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Playwright's Network

Network Chairs:
Drew Chappell, Arizona State University
Laura Turner, College of Charleston
The Playwright's Network acts as a conduit to theatre production, both professional and school-based, for playwrights writing for young audiences. The network strives to be a resource for playwrights to share their work by providing opportunities to promote and produce their scripts, receive information on upcoming contests, and network with those producing plays with and for children.
The playwriting network welcomes any and all AATE members interested in scripts for young audiences. There is no requirement that a member be a professional playwright or dramaturg to take part in network activities. See below for a list of current Playwright's Network projects.
On this page, you'll find:
AWARD-WINNING PLAYS from the PLAYWRIGHTS NETWORK
of the AMERICAN ALLIANCE FOR Theatre & Education
NEW PLAYS by Member Playwrights
What Do Playwrights Need To Know?
Important Links For Playwrights
Resources for High School Playwrights
Playwright's Network Projects
Unpublished Play Reading Project Guidelines:
download in MS Word or pdf format
AWARD-WINNING PLAYS from the PLAYWRIGHTS NETWORK
of the AMERICAN ALLIANCE FOR Theatre & Education
The updated 2006 directory is now available! Click here or download the pdf.
NEW PLAYS by Member Playwrights
(updated Summer, 2006)
All playwrights who are current members of the American Alliance for Theatre & Education are invited to submit two synopses of up to 75 words each for this listing. Plays may be published or in-progress. Listings will be updated twice a year and posted on the AATE Website. Please see the following entries for preferred format. Send new and updated information by May l and/or December l to
Sandy Asher: sandyasher@earthlink.net
View or download the New Plays by Members Directory
What Do Playwrights Need To Know?
21 Answers from Sandra Fenichel Asher, Max Bush, Diane Crews, Carol Korty, Joanna
Kraus, Judy Matetzschk, James Still, and Dorothy Webb.
(This handout was originally prepared for a Box Lunch Discussion at the 2001
IUPUI/Bonderman National Playwriting Symposium in Indianapolis, IN.)
Learn your craft: Read lots of plays by other people in the
field. See how other playwrights solve the problems of exposition, character and
plot development, conflict, climax, and so on. Take classes. Attend workshops.
Read books on playwriting, even if they're not about theater for young audiences.
Know the field: Attend plays. Get involved with a theater group, on stage
or behind the scenes.
Present yourself and your work professionally: Submissions should be typed,
formatted, clean, bound, and absolutely in compliance with theater and contest
guidelines.
Get to know people who produce plays, get to know their tastes, their passions,
the challenges that their theaters deal with. Not every play you write is going
to be right for every theater -- even if they've done one of your plays in the
past, or even if they've done plays that seem similar to your play.
Listen to anyone who will talk to you with respect about your play. And
also to those who don't respect your play. Listen especially to recurring criticism,
and especially to someone who understands your play and still has some problems.
Listen, but don't let anyone rewrite your play for you. Listen for what will help
you write the play you want to write as well as it can be written. Accept comments
and critiques graciously. All criticism is constructive if you learn to use it
constructively!
Enter contests, such as the IUPUI/Bonderman event and the AATE Unpublished
Play Reading Project. These offer feedback on your play and how it is coming off
the page to people who don't know you.
Get productions any way you can: civic theater, high school, professional
theaters. Theaters ALMOST NEVER produce unsolicited manuscripts from people they
don't know. Get to know them. Or see if they have a staged reading program and
go for that.
Directors can't often read unsolicited, whole scripts. There just aren't
enough hours in a day. Send a letter with the play's casting and production requirements,
a synopsis of the action, and info about its production history - all BRIEF! With
that should come the first five or six pages of the script and a self-addressed,
stamped postcard for a reply.
Most directors want to read new work and want to find new people to work
with, but playwrights need to network so directors can get to know them. Companies
are much more likely to commission someone they know (even a little bit) than
people they don't know. Attend conferences, network, talk to publishers, directors,
and other playwrights.
Don't wait for somebody to champion your play -- take matters into your
own hands. Do a reading of your play -- in your living room, in a classroom, in
a bar... wherever you can do it and really listen to what you've written... ask
friends, ask actors, ask kids -- just get a group of people together and read
your play aloud. If you want to discuss it afterwards, have some questions ready
to ask everyone... get what YOU want from the reading. Which means try to figure
out ahead of time what you might want.
Try to find someone you respect, like, trust -- to mentor you as a writer,
or to mentor a particular play. You can always ask -- the worst that can happen
is someone will say no. Don't take that personally.
Theater companies and other organizations commission plays for a variety
of reasons. Sometimes, they want to work with a particular playwright, and are
open to a new play suggested by that playwright. Or they may want a particular
play written and feel a certain playwright will do a good job for them. Try to
get commissions from theaters and artistic directors with whom you've developed
a relationship.
Either way, it's important that the playwright retain control over the
script, and that the contract between the commissioning organization and the playwright
reflect that control. This means that while the playwright is open to suggestions,
the script will be written without undue outside interference and the copyright
and all future rights after the commissioning group's production will belong to
the playwright.
To find a reputable publisher who will represent you well, check out the
publishers listed in the AATE Directory of Award-winning Plays. These are publishers
who promote their plays through national conferences and events and represent
the top playwrights. Visit their booths at conferences. Send for their catalogues.
Explore their Web sites. And read their plays!
Don't try to publish your play too soon. Publishers often require several
productions before they'll consider a script for publication. If you play is good,
it probably could be better. Don't send it to a publisher until you're sure that
EVERY MOMENT WORKS. Do your rewrites based on productions and audiences (not just
workshops). During this time also try to interest publishers by letting them know
about the play, try to get them interested in following the growth of the play
through its different productions. Don't send a publisher your first draft. Even
if they ask for it. Most playwrights writing for young audiences do not have agents.
There's just not enough money in it to interest agents. Some playwrights hire
entertainment lawyers to negotiate individual contracts. Those who belong to the
Dramatist Guild can have a lawyer look over contracts for them. A good publisher
becomes your play's agent, negotiating and collecting royalty fees for you. They
split book fees and royalties with you. They do NOT expect any advance payment
FROM you.
Treat artistic directors, producers, and publishers like people -- not
like tickets to your future. Choosing a season, investing in a play or a writer
-- it's all highly subjective and a bit mysterious. It has a lot to do with whether
or not that person feels he or she can sell this play to the public.
Be generous to other writers. Envy will kill you.
Try not to be discouraged; try not to give up. But remember: There's a
difference between being persistent and being annoying.
If you can avoid it, don't go into this field. There's almost no money,
and very little respect. If you must write, marry well. And love the work, because
that's what it's really all about.
For informations on a variety of resources, on and off the Internet, including
the American Alliance for Theatre & Education (AATE), the International Association
of Theatre for Children and Young People (ASSITEJ/USA), the Children's Theatre
Foundation of America (CTFA), the Dramatists Guild, the IUPUI/Bonderman Playwriting
Symposium, the Kennedy Center's New Visions/New Voices Symposium, Theatre Communications
Group (TCG), contests, workshops, theaters, and publishers, see the THE DRAMATISTS'
SOURCEBOOK, published annually by Theatre Communications Group, Inc., and USA
Plays for Kids, http://usaplays4kids.drury.edu
Important Links For Playwrights
www.kennedy-center.org/education/nvnv.html
www.liberalarts.iupui.edu/bonderman
"USA Plays for Kids and America Writes for Kids are on-line. Check 'em out at usaplays4kids.drury.edu and usawrites4kids.drury.edu
America Writes for Kids and USA Plays for Kids are no longer small! We're now linked to about 300 authors' and playwrights' Web pages, plus other useful resources. Interested in joining our playwright's list-serv? E-mail Dorothy Webb @ dwebb@iupui.edu
For more information on Playwrights In Our Schools contact:
john.newman@slc.k12.ut.us
For more information on the Award Winning Play Directory or AATE Member
Plays contact: sandyasher@earthlink.net
For more information on the Publisher's Showcase contact:
raverill@sunflower.com
Resources for High School Playwrights
View or download this helpful list of resources for High School Playwrights.
Playwright's Network Projects
Playwright's In Our Schools
The Children's Theatre Foundation of America (CTFA) has awarded a grant to the Playwriting Network of the American Alliance for Theatre & Education (AATE) that will enable five award-winning playwrights to develop works-in-progress in AATE-member secondary schools. The "Playwrights In Our Schools" project seeks to bring playwrights into the schools and bring schools into the process of developing new plays.
For more information on Playwrights In Our Schools contact:
john.newman@slc.k12.ut.us
Directory Of Award Winning Plays
This publication list award winning plays featuring the AATE Distinguished Play Award, the AATE Unpublished Play Reading Project, ASSITEJ/USA Outstanding Play Citations, the IUPUI/Bonderman Finialists, and the Kennedy Center's New Visions/New Voices selections. The listing is updated regularly and available at the AATE conference or through the above link. For more information on the Award Winning Play Directory or AATE Member
Plays contact: Suespring42@aol.com
AATE Member Plays
All playwrights who are current members of the American Alliance for Theatre & Education are invited to submit two synopses of up to 75 words each for this listing. Plays may be published or in-progress. Listings updated twice a year. See above link.
For more information on the Award Winning Play Directory or AATE Member
Plays contact: sandyasher@earthlink.net
Publisher's Showcase
Publishers work with the Playwright's Network to identify new works important for the field. The Publisher's Showcase uses professional actors in a stage reading at the AATE conference every other year.
For more information on the Publisher's Showcase contact:
raverill@sunflower.com
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