Today, I read a blog post in which the author argues that production rights for plays and musicals should be licensed for free to schools that otherwise can't afford to pay.
This author, whom I respect greatly, correctly points out the value that arts education represents for schools, and makes the important point that the focus on STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Math), rather than STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, ARTS & Math) will do our students (and society) a disservice in the long run. With funding for the arts being cut at school after school, he proposes to give poorly funded school drama programs a break, calling on authors and licensing agents to waive fees for these programs.
It's certainly hard to argue against the need to preserve arts education in our public schools. It's hard to defend charging fees for the use of plays and musicals in the educational setting.
And yet I must. Here goes.
Arts education should include exploration of the business of art
Arts education is certainly important. But so, in my view, is a pragmatic education in the economic realities of art and culture in our society.
Stage with Curtain and Lights
To those educators and administrators who claim they can't afford to pay for the rights, I say this: If you're selling tickets, you've got a revenue stream. Shouldn't the authors of the show share in that? We buy or rent the sets, costumes, lights. We pay for electricity, etc. and the teachers/directors/choreographers get paid. Why should those who wrote the material waive their fees?
When you set out to construct a school building, you pay the architects and engineers for their work designing it. You pay the owners of the land on which the school is built, and you pay all of the vendors who supply the raw materials from which the building is constructed. If there's no viable way to fund all that construction, you don't build it.
In Theatre, the plays are the raw materials used to construct the learning experience. In academic classrooms, the books, lab equipment, supplies, and other learning materials come at a cost. Why should theatre be different?
Instead of looking for ways to avoid paying for the art we consume, we ought to encourage the search for ways to fund it.
We go to great lengths to see that students are given opportunities to create, perform, and display the fruits of their talents, but we pay little attention to the real-world economics of art. We need, I think, to involve students in the show-selection process, and to help them understand the costs, and that the materials they perform represent the creative efforts of bookwriters, composers, lyricists and others. These things, like most things of value and importance are not free. They are not something to which everyone is entitled. (Don't get me started on the entitlement mentality of many as regards music, film, etc.). This understanding will help them see the need for funding from multiple sources, and make them better citizens. the simple fact is, fundraising is a huge part of the theatre-making process, and the more we involve kids in that process, the better they'll understand and be able to participate in the arts throughout their lives. Isn't that what education is really about?
Royalties for plays are typically a fairly small part of the overall expense of putting on a show. (Though the author of the blog in question points to anecdotal evidence of rather high license fees for the most popular shows). In most cases licensors are mindful of budget, school size, etc. And in many cases, royalties are tied to ticket sales, so the cost stays relative.
Artists need to be able to earn from their work
Arts education is important. But it is equally important that those so educated have a chance at making a living by creating art. Without that, the arts will whither and die.
Bottom line: authors need to feed, clothe and shelter their families. They should be paid for their work. If they're not, they will be less inclined to create.
What do you think? Should schools be given a free pass on paying for stage rights?
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Too many people want something for nothing these days. A friend of mine wrote two plays, Titanic - The Musical and Wacky Soap, and allows schools to have them at a discounted rate. I think you're doing yourself a disservice and undervaluing your worth and the worth of your material if you give it away free. I do give away some of my short-stories for free, for reading only, but only as a marketing tool to try and stimulate sales of my books. But if someone wanted to option one of those short-stories, then I'm afraid they'd have to pay.
The place of money in the spirit of creativity is actually non-existent. Money enters the picture when creativity interacts with society. If artists are to be listened to down the ages, then money is not the way society will govern itself in the future, so I am happy to visit schools free of charge and do my storytelling. especially given the fact that today all education is only to produce workers and not thinkers. Some of us have to make a stand against that :)