Andy McDonough, a store manager at the Rochester Market Basket, yells at a tractor-trailer driver that he's going the wrong way to make a delivery in this August 2014 photo taken at the Milton Road store. (Lebanon Voice file photo)
Throughout the summer of 2014, a corporate "food fight" played out in dozens of communities impacting tens of thousands of workers and the economies of three states.
The story of corporate greed, family intrigue and the employees swept up in the drama will be told in a heralded documentary "Food Fight: Inside the Battle for Market Basket" at the Rochester Opera House Jan. 6 and 7.
When the faction of the Market Basket board headed by Arthur S. Demoulas fired his cousin and arch-rival Arthur T. Demoulas as longtime CEO of the successful supermarket chain, it set off a firestorm that sparked one of most unique corporate dramas in American history. It's what the New York Times called "the last stand for the middle class."
Within days of hearing the news that their beloved "Artie T" had been axed, several high-ranking managers resigned, others were fired. Truckers stopped trucking. Warehouses stopped supplying. Vendors stopped shipping. Customers stopped shopping. Employees picketed in parking lots. Practically overnight, the $4 billion dollar business, with 71 stores scattered across three states, ground to a halt. Governors from two states were called in to negotiate a settlement.
Throughout the entire summer, workers, managers and customers were galvanized. They didn't want more money, better benefits or work conditions. They only wanted back Arthur T, a quiet leader who operated on simple, long-held family values he learned from his grandfather who started the business nearly 100 years ago - treat your workers well, give customers "more for their dollar", and you'll build the American dream.
What unfolded for the next seven weeks erupted into a major news story that gripped New England and churned across the country. It's the saga of a Greek immigrant who lived the American dream and the nightmare of his descendants, with fundamentally different views of how to run a successful business, feuding for control.
It's a new take on the struggle for nonunion workers and loyal customers to get a fair shake in a world where the 1 percent seems to pull all the strings. It is a distinctly 21st century drama where ideals, personalities, passions, old tactics and new tools turn conventional ideas about labor, management and consumers on its head.
Only one film crew was on the ground throughout the summer, following the fear, anger, hope and courage of a most unlikely cast of characters. By consistently being the folks that "kept showing up", we have gained unique trust and access to people who are central to the Market Basket saga.
"FOOD FIGHT" is the story of the battle to save Market Basket, and about the power of ordinary, passionate people to rewrite corporate history.
Tickets $7. January 6 & 7 at 8 p.m., doors open one hour before showtime. Reserve tickets online or call the box office (603) 335-1992, M/W/F from 10-5pm and 2-hours before the show. This show is sponsored by TD Bank North, Eastern Propane, Shaheen & Gordon P.A., and Norm Vetter Foundations. The Rochester Opera House is located in City Hall, 31 Wakefield Street, Rochester NH. Visit www.RochesterOperaHouse.com for more information.