Articles

A Copyright Right of Publicity

April 30, 2016

Abstract

This Article identifies a striking asymmetry in the law’s disparate treatment of publicity-rights holders and copyright holders.  State-law publicity rights generally protect individuals from unauthorized use of their name and likeness by others.  Publicity-claim liability, however, is limited by the First Amendment’s protection for expressive speech embodying a “transformative use” of the publicity-rights holder’s identity.  This Article examines for the first time a further limitation imposed by copyright law:  when a publicity-rights holder’s identity is transformatively depicted in a copyrighted work without consent, the author’s copyright can produce the peculiar result of enjoining the publicity-rights holder from using or engaging in speech about her own depiction.  This Article offers novel contributions to the literature on copyright overreach and:  (1) identifies a legal asymmetry produced in the interplay of publicity rights, copyright law, and the First Amendment; (2) examines the burdens on constitutionally protected speech, autonomy, and liberty interests of publicity-rights holders when copyright law prevents or constrains use of their own depiction; and (3) outlines a framework for recognizing a “copyright right of publicity” to exempt the publicity-rights holder’s use from copyright infringement liability.  Notably, this Article contributes uniquely to the literature by revealing new insights gained from an exclusive first-hand perspective of an internationally recognized celebrity whose persona was prominently depicted without prior notice or consent in a wide-release feature film.

Professor Weisbord presented his Essay, “A Copyright Right of Publicity,” at a special colloquium event at Fordham Law School on January 27, 2016.  Following a presentation of the paper, the colloquium featured a vivid illustration of the relevant legal principles through an exciting live demonstration of the fair use doctrine:  Five professional dancers staged a choreographed dance presentation set to the music of “What Would Brian Boitano Do?”

Live Dance Presentation, A Demonstration of the Fair Use Doctrine from Fordham Law Review on Vimeo.

Choreography:  Richard Hinds (Broadway credits:  Disney’s Newsies, Jekyll and Hyde, Il Divo:  A Musical Affair; Television credits:  America’s Got Talent).

Dancers:  Drew Franklin, David Paul Kidder, Cory Lingner, Anthony Raimondi, and Sharrod Williams

May 2016

No. 6