*** OPPORTUNITIES FOR PLAYWRIGHTS ***

 


*** OPPORTUNITIES FOR PLAYWRIGHTS ***

Pan Theater presents Anything Can Happen in Ten Minutes, a collection of short plays by some of the nation’s top emerging playwrights.
Pan Theater, where neurons fire faster, has been bringing comedic and dramatic improv to the San Francisco Bay Area and Oakland since 2002.
The theme of the festival is Anything Can Happen in Ten Minutes.
All writers with plays accepted for production will paid at the rate of $100 per winning play. There will be 10 plays produced. We are seeking a range of plays from serious/dramatic to absurd/comedic.

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The Phoenix Theatre Company’s 25th Annual Festival of New American Theatre will run April 7, 2023 – April 23, 2023. The 2023 Festival will feature both curated and submitted works including: one play reading, two musical readings, one musical workshop, the Composer Lyricist Cabaret featuring two artists, and the Choreography Lab which will set movement to musical material featured in the festival selections. All eligible submissions are welcome and we are actively seeking submissions from artists with an Arizona connection

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The Ensemble Playwright Lab (EPL) is a residency program for NYC-based playwrights to engage with Letter of Marque's (LOM) ensemble of actors, musicians, dancers, designers, and dramaturgs to create, develop, or reimagine a piece of work. This experimental process of creation and development is designed to welcome the playwright into the rehearsal room through active participation in devised and improvisational explorations. The goals and outcomes of each residency are mutually determined by both LOM and the playwright.

*** FOR MORE INFORMATION about these and other opportunities see the web site at https://www.nycplaywrights.org ***


*** INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY PIRACY ***

A church in Texas that earlier this month staged unauthorized productions of the musical hit “Hamilton,” changing some lyrics to reflect Christian themes, apologized and agreed to pay damages on Tuesday after lawyers for “Hamilton” had demanded that they stop performances.

The version put on this month by The Door McAllen, a nondenominational church in the border town of McAllen, Texas, altered certain words and inserted invocations of Jesus Christ, according to clips posted on Twitter. It also included a sermon stating that God could help people with their homosexuality, as well as with struggles with drugs and alcohol.

More...
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/23/theater/hamilton-christian-production-apologizes.html


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The Asolo Repertory Theatre is not the first theater to alter a playwright’s work and violate contractual agreements for production rights.

Playwrights and publishers say it happens all the time, but rarely with a professional theater of the caliber of Asolo Rep, which was forced to restore cuts made to Brian Friel’s 1964 Irish drama “Philadelphia, Here I Come.”

A few days after the play opened Jan. 10, the theater received a cease and desist order from Friel’s agent, the play publisher Samuel French.

Director Frank Galati had substantially altered the play by streamlining the storytelling to increase its impact on a modern audience. But the theater apparently didn’t get the permission required to make the changes from the playwright.

More...
http://ticket.heraldtribune.com/2014/01/31/asolo-faces-criticism-for-altering-a-living-playwrights-work-in-philadelphia/

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“The play runs too long. We’ll get disqualified.”
“My administration won’t let us say the word ‘cigarette’.”
“I have more girls auditioned than guys.”

In the professional world, changing the script is a big no-no. What the playwright puts on the page is what is supposed to end up on the stage. The length is the length. The genders stay the same. If a word puts someone off, don’t do the play. Certainly changes still happen without the playwright’s permission, but that’s another story.

In the educational world, the spirit of that law is always in place but there are other factors in play.

You’re dealing with students.
You’re dealing with parents.
You’re dealing with administrators.
And if you don’t take these groups into consideration there will be consequences beyond not doing a play. That is a fact and that can’t be ignored. It creates a situation where you have to request a cut or a change from a playwright/publisher.

More...
https://www.theatrefolk.com/blog/request-cut-change-script/


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A Virginia youth theatre is on the hook for thousands of dollars in copyright damages after allegedly presenting unlicensed and unauthorized performances of at least 16 well-known musicals, including Roald Dahl's Willy Wonka, Matilda, Seussical, Little Shop of Horrors, and Honk! MTI, a global theatrical licensing agency, filed suit after receiving no response to numerous requests that the community theater cease the unlicensed performances.

According to a recent court order, Theaterpalooza offers musical theatre classes and camps for children. In addition to charging tuition fees up to $600 per child, Theaterpalooza also charges admission to its final performances, typically $15 for adults and $12 for children. While the theater’s performances often feature well-known plays, it did so without obtaining authorization from the copyright holders.

The court order also concludes that Theaterpalooza was aware of MTI's copyrights on the musicals as early as January 12, 2015 and continued to perform and advertise unlicensed shows for several years. Accordingly, the court found that Theaterpalooza "willfully infringed" on MTI's copyrighted works.

More...
https://scarincihollenbeck.com/law-firm-insights/intellectual-property/local-theater-copyright-infringement

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This post is about a problem I encountered last summer and have been struggling to put into words for a while now. At its heart it’s about respecting the work of the playwright. But it starts with an elaborate back-story including a brief sidebar on intellectual property rights.

The Back-Story

Last summer, a director friend from a major summer stock theater company contacted me with some good news: the late-night intern showcase was coming up, and one of the directing interns had chosen to direct my ten-minute play The Roosevelt Cousins, Thoroughly Sauced. They’d already been rehearsing for a couple of weeks, and my friend wanted to put me in touch with the director to discuss the play. To which I said, “That’s great. Of course I’ll speak with the director. But that particular play is published by Sam French. Have y’all contacted them for the rights?”

More...
https://www.mikelew.com/thoughts-on-the-theater-blog/-a-plea-about-arts-piracy-in-theater


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Playwright Neil Simon revoked the Grove Theatre’s rights to perform his play “Rumors” when producers refused to stage it as written, including the profanity.

The comedy was set to open next Thursday at the Pleasant Grove dinner theater, with actors replacing the play’s blue language with more palatable dialogue. Now, contrary to the old theater maxim, the show must not go on.

The theater’s producer and owner Gayliene Omary said, “Someone reported us to Samuel French … and they said in taking the profanity out, that put us in violation of the copyright. They said we had to do it as written or not at all.”

Samuel French Inc., is a firm that handles copyrights and royalties for many plays and musicals. The firm’s letter to Omary, dated July 29, said, “If any changes have been made during the rehearsal process, we ask that you restore the script to the original text.”

More...
https://www.heraldextra.com/news/2003/aug/08/playwright-kills-play-over-lack-of-profanity/

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Playwrights, composers, lyricists and librettists often struggle professionally in theatres throughout the country, and even on Broadway, due to the wide-ranging demands and expectations imposed on them by their producers (and other collaborators) which are presented as “standard” terms.  It is essential, therefore, that dramatists know their rights, which the Dramatists Guild established in 1926 and has defended ever since.  

In order to protect their unique vision, which has always been the strength of the theatre, dramatists need to understand this single fundamental principle: they own and control their work. To ensure this ownership and control, the Guild recommends that any production involving a dramatist incorporate a written agreement in which both the producer and the writer acknowledge certain key industry standards, including the following:

Ownership of Intellectual Property

You own the copyright of your dramatic work. Authors in the theatre business do not assign (i.e., give away or sell in entirety) their copyrights, nor do they ever engage in “work-for-hire.” When a university, producer or theatre wants to mount a production of your play, you only license (or lease) the public performance rights to your dramatic property to that entity for a finite period of time.

MORE AT THE DRAMATISTS GUILD
https://www.dramatistsguild.com/rights