Sunday, March 25, 2018

What Playwrights Need from National New Play Development Workshops

For playwrights struggling to develop their work and careers such that they are at least getting a small voice in the national theatrical conversation, there are a few ways to start to break through. For some, attending a prestigious MFA program might be the ticket. But not everyone has the financial resources, or family space, or time, to carve out 2-3 years for an MFA. Other might try working with local theaters who are LORT members, or companies who are part of NNPN.  But those are hard to approach without an agent (more and more so all the time). Or a writer could move to New York City and try to get into the scene there. But not everyone can make that work with their lives.

For many others, national playwriting conferences and workshops provide a potential opening for their plays to be noticed, and to work with artistic collaborators from outside their own communities. The list would include the O’Neill, Sundance, Great Plains, Last Frontier, Inge, Bay Area Playwrights, Seven Devils, PlayPenn, the Lark, Cape Cod, National Winter Playwrights Retreat, Ashland, New Harmony, and more. At a time when our art/business is engaged in a conversation about increasing diversity/inclusion, these opportunities have a low cost of entry (compared to MFA programs or moving to a new city), are for a limited time (so don’t require you to quit your job or uproot your family), and many offer blind submissions, so that (in theory) the identity of a writer is not a barrier to selection.

I (and many others) would argue that for our artform to remain vital, we need to encourage writers of color, women, and those who identify as LGBTQ. And also not limit our writer pool to people of financial means. We need to include writers who have children, or who might be caregivers for family members. We need these diverse voices, and our informal network of playwright’s workshops can help bring them in.

But.

I’ve been to some amazing conferences, and they’ve changed my life. (Thanks, Seven Devils!) I’ve been a finalist and semifinalist in a bunch of others (which is exciting and heartbreaking). And I think there are ways that we might encourage these organizations to be even more effective.

These are suggestions—some are free to implement, some are not. I realize that every organization has its own reasons and methods, and no one asked me for my advice. But I’m a writer who has been through the process, who has been a stay-at-home parent, and who has tried to figure out how getting into one of these important opportunities could be possible given the restrictions of my life.

So here goes:

1.  Early notification.  Most programs operate in the summer. My summer books up months ahead, both with family stuff and with writing projects. Two weeks away is tricky if you have a steady job or have kids at home. Three weeks or four weeks takes a LOT of planning and asking for favors. Many places start notifying in mid-March for July, which can work. Notifications in April are much harder for writers. Every extra week of notice helps writers. Less lead-time favors people without families or people with more financial resources. Shifting submission deadlines earlier does not inconvenience writers—so if you need to shift the deadline 3 weeks earlier to give 3 more weeks of lead time, many writers would thank you, and you might change your pool of applicants/participants.

2. Minimally coordinate to avoid overlap.  In my ideal world, we would have a big convening (via HowlRound?) of all the organization leaders, and they would all look at their calendars and coordinate a little. Yes, the summer is only 12 weeks long, so some workshops will necessarily be simultaneous. But the ones that overlap by just a few days force really tough choices for writers who are multiply selected (I know, boo, hoo). This year, I was a finalist at BAPF but need to attend the Dramatists Guild NYC national conference, and they overlapped by 3 days (thus had to step out of the pool). The Guild conference might also overlap the O’Neill.  At the very least, the Guild and workshops could attempt to coordinate so that writers who are at these workshops—some of our best writers—can attend the conference.

3. Set the dates early. Some conferences have only a range of dates posted when the submission window is open. Writers tend to apply to as many of these opportunities as possible, but they’re making uninformed choices if they don’t know what the exact dates are. Some family situations and many jobs will require significant notice and planning in order to take multiple weeks off. If we want people without significant financial resources to participant, we need them to be able to plan.  There are conferences coming up this summer for which you still can't find the dates posted online right now.

4.Consider using a common app or common requirements. Many places ask for artist statements and  have specific formats for cast list, development history, bio, etc.  Which is fine. But they’re all slightly different. Shifting this same info from format to format takes a fair amount of time for writers. Spread out over thousands of writers, this seems like many thousands of wasted hours. This is an application cost, of time, that has a greater impact on people without means or who are caring for children/family members.

(these are going to start costing money)

5.  Feed writers. If you pay a stipend, but don’t make arrangements for food, guess where the stipends have to go. There are creative options—Seven Devils has arranged discounts with local restaurants, plus they set up a cooler of picnic food every day that the entire company can access. This helps save money for folks on tight budgets.

6. Pay for travel. Many of the larger opps pay for travel. Just about all of them provide housing. Airfare costs will keep out people who don’t have deep pockets, which, given how income/wealth is broken out across America, means a less diverse pool of applicants.

7.  Increase stipends, or start paying one.  A few places offer them now. Sometimes it’s hundreds of dollars, some are up to $1,000 or more. And as a playwright participant, I am always extremely grateful for every dollar. But if we want a diverse pool of participants, in every sense, then in an ideal world, I think we’d shoot for $500/week. That amount would help cover lost wages, help pay rent, or help offset childcare costs. When I was the stay-at-home dad for our two small kids, I applied to the O’Neill with a vague sense of dread—how would I be able to afford to pay for someone to watch the kids for a month? (Fortunately/Unfortunately, I never had to figure it out.)  Also, if you pay a stipend, please post how much it is on your web site. Writers with restrictive budgets need to make informed choices.


Please understand, I think all these organizations are doing amazing work, and they are providing an essential role in the theatrical ecosystem. And I also understand that every one of them is scrambling for dollars every year just to keep their programs open. So a logical response to many of these suggestions will be a collective eye roll and/or sigh of despair. And, like many writers, if chosen for any program, I am incredibly grateful for the chance to work on my play, and to interact with other artists in a creative, nurturing environment. But it’s important for writers to at least state our needs, if we have any hope of them being met.

Most importantly, enacting any of these steps will help widen an important entranceway for writers who have traditionally not had access to participation in the larger artistic conversation. We need those plays, we need those voices.

(My secret fantasy is for some big foundation to think about this, and decide, "well, let’s try an experiment, and try funding these tweaks across the board for two years." It would impact hundreds of writers. Would it help diversify and change the pipeline? It might. Which would in turn might have ripple effects across the theatrical landscape, for years to come.)

5 comments:

Claudia said...

What is interesting is that the few (4 I think) development opps for youth plays all pay for airfare and housing. 3 of the four give a generous stipend so that your food is easily taken care of. The one opp that doesn't give a stipend does take care of 75% of your food. I'm thinking TYA is ahead of the curve.

Jeni Mahoney said...

This is all great, Patrick, and thanks for the Seven Devils shout out! I know we're aren't yet able to live up to all these things... yet... but we are always trying to work in the direction of doing more to support writers. In terms of coordinating dates and looking at overlap, that's something I used to think about (we always overlap with Last Frontier, and often with some part of Great Plains), but that I've really let go of for two reasons:

1) Every couple of years there will be a play or three that everyone is over the moon about and that's great, but if make it possible for that one playwright to attend 4 Conferences... that's 3 playwrights that might otherwise have gotten some support that now won't. We pick 4-6 plays to work on a year, but there are many more than that that we'd be very happy to work on.

2) At some point I realized that we were never going to change our dates because our dates are set by the needs of the community we're in, and the availability of resources. AND that other companies were likely in a similar situation. As much as all these companies serve a national need/mission, most of them also serve local needs. The local/national balance is tricky, and I think that way too often audiences feel like they are playing second fiddle to the needs/expectations of some machine that isn't much concerned with them. Paying attention to the local community's needs in planning is a huge part of what has kept us alive for so long.

So while I think shifting these things would certainly make life and planning and choices smoother for playwrights as individuals, there is a flip side that's worth considering.

Patrick Gabridge said...

Excellent points, Jeni. Of course, I am only writing from the playwright's POV, so I'm not seeing the bigger picture.

I think one big thing I'd like to see is the dates of the conferences being firmed up a lot sooner. Is that a local challenge as well?

In terms of impact, on a personal front, I ended up needing to withdraw a script from Seven Devils consideration, once I understood that the dates were going to conflict with my son's high school graduation (and other stuff).

I see this as a frequent problem--the O'Neill 2018 dates still aren't easy to find. (I've looked, just recently.) And that's happening in July! I think we want writers to be able to make sensible choices when they're applying, or give them a chance to keep windows open and available if they think they have a decent shot at getting picked.

I think the overlap is a bigger issue for the scheduling of the DG National Conference. (Again, whining about my own problems.) Many of the writers operating on the national level are involved fairly heavily in the Guild and should attend. Is it possible to schedule it so that it doesn't bump into important conferences?

Jeni Mahoney said...

We've been working on announcing dates earlier and earlier - this year we announced them earlier than ever. We usually tack onto the end of the school year and because snow in McCall can sometimes shift that we do usually wait until the new year (when we have as fairly good sense of what the winter looks like) but since we guess right 99.8% of the time at this point, I think that will be getting better for us in the future.

Yeah, it's frustrating for us sometimes that we overlap with the DG Conference and often with the TCG Conference. On a personal level, it means that I also don't get to go to those things (nor do I get to go to development conferences for my own stuff.) There are so many things in June and July, I'm not sure knowing the dates earlier would end up making that much of a difference. One of the nice things about NWPR in Creede is that it's in the winter!

Patrick Gabridge said...

I know, it stinks that people like you, who are writers and who also organize these things, are often excluded because of how the schedules clump. I agree that having NWPR in the winter is really cool. I also love that the Lark is in the fall, again, out of the great grouping in July.