Posted on June 3, 2010 at 1:15 pm
I have been associated with New York Musical Festival (NYMF) in the past, and therefore I feel a certain responsibility to make sure that they are held accountable for detestable practices and abuses. NYMF has asked all the writers in this year’s festival to sign a contract in order to participate. The following letter from the Dramatists Guild explains the problems from there:
From the DRAMATISTS GUILD
June 3, 2010
Dear Guild members,
You may have heard that there is considerable controversy surrounding the 2010 NYMF contract. After analyzing it, it is clear to us that NYMF has made significant modifications to its contract this year, to minimize the risk and cost to them of presenting your self-produced production in their festival while maximizing their control and revenue. It appears that NYMF has adopted a philosophy in taking for itself financial terms that are more appropriate for a LORT or commercial Off-Broadway producer actually paying to produce your play. While the Guild has spoken with the NYMF administration, they have only conceded that they might adjust their contract with respect to script and creative approval. They appear, though, to be resolute in maintaining the financial terms of their contract which allow them benefits superior to those reserved for LORT, commercial Off-Broadway, and, in at least some instances, first-class/Broadway producers.
The Guild considers this contract substandard and advises against signing it for the following reasons.
The Applicant’s (who is most likely the Author) present costs are considerable, making the Author a self-producer as with any typical festival:
a. $500 participation fee;
b. $575 for insurance;
c. $1,000-$2,250 as a venue fee (priced at their discretion)
d. $1,000-$4,000 as a sound fee (priced at their discretion)
e. $100 per performance [what was this for?]
f. additional $100 for a sound engineer fee.
Per paragraph 4(B)(iii) and everything in Schedule B, there may be additional unforeseen fees, as well. This puts your out-of-pocket present costs at a minimum range of $3,275-$7,525, plus the significant bite from the box office given over to NYMF. This, of course, doesn’t include the costs of actually producing the show (cast, crew, sets, props, etc.), which are the sole responsibility of the applicant to the festival.
The potential present income for NYMF is also significant, allowing them to receive the rewards of producing while maintaining the risks of a presenter. This is epitomized by NYMF’s take of the Box Office:
i. NYMF takes the first $1,500 of box office receipts; then
ii. NYMF takes 60% of the gross up to half the maximum possible receipts for the entire festival; then
iii. NYMF takes 50% of balance.
Typically, co-producers would split the gross either 50/50 or proportionally according to their respective outlay for initial capitalization. Even the NY Fringe takes only about 1/3 of the box office receipts. Moreover, NYMF is allowed to give away up to 25% of all tickets to anybody it wants (“members of the press, sponsors, patrons, staff, and NYMF partners”). It can also discount 100% of the tickets. These factors can cut deep into the box office before you have a chance to claim any percentage of it for your own efforts.
Merchandise is likewise used as an opportunity for NYMF to over reach. It requires 20% of gross from all merchandise, plus as-yet undetermined royalties to the Merchandise Venues, which is decided exclusively between NYMF and the Venue.
NYMF now also requires payments from the author and applicant’s future income:
a. 2% of the Applicant’s gross on all income received from the play in excess of $20,000 over ten years, PLUS
b. 2% of the Author’s gross on all income received from the play in excess of $20,000 over ten years.
First of all, the $20,000 trigger is no more than lip service to the “windfall” idea. The Public Theater has just agreed to a $75,000 windfall waiver, where they do not receive any subsidiary rights participation on the author’s first $75,000 of income, and that’s when they’ve spent a lot of money to actually produce a work. The Roundabout and Lincoln Center take no sub rights on their off-Broadway productions. Manhattan Theatre Club gets 5%, and most large main stage LORT around the country get 5% of sub rights for five years. And these participations are based on actual productions, usually at least 21 paid public performances that they have fully financed and marketed, and for which they have paid authors an advance and gross royalties. How many performances does NYMF guarantee? Six? What advance are they paying? What minimum royalty guarantee? Oh, wait. No. YOU pay THEM.
As to the amount of their participation, typically, an Equity Showcase producer garners EITHER 3% of the Author’s net subsidiary revenues earned within two years of closing OR a percentage of the box office (sometimes in the range of 0.5% to 2.0% of the GWBOR) from any commercial productions in the US within two years. By requiring both the Applicant and Author to pay a future royalty, they are essentially enjoying the benefits of BOTH subsidiary rights from the Author AND future participation from the producer. And if you are the one producing your show in their festival and are producing the subsequent productions as well, you may be paying 4%, not just 2%. What is more, they are requesting 2% from the Author’s gross, not net, so there is no adjustment for agent commissions or any other third party obligations.
With regard to the duration and scope of their participation, they are requiring this subsidiary rights participation for ten years, a length of time typically reserved for commercial off-Broadway producers, who are a far cry from being Showcase festival co-presenters. Keep in mind that they are requiring their participation from all performances, including foreign territories, which commercial producers don’t always share in. Frankly, a Broadway producer doesn’t even share in foreign territories after seven years. In other words, the NYMF administration seems to be suggesting that the value they add to shows is in many ways superior to that of Broadway producers.
Control is also at issue in this contract. In Paragraph 1(B), NYMF claims “final, sole discretion” over “all decisions and approvals.” While this is probably not a sinister plot for NYMF to rearrange any dialogue, the contract should specifically limit any script or creative approvals to the Author. And they have expressed to us their willingness to revise the contract to so specify. More broadly, however, under their contract they have control over the venue, schedule, ticket pricing and marketing without ever having to bear the risk that a producer would have to bear in order to obtain such broad control over such elements of a production.
They also take for themselves the right to “equitable relief” in an arbitration against you, but they bar you from any similar right. Further, they make all the authors “jointly AND SEVERALLY LIABLE” for any breaches, which can make one author fully liable for their collaborator’s plagiarism (for example). The industry standard is for all authors to be solely liable for their own contributions.
A festival is meant to be an opportunity where people can pool their resources and produce their own work at a significantly reduced price. Hopefully, that production will pay for itself and lead to other opportunities. NYMF subsidizes this process and, in so doing, fulfills the charitable purpose for which they receive tax-exempt non-profit status and, therefore, the ability to receive grants, subsidies, donations and underwriting. But NYMF has its hand out for more, grabbing more than the industry standard at every juncture of the event. It costs $5,000 just to participate. But, then they take subsidiary rights and future participation analogous to what actual producers might receive, take well above even a standard co-producer’s share, take an indefinite merchandising royalty, and reserve the right to give away 25% of the seating capacity while discounting the rest. Additionally, their contract could be read to impose greater liability on the authors than it does on them, and all this at the expense of those they’ve received tax-exempt status to help.
Shows like Next to Normal, [title of show] and Altar Boyz were featured at NYMF before reaching significant success. With a track record like that, it is easy to see why a playwright would desire the exposure provided by inclusion in NYMF. Nevertheless, the Guild encourages all of its members to be aware of the standard terms for such a festival and act accordingly. Certainly, NYMF is not adding value to your work that is superior to what is added by the Roundabout, the Public, and Lincoln Center. So, why should they receive superior, or even equivalent, terms, especially considering that they are not, in fact, producing your show?
This organization is taking the position that they deserve the prerogatives, controls and compensation of a PRODUCER, but with the minimal obligations of a PRESENTER. Of course, the Guild cannot prohibit its members from signing such a contract. However, we hope that with this notice, our members feel fully educated as to its nature.
9 comments
I know intimately the way NYMF works, having been an “invited” show there three years ago. However, there is one significant piece of information missing from that letter – the participation fee for the NYMF-chosen shows is indeed $500. However, the participation fee for the invited shows (like mine was) is, in fact, $5,000.
Wow. That is horrible!
I’m not sure that’s true. I was involved with a show that was an invited work and didn’t pay $5000. Perhaps there was something about your show that meant they wanted/needed to charge more?
It certainly is or at least was true – not only for my show (which certainly had no special needs or anything), but for several of my friends’ invited shows. That was the fee and it was set in stone – and believe me, I argued about it. Because of the fee, the box-office returns were split more favorably for the show – but not by much.
I just read Isaac Robert Hurwitz’s response to all of this:
http://www.nymf.org/Story-474.html
I understand where the Nymf people are coming from, and yet, I can’t help but compare the Nymf situation with the policy of NAMT, the National Alliance For Musical Theater. From their website (my italics):
Step 5: IF YOU ARE SELECTED
I still haven’t done anything with Nymf, largely because I haven’t been ballsy enough to raise money to produce my own shows in New York. But getting selected for NAMT led directly to an off-broadway run of one of my shows, and the rest of my career. And all I had to pay was the $60 fee to apply.
True, it’s a crapshoot–NAMT only does 8 shows a year. Nymf is more of the laissez-faire capitalism version, while NAMT is more of a contest with 8 winners. Which would you rather have?
I produced my show at NYMF and I am one of a very few that has a “pay 2% over 20 grand” clause.
I’m not surprised that the Guild is pissed but they wait 5 years to speak up? Where have they been this whole time?
Before we gave NYMF $5000 entry fee (plus a $550 insurance fee), they spent a lot of time making sure we all understood what the production end entailed as well as box office. I mean they really went through the contract with a fine tooth comb with all of the producers in the room at the same time. They did not however do the same with the participation agreement. I’m not saying they did this on purpose but it is suspect. It’s obvious they are still growing and need some financial help. The folks running it are not making a helluva lot of money, after all, it is a non-profit.
It’s easy to portray them as this big bad guy out to get our money but the reality is they are another well intentioned institution looking to make it’s mark. I know good intentions sank the Titanic but the real bad guy here is the fact it’s far too expensive to produce anything in NYC. I’m actually glad this is causing this controversy it is because it will only help our cause, to write new work and be able to present in the greatest billboard in the world, NYC!
This is a pretty ballsy agreement from a showcase festival. Even the O’Neill backed down from their royalty proposal
and Roundabout has altered their agreement in favor of the writers. Someone should warn the folks at the NYU masters program and BMI to caution their students about this.
I’m pretty much over this idea that enabling writers/composers to self-produce is somehow empowering to them (NYMF’s basic premise). It’s not empowering at all; what we need is more producers and fundraisers to work for/with us so we can do our work: writing and revising the show. If NYMF were to address this issue and use their profile to launch programs to support the next generation of musical theatre producers, then things could get interesting. But as things are, it’s so hard and stressful to get your show on, and all the contracts can be so confusing to a new writer–bottom line, this percentage of future royalties thing is very upsetting. What a hot mess.
Jason, thank you for taking NYMF to task on this!
I’ve been involved with NYMF shows a few times in different capacities and I can say from experience that the whole festival has evolved over the years into something that I don’t think it was ever intended to be. Every year, I’m amazed at how much emphasis is continually put on production values. I saw a couple of shows last year that looked like full-on Off-Broadway productions. It’s been a slippery slope of growing expectations forcing shows to do more and more with the same amount of resources. This is becoming so distracting for writers who now spend more time worrying about props and costumes than words and notes on the page. And now they want them to sign away their financial rights too? It’s insane!
I understand that NYMF is probably hemorrhaging money right now, but with the way they’re currently undermining the writers’ ability to do the jobs they’re supposed to be doing, they’re not really maintaining their mission statement anyway.
It seems that NYMF is becoming more interested in being a business than being a vehicle of artistic nurturing. But you know what, if your intention is to help artists then you almost have to expect to run in the red. It may not be fair, but no one says you have to keep doing it.
In my opinion they really ought to make a choice between simplifying things so that they can operate with out such massive deficits, or just become an actual producing entity like Roundabout. But you can’t have your cake and eat it too.
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