About a week ago, a theater got in touch with me asking if
they could produce one of my plays. The
catch was, they’re going through some difficult financial times, and they can’t
afford the rights. I won’t go into too
much detail, but basically, they thought if they could produce what I’d written
at a low cost, they could start to rebuild their company.
I looked into it, found out they were telling the truth, and
told them they could do the play for free.
They only asked me to do it at a discounted rate, but I knew charging
them nothing was a better idea. They
could bank way more money that way. All
I asked in return was that in the future they’d consider doing more of my work.
And I thought that was the end of the story.
I was wrong.
Apparently, this is what happened next.
Someone from this theater told a playwright from the same
area about what I’d done. I guess they
had asked her about doing one of her works at a discounted rate before they
asked me, and she refused to lower the price on the rights. When she heard what I’d done, instead of
saying “Oh, isn’t that great. How nice
of him to do the thing I wouldn’t do,” she was FURIOUS.
Truly livid.
And I know this, because she wrote me a scathing e-mail asking,
among many things:
- If I realized this devalued not just my work, but the work of all playwrights.
- If I realized this devalued not just my work, but the work of all playwrights.
- If I was a millionaire, thereby able to be so generous.
- If I felt my work was so bad that I didn’t deserve any
money for it?
She then insinuated that maybe she should contact a few
theaters that have done my work and let them know I’m giving it away for free
now, and that they should ask for a refund.
After taking a deep breath, I responded to her:
- I wasn’t trying to devalue my work or the work of anyone
else, but I also think that passion has value, and this company felt very
passionately about producing theater, and doing my show. Clearly not as passionately as they felt
about doing her show, but since she wasn’t willing to bend on the rights, I’m
glad I could help them out.
- Yes, I am a millionaire.
I’m writing this e-mail to you from my indoor pool waiting for my chef
to finish up the lamb shank he’s making me for dinner.
- I think my work is good, but I think every situation
deserves different approaches. I don’t
see anything wrong in charging a well-off theater more for rights and other
theaters nothing at all. I’m sure the
well-off theaters probably wouldn’t find that to be fair, but considering all
the advantages you get being a well-off theater, I don’t feel they have room to
complain.
I ended the e-mail by pointing out that I’m not a well-known
playwright, and that one of the best ways to get my work out there is to make
it as financially reasonable as possible for people to produce it. I told her that I run my own theater company
,and so I know how many great plays go unproduced every year because of the bureaucracy
you run into attempting to get the rights to some of them, especially plays by
gay playwrights and women. I suggested
that maybe the solution is to make it so easy for theaters to do our work, we’ll
be the first places they look after Shakespeare and A Christmas Carol.
She hasn’t responded to my e-mail yet, but I’m sure she’s
not going to be thrilled when she reads it.
I still think I made the right call.
But that’s just me.
You go Frog!
ReplyDeleteYes. Also: I hear stories all the time of companies who WANT to do a play but are rejected by those who represent the playwright, when I suspect the playwright would probably make a similar call to what you did. Good on you!
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