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Topic: Performer perks( Topic Closed) | |
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Author | Message |
VPA1
Star Joined: 10/20/06 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 54 |
Posted: 10/22/06 at 2:26am |
Mike Polo,
Your tech rehearsals...do they engender a royalty charge? Do you feel that you may lose some ticket revenue because some folks may attend that otherwise would pay? Is that amount significant? These are the burning issues in my mind. Your responses are very enlightening, thanks sooo much! Larry at the Valley Performing Arts in Wasilla, Alaska |
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Mike Polo
Admin Group Community Theater Green Room Joined: 2/01/04 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 286 |
Posted: 10/22/06 at 7:25am |
No royalty charge involved, as we write our own fundraisers. We haven't lost a ticket sale yet, as these are people who couldn't get tickets or couldn't make the show because of scheduling. We've done the tech rehearsal thing for regular shows at times (never thinking about royalties) but rarely managed to attract an audience larger than the cast. Frankly, the royalties thing kind of falls into a grey area, at least in my mind, because my rehearsals are open... meaning anyone can come in, have a seat and be tortured along with the cast. Not sure the royalties thing comes into play. |
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MartyW
Celebrity Joined: 2/02/04 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 555 |
Posted: 10/22/06 at 10:32pm |
1 per cast and crew...
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Marty W
"Till next we trod the boards.." |
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Linda S
Celebrity Joined: 4/16/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 312 |
Posted: 10/22/06 at 11:49pm |
I had an interesting conversation this afternoon at a production meeting. The discussion was about opening dress rehearsal to family and friends. No problem. My rehearsals are always open too. I figure they are going to perform in front people eventually. They might as well get use to it. If someone shows up to rehearsal often enough, I put them to work. The conversation started with keeping the invites informal, "Ask some people who might not be able to see the show otherwise, and keep it casual" Then they thought they would ask for donations. You know, put out a bucket with a sign, "Donate to our roof repair fund." Then they thought they would have tickets printed 2 for each cast member, so there wouldn't be too many people invited. The they thought, "Instead of a donation, how about 1/2 price tickets?" Then they could they make some money. That is when I stopped them. They went from an informal audience to selling tickets to dress rehearsal in five minutes. It's a fine line. Linda |
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mtgirl118
Player Joined: 4/10/06 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 0 |
Posted: 11/01/06 at 5:17pm |
My theater used to give away 2 free tickets per actor per show. However, they don't do that for all of the shows.
Ellen Marie |
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Once upon a time I was a shy young thing ~ Could barely walk and talk so much as dance and sing ~ But let me hit that stage I want to take my bow ~ Cause Momma I'm a big girl now - "Hairspray"
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POB14
Celebrity Joined: 7/01/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 349 |
Posted: 11/02/06 at 9:13am |
The only theatres I've worked at that gave comps have been colleges. I always turn them down or give them to other company members anyway, since [insert deity of your choice] has been good to us in the financial department.
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POB
Old Bugger, Curmudgeon, and Antisocial B**tard |
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Sueshoo
Player Joined: 4/29/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 27 |
Posted: 11/02/06 at 10:26am |
Our theatre opens the final dress rehearsal to friends and family. And each cast and crew member are given 2 comps to be used on opening weekend only. Cast and crew can "earn" additional comps if they come on the big set day and help out for 4 hours (1 comp for 4 hours). Susan |
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Susan
Life is not a Dress Rehearsal |
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jenniz
Walk-On Joined: 11/15/06 Location: Canada Online Status: Offline Posts: 0 |
Posted: 11/15/06 at 2:07pm |
Tell me about this...how do you do it? what is your annual fundraiser?? We are in great need for more effective fundraising ideas, with a cast of about 60 students aged 6-19 the fundraising is a difficult part of our group!
Our actors are allowed to see one other performance for free. No comps are given to them. Friends and family are the main source for our ticket sales as well. We do offer ticket comps to the board of directors and high scale donors. We budget for about 20 tickets per show to go to Networking efforts and recruitment opportunities. |
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Nanette
Celebrity Joined: 8/01/06 Online Status: Offline Posts: 399 |
Posted: 11/15/06 at 2:38pm |
I even make my husband pay to see a show! LOL Tickets to the movie theatre are less expensive than to see our show! (We're charging $5/seat.) So far, no one has complained about paying the $5 ... of course, no one has suggested it, and the show is a fund raiser for the local library, so people don't seem to be too upset about paying the $5. The folks I've conned into patroling the green room and halls were offered a comp to see a show and they've refused. That's the difference between us here in "Mayberry" and elsewhere, I guess.
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In a world of margarine, be butter!
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Mike Polo
Admin Group Community Theater Green Room Joined: 2/01/04 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 286 |
Posted: 11/15/06 at 2:45pm |
Jenniz, We do a cabaret-style satirical sendup of our home state and whatever happens to be going on, writing our own songs and creating the show from scratch. We generally have 24-28 songs, 6 or so running gags (3 appearances of each), assorted foolishness during the songs and light patter in between. We also gather together all kinds of give aways to raffle off during each performance, sell ads are displayed during the intermissions and covert the auditorium to cabaret seating and serve drinks at the tables. From a 6 week rehearsal schedule, we spend 5 or so weeks just learning songs and making them sound good, then a week or two inserting bits, gags and humor. We rely heavily on cast members with good improv skills, a music director who is second to none, and a couple of yahoos handling MC duties who can keep a show moving no matter what happens. And that's as close as I can come to describing what we do... it's kind of like a Delaware version of the Capitol Steps, but with elements from the fundraiser concepts that preceded it at our little theater. As a group, we've been developing this series of shows for over 30 years, changing things and growing with the times and the available talent. It's a huge undertaking for the three of us who create it, so huge that we take a sabbatical from it every 3 years, otherwise we'd go insane. |
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