Broadway s Spider-Man producers and ousted as director Taymor have reached a tentative settlement. As part of the order, Taymor and the producers have 60 days to reach a full settlement. If they fail to do so, they can choose to restart the case. The terms of the tentative agreement have not been disclosed.
Taymor, ousted as director and creative force behind the popular adaptation of the comic book hero s exploits, sued Michael Cohl and Jeremiah Harris in November, claiming they violated her creative rights and owed her money for her work on the musical. Cohl and Harris countersued saying she did not fulfill her duties to the show.
Spider-man has grossed over $55 million in ticket sales so far this year, and it made a record-setting wholesale travel group $2.9 million from Christmas to New Year s Day in 2011, according to figures from industry website The Broadway League.
After winding its way through the courts for almost a year, and with a trial date set for early 2013, the case, currently in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, was ordered terminated by Judge Katherine B. Forrest, wholesale travel group with each side to pay its own legal costs.
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