Flatley's `Riverdance' court action is settled

A legal battle between the dancer Michael Flatley and the producers of Riverdance has been settled, it was announced yesterday…

A legal battle between the dancer Michael Flatley and the producers of Riverdance has been settled, it was announced yesterday. A statement said the terms remained confidential, but they acknowledged Flatley's contribution to the original development of Riverdance.

A spokesman for one of the producers, Ms Moya Doherty, said last night they would be adhering strictly to the confidentiality agreement.

Flatley issued a writ against Abhann Productions, the Dublin-based producers of the show, in 1995 after disputes over pay and profit-sharing.

The 40-year-old Irish-American was sacked from Riverdance on the eve of its triumphant return to London in October 1995. He always maintained that it could not have been created without him.

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Flatley went on to greater fame and fortune with his own show, Lord of the Dance, which has played a series of sell-out concerts across the world.

The joint statement from Ms Doherty and Flatley said: "Everyone is very pleased that matters have been finally resolved."

A legal adviser to Flatley told The Irish Times in 1995 that he was suing the Riverdance producers on contractual grounds, claiming he was entitled to 2 per cent of the gross earnings of the Riverdance shows. A recent estimate of the shows' turnover was £400 million, which would suggest that Flatley's claim was for £80 million. In 1997, the American business magazine Forbes said Flatley was earning $54 million a year.