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Post by wickedgrin on Feb 28, 2018 15:12:04 GMT
I am surprised the issue of no pay has not come up before. Shenton has long championed fringe venues where the artists have not been paid. No payment for work equals amateur or hobby. I have long been astonished that these productions have been treated as professional.
Insisting on free "plus one" tickets will not help the cause for payments of artists either in a small fringe venue. Plus free programmes and drinks.
I attended the production of Hair at the Vaults at a performance Mark Shenton attended and was astonished that he had two reserved prime seats while the rest of us "plebs" had to scramble for the unallocated seating. I thought surely he should experience the show in the same way as a typical audience member rather than have preferential treatment. I ended up at the back of a shallow rake with a large person in front of me and barely saw anything!
He, of course, complains bitterly when other journalists get preferential scoops like Baz in the paper we don't mention!
However, having said all that, I do support him in this stand - I only hope he sticks to it.
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Post by oxfordsimon on Feb 28, 2018 15:12:17 GMT
What Shenton needs to do to convince me of his position is to provide some evidence as to the scale of the problem. Not anecdotes about actors having to take second jobs to keep going. The industry has always been packed with people working as waiters or in call centres or whatever until they get their big break. There will always be more actors than there are acting jobs for them to do.
And that disparity between the number of roles and the number of trained actors is only exacerbated by the increase in the number of drama schools and other institutions providing training for actors. The more people who get trained, the fiercer the competition, the more out-of-work actors there will be. People will always want to follow their dreams.
I want something concrete that explains how big the issue of low paid/unpaid work really is. Is it 10% of shows in London? 5%? 20%? I know that people are working under those circumstance in London and beyond. But what is the scale of the issue?
If the research is out there, I would be really interested to see it. It will serve as useful framework for any discussion.
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Post by wickedgrin on Feb 28, 2018 15:17:23 GMT
I have no idea how big the issue is. It will always be a problem where there are far more trained actors than there are paid roles.
However, Shenton has regularly reviewed the Edinburgh Fringe theatre, for example where I would suggest a very high percentage of performers do not get paid - opting for the exposure and the (deluded?) notion they may be spotted and swept off to Hollywood! This issue could alter the entire Edinburgh Fringe Festival!
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Post by oxfordsimon on Feb 28, 2018 15:26:52 GMT
I have no idea how big the issue is. It will always be a problem where there are far more trained actors than there are paid roles. However, Shenton has regularly reviewed the Edinburgh Fringe theatre, for example where I would suggest a very high percentage of performers do not get paid - opting for the exposure and the (deluded?) notion they may be spotted and swept off to Hollywood! This issue could alter the entire Edinburgh Fringe Festival! The vast majority of Fringe festivals have many productions where the cast and crew aren't being paid. There is no way that any company can pay people on festival levels of income. They are useful opportunities to develop new work and test it out with audiences. There will be plenty of people who will continue to review festivals. And that is great. Our future critics will cut their teeth reviewing fringe and festival pieces. And anyone who thinks that local papers pay good rates for theatre reviews is deluding themselves. I was once asked to step in to cover a show and was offered double the usual rate because it was short notice. I got £20. And that was only a few years ago. Whatsonstage relied on unpaid reviewers for vast swathes of their content. Indeed I suspect most of what is left of their regional coverage is still unpaid. Will that stop companies plastering star ratings and pull quotes from WoS on their posters? Of course not.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 28, 2018 15:34:29 GMT
As a general rule, I don't believe that "virtue-signalling" is a real thing Isn't that basically the purpose of 98% of Twitter and Facebook accounts?
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4,970 posts
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Post by Phantom of London on Feb 28, 2018 15:55:24 GMT
I wonder how many non-Equity rate shows Shenton has reviewed over the past year. Just to get a sense of what he sees to be the scale of the problem. I really don't have any real idea as to the scope of non-Equity rates in the industry. I’d expect Mr Shenton will be a stranger at the SWP going forward. Because I don’t see how they can stage musicals, in London, with those ticket prices and still be paying the actors, musicians and crew minimum wage. The SWP gets Art Council funding.
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Post by Phantom of London on Feb 28, 2018 18:23:15 GMT
Acting is the ultimate carrot and stick career. Where people dream of the red carpet, with their chauffeur limousine waiting, but first you have to navigate the baying paparazzi, or you fly from Los Angles to Paris vis New York and London to promote your new movie, naturally you travel first class, but the producer picks up the bill. But the likelihood all that is going to be a pipe dream and as pointed out on here your lines will be “what would you like for your main” or on a phone telling people “we are not trying to sell you anything”. So most artists and creatives are chasing that unlikely dream, so in a way they’re vulnerable. Why should then because they are chasing that said elusive dream, should this make them entitled to be exploited?
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Post by oxfordsimon on Feb 28, 2018 18:44:12 GMT
It is not just actors who dream. All too often you hear of those rogue model agencies who charge the hopeful an arm and a leg to join their books - and never get them any work.
In many ways, you can view the way some drama schools charge a lot for auditions as a form of exploitation. I have heard tell of figures up to £150 to be seen - and they don't give any feedback other than yes or no. So if you are applying to a few, you can be out of pocket of close to £1k by the time you factor in travel and other costs. And the drama schools can get away with it because so many people want to enter the profession.
Yes, there are costs involved in running entry auditions. Even more so if you are running auditions for musical theatre when you need to provide pianists. But those costs do seem excessive - as most of those on the panel will be members of staff doing this as part of their job! £150 is a lot for admin...
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5,138 posts
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Post by TallPaul on Feb 28, 2018 19:23:24 GMT
The SWP gets Art Council funding. If SWP is the Southwark Playhouse, then I'm not sure it does, at least not in the current funding cycle just coming to an end. Happy to be corrected.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 28, 2018 20:09:53 GMT
The SWP gets Art Council funding. If SWP is the Southwark Playhouse, then I'm not sure it does, at least not in the current funding cycle just coming to an end. Happy to be corrected. No it isn't: southwarkplayhouse.co.uk/support-us/Not to say that some productions that go through there wouldn't be (if they've had a production grant or whatever ACE call them). Also I can't speak with great authority on ACE but my own Arts Council experience was that again, pay was not a 'hard and fast rule' thing in terms of how much people should be paid. AND you don't actually have to PROVE that you paid that (at least not in Wales) it's taken on 'good faith'. So again the actual scamming scoundrels would get away with it (in the short term at least)
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4,970 posts
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Post by Phantom of London on Feb 28, 2018 21:54:03 GMT
Okay it used to get funded though the Arts Council.
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Post by firefingers on Feb 28, 2018 23:18:03 GMT
If SWP is the Southwark Playhouse, then I'm not sure it does, at least not in the current funding cycle just coming to an end. Happy to be corrected. No it isn't: southwarkplayhouse.co.uk/support-us/Not to say that some productions that go through there wouldn't be (if they've had a production grant or whatever ACE call them). Also I can't speak with great authority on ACE but my own Arts Council experience was that again, pay was not a 'hard and fast rule' thing in terms of how much people should be paid. AND you don't actually have to PROVE that you paid that (at least not in Wales) it's taken on 'good faith'. So again the actual scamming scoundrels would get away with it (in the short term at least) All on good faith over here too. It may have been an issue on a show I worked on. Depending on the producer musicals at SWP usually pay about 200 a week, too low for Mark Shenton's approval. I did a whole host of low pay gigs early on. I set myself a basic rule on my pay: I wouldn't do a show for less than a ticket to that show. Felt fair for someone learning the ropes. As long as everyone is getting bugger all then I'm fine with it. One fringe producer has recently got a nice pad in fancy bit of East London, but will happily stick cast on 100 a week plus profit share and no profit is found at the end of the run... someone is making money and not others. Not on really. It's why I support producers who run an open book and let every company member view the finances at the end. Of course numbers can be fiddled but it helps.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 1, 2018 9:19:47 GMT
OH!!! May I suggest *not* using SWP as an abbreviation for Southwark Playhouse? "Southwark" being all one word means I've been spending the last few days wondering if I missed where Mark Shenton suddenly became a massive proponent of the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse!
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Post by samuelwhiskers on Mar 1, 2018 14:03:46 GMT
There is a lot of exploitation financial and otherwise in acting. We would do a lot better to ban drama school audition fees and CD workshops before banning profit share fringe.
And critics need to look to their own behaviour. There is one now-notorious blog who requested tickets to almost every single show on Vault Festival this year, yet reviewed only about three. Of course requesting a press comp is not a guarantee of attendance or review, but requests should be made in good faith, ie on the intention of reviewing. Blithely requesting hundreds of comps when you cannot physically attend shows a level of carelessness towards the fact these small companies and artists rely on ticket sales to cover their costs. Requesting a comp with no intention of attending leaves a seat empty that may have been sold to a paying audience member.
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Post by westendwilma on Mar 1, 2018 17:53:26 GMT
So its just been announced that Shenton is heading to NY to be The Stage's lead theatre critic there? So he won't be in London to review shows regardless of whether people are being paid or not?
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Post by oxfordsimon on Mar 1, 2018 17:57:25 GMT
Has it? Where?
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Post by princeton on Mar 1, 2018 18:27:46 GMT
John Lahr was theatre critic for the New Yorker magazine for more than 20 years but was based in London. He used to go to NYC to binge on theatre and then eke out his reviews over a few weeks, I suspect that's what will happen with Shenton. He'll no doubt review UK theatre for other outlets.
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Post by oxfordsimon on Mar 1, 2018 18:39:46 GMT
Just seen it on his Twitter feed.
It makes his article seem even more of an ego trip as he must have known that he would be shifting focus to NY when he wrote it.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 1, 2018 21:47:15 GMT
And critics need to look to their own behaviour. There is one now-notorious blog who requested tickets to almost every single show on Vault Festival this year, yet reviewed only about three. Of course requesting a press comp is not a guarantee of attendance or review, but requests should be made in good faith, ie on the intention of reviewing Sitting next to empty seats on press (and indeed trade) nights makes me angry as hell. Of course it is bad manners to accept a comp and not review. Personally, I do say "no" when I know there is no chance I'll either make it or write about it. It's the only right thing to do, as there is always someone who will, and be useful to the production as a result. Ditto all of that. Obviously life happens and sometimes something comes up last minute but unless it’s an actual emergency phoning to cancel press tickets (or emailing) takes minutes. And of course the outright self importance of accepting on the off chance you can be arsed to go.
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Post by shady23 on Mar 1, 2018 23:10:46 GMT
Not a fan, he doesn't half come across as full of an inflated self importance
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Post by oxfordsimon on Mar 1, 2018 23:15:34 GMT
Do you think Shenton was the inspiration for Elder Price?
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4,970 posts
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Post by Phantom of London on Mar 4, 2018 1:24:46 GMT
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Post by joem on Mar 4, 2018 10:01:23 GMT
OH!!! May I suggest *not* using SWP as an abbreviation for Southwark Playhouse? "Southwark" being all one word means I've been spending the last few days wondering if I missed where Mark Shenton suddenly became a massive proponent of the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse! Or the Socialist Workers' Party.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 4, 2018 11:10:55 GMT
I've genuinely, involuntarily said "Oh f*** off" at that article.
"I will only read reviews and features written by people who are paid to write them."
Is just an excuse to extend critical snobbery (fear?) of other writers. I'm all for getting paid for my writing. But my reviews for unpaid sites are no less valid.
Also Shenton is being very quiet on the issue of how we work out playwright's salaries. My current commission is already working out at less than minimum wage, and it's not close to done. I'm ok with that, I signed up for that, because I feel it's a worthwhile investment of time/lack of money for the future.
This and observing a lot of the replies to tweets I'm afraid all reeks of self serving, and self promotion.
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Post by oxfordsimon on Mar 6, 2018 14:47:54 GMT
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