter for the movie studios, and joined the local painters union. In April 1937, his union local was one of those unaffiliated with IATSE which formed the Federation of Motion Picture Crafts. That same month, the FMPC went on strike against the major studios. In the picket line at Warner Brothers, Sorrell's determination earned him the rank of "picket captain", and the attention of Blayney F. Mathews, head of Warner Brothers' security, who had him arrested. He was never charged and was released several days later. This notoriety led to his subsequent position as the business representative for the painter's union and as a result he became one of the major negotiators who settled the strike in June.
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