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Community Theater Green Room Discussion Board :Theater Administration :Money Talk |
Topic: how much to do a productions( Topic Closed) | |
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Author | Message |
Kathy S
Celebrity Joined: 8/21/04 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 303 |
Posted: 6/01/06 at 11:49pm |
K8tt, just wondering, if you are really paupers, why do you give away part of your proceeds to charity? Do you have an arrangement where there is a charity that sells your tickets for part of the take? Do you think giving away a portion is helping your theatre or not? I'm sure it very well could be helping, I don't know, we've never done that. There is always so much that we need to buy that we really need our shows to make money. The one thing that we have done all along is to give our concessions to a non-profit group every night, but THEY bring the goodies and sell them, taking home the donations, too. Although, since we just did a huge renovation and are still trying to get the bills paid, we have decided to do concessions ourselves on the current show. |
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Gaafa
Celebrity Joined: 3/21/04 Location: Australia Online Status: Offline Posts: 1181 |
Posted: 6/02/06 at 12:26am |
We only get into charity by offering the organisation blocks of seats
for a performance from $5 each, for the $15 tickets, depending on the
amount taken! They can flog them to their own membership for what they
like & keep the difference. If they want to take the whole house,
they can take over the performance & do whatever they want in the
way of raffles or whatever! [usually on a mid week night] Some mobs
make around $2000 & more for the night for little effort!
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Joe
Western Gondawandaland turn right @ Perth. Hear the light & see the sound. Toi Toi Toi Chookas {{"chook [chicken] it is"} May you always play to a full house} |
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tristanrobin
Celebrity Joined: 4/25/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 704 |
Posted: 6/02/06 at 5:31pm |
just out of curiosity - how are you casting "Gypsy" with only 20 people?!
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Gaafa
Celebrity Joined: 3/21/04 Location: Australia Online Status: Offline Posts: 1181 |
Posted: 6/03/06 at 9:50am |
I?ve been trying to get our mob to forget about charging a price fixed for the tickets!
Just have an open house & request entrance by a monitory donation. I did this a long time ago in a country town & didn?t specify the donation being of money! We got everything thing from boxes of Tomatoes, fruit to even frozen chook! What I should have been specific about was it had to be non perishable! We did get some of money, so we ended up doing a quick auction after the shows & we made more out of that than flogging the seats. When I started the theatre 2 years ago here, & directed our inaugural production, of ?Stepping Out?. As it was the first community theatre in Cockburn City, although they put a price of $12/$10 for the tickets. I gave out a whole heap of comps to the general public, in order to get an audience. I placed a number of donation boxes around the foyer, when we did the final tally. We made around 60% more, than we what we would have done, by selling the tickets & got good audience numbers to the shows as well! Although they have kept up the donation boxes, the return from productions since then, have just covered costs! For their present & 4th production, they have increased their prices for each season. It is now $15/$12 & they don?t give out comps any more. As they think by charging the full wack, this will give them better returns? But all it has done is reduce the punters & the revenue. Instead of playing to decent houses & increasing their audience base over a the shortest time! Ah well! |
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Joe
Western Gondawandaland turn right @ Perth. Hear the light & see the sound. Toi Toi Toi Chookas {{"chook [chicken] it is"} May you always play to a full house} |
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k8tt
Star Joined: 4/05/05 Location: Canada Online Status: Offline Posts: 73 |
Posted: 6/12/06 at 8:58am |
Whew, just finished the run of Marvin's Room and I think we won't have much to donate to the cancer charity. The Publicity manager partnered with this Breast Cancer group thinking that they would help promote the play and bring in patrons. But the partnership did not help fill seats.
I am still upset that we put on this drama (AD's choice, not Play Committee's choice). We had to beat the bushes to get 3/4 of the house full each night (and one of our matinees was only half full). Everyone who saw it liked it, but the audiences want comedy. Lots of our regular patrons didn't attend because they didn't want to see a play about cancer, even if parts of it were humorous. |
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Playwright
Celebrity Joined: 4/01/06 Location: Canada Online Status: Offline Posts: 126 |
Posted: 6/12/06 at 1:40pm |
I hear you! Marvin's Room is an awesome play! I'm premiering my own play in four weeks. All the ticket proceeds are going to charity. The tag line for the play says- A story of family, love, laughter, loss and the enduring human spirit. We are deliberatly not giving away the story-line. Tickets are selling slowy at a steady pace but suprisingly opening night is selling the best so far. Once the cast members get their orders in then we'll sell even more. It's summer theatre and not a flat out comedy so I'm not expecting sold-out nights. Wishing for some but not setting my expectations too high.
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John Luzaich
Celebrity Joined: 2/24/08 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 174 |
Posted: 3/11/08 at 3:06pm |
Actually, we were just looking at numbers last night. We had a budget/finance committee meeting (8 members) and then our full board meeting (18 members). We're in our 30th year. We own our own 500 seat theatre building, produce 4 plays a year, present a small artist series and do a number of rentals. For our community theatre produced plays (non-musical) we spend in the $4,800. - $8,300. range. For musicals we spend usually in the $12,000 - $14,000. range. But, for the last play we spent about $5,000. and brought in about $20,000. for a profit margin of $15,000. For Pippin we spent about $23,000. and brought in about $47,000. for a $24,000 profit margin. ("brought in" - meaning individual admission ticket sales, a portion of season ticket sales, sponsorships, concession and any other contributions or fund raising for that specific show).
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John
cfct@cfu.net http://www.osterregent.org http://www.facebook.com/osterregent |
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jayzehr
Celebrity Joined: 8/11/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 537 |
Posted: 3/12/08 at 8:24am |
How much did your 500 seat theatre cost you and/or what do you think it's worth at the moment?
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John Luzaich
Celebrity Joined: 2/24/08 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 174 |
Posted: 3/12/08 at 9:59am |
Hey Jayzehr,
Our building was built in 1910. It was a legit theatre for 8 years, then a movie theatre for most of it's life. The building was run down and fly system back stage area not structurally sound. It was closed down for a few years and the family that owned and operated the movie theatre gifted the building to our community theatre organization. The community theatre had been producing two plays a year for 16 years on a junior high school stage. We spent about three years fund raising and restoring the building. It is listed on the National Registry of Historic Places and the board raised and spent about $1.2 million as it re-opened in 1994 as a legit theatre again. We've since spent another $225,000. on restoring all of the seats, waterproofing the roof, replacing 5 doors, building an orchestra pit and insulating the back stage areas. The building is valued at about $1.4 million. I'm the general manager, a full time employee, and have been here about 10 years. We have another full time employee, one part time employee, 474 volunteers on our list, an 18 member board and a 15 member "friends" board (social support and fund raising group).
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John
cfct@cfu.net http://www.osterregent.org http://www.facebook.com/osterregent |
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ticketjunior
Walk-On Joined: 6/23/07 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 0 |
Posted: 5/18/08 at 9:55pm |
Just for people looking for numbers. Our theater groups just did Beauty and the Beast. Cast of 60, lighting, customs, scenes, sound, etc, ...basically everything for just a little over $7,000. We did three performances and sold approximately 1500 tickets at $10 per ticket. |
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-James P. Walters
Phone: 404-272-4778 www.ticketjunior.com "We're the little guy in the ticketing business." |
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