Quebec court upholds fines to theatres where actors smoked during performances
MONTREAL — Representatives from three Quebec City theatres said Wednesday a recent court ruling that upheld fines they received for allowing actors to smoke onstage will reduce creative choices and take some of the magic out of live performances.
The theatres had challenged the $500 fines on the grounds that the penalties were a violation of their freedom of expression.
But the act of smoking is not itself a form of expression, Quebec court Judge Yannick Couture wrote in his decision released Tuesday. The issue, he said, was not whether actors could play characters who smoke; rather, it was about how actors portray smoking onstage.
Quebec law permits actors to portray characters who smoke or to simulate smoking, “which constitutes the expressive content that is not banned,” Couture wrote. “The ban is on the projection or inhalation of smoke from a tobacco product in a public place.”


