http://firsthand.heinemann.com http://pd.heinemann.com http://www.boyntoncook.com http://www.heinemanndrama.com

Home| About Us| Contact Us| Our Authors| College Professors| Mailing List| Help | My Account| View Cart
SEARCH
BROWSE
New Titles
firsthand
Literacy
Reading
Writing
Language Arts
English Lang. Acquisition
Mathematics
Social Studies
Science
Assessment
Staff/PD
Politics of Education
Multimedia
Professional Development
More >
OTHER RESOURCES
Author Guidelines
Sales Representatives

Read a Sample Chapter
The Musical Theatre Writer's Survival Guide
David Spencer
Foreword by Robert Lopez, Jeff Marx

ISBN 978-0-325-00786-1 / 0-325-00786-1 / 2005 / 216pp / Paperback
Imprint: Heinemann Drama
Availability: In Stock

Grade Level: Adult

List Price: $19.95
Earn Extra Credit! Click here to learn more.

Learn More
Description

David Spencer has written a book full of truths a young writer will not find articulated anywhere else. Most of us in the theatre gained our "experience" by making mistakes and learning from them. David's book lets you gain the "experience" and skip the mistakes part. Anyone maneuvering the treacherous waters of musicals will find it not nearly so lonely or baffling with this remarkable volume as a companion.
—Richard Maltby, Jr., Director/Lyricist, Miss Saigon, Ain't Misbehavin', Baby

Consider The Musical Theatre Writer's Survival Guide your new best friend in the business.
—Alan Menken, Oscar recipient and Tony–Award nominee, composer, Little Shop of Horrors and Beauty and the Beast

At long last: a how-to book written by someone who actually knows how to. It hits so many nails on the head I could barely get through it for the sound of all that hammering.
—Larry Gelbart, Award-winning co-librettist, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum and librettist, City of Angels

For its practitioners, musical theatre is an art, a passion, and a lifelong love. But it's also a complex landscape involving not merely principles of craft about book, music and lyrics, but also principles of collaboration, script/demo presentation, project/production development, venue, business, and—everybody's area of uncertainty—politics.

In The Musical Theatre Writer's Survival Guide, award-winning musical dramatist and teacher David Spencer provides a guide-to-the-game that helps you negotiate all those aspects of the business and more. This professional handbook will walk you through:

  • getting your name and your projects into the hands of producers, instead of the rejection pile
  • choosing the right producer, agent, or director, instead of surrounding yourself with people uninterested in your work and your career—or interested for the wrong reasons
  • bringing your vision to life through stage-savvy writing, instead of watching it sputter due to flaws in craft
  • living a happy, healthy life in musicals, instead of dying a slow, showbiz death.
If you're taking your first steps, Spencer's counsel, anecdotes, and instructions will save you years of blindly stumbling about without results. Likewise, if you've been around the block a few times, The Musical Theatre Writer's Survival Guide can rescue you from the kinds of career-stalling traps, bad habits, and false assumptions that lead to dead ends.

Table of Contents
    Foreword by Robert Lopez and Jeff Marx
    Acknowledgments and Deep Gratitude
    Introduction
    Section One: Establishing Relationships
    Chapter 1: You’re Only as Good as Your Partner—and Vice Versa, or: Collaboration
    Chapter 2: That Other Collaborator, or: The Director
    Chapter 3: The Guards and the Suits, or: Agents and Producers
    Section Two: The Basic Components
    Chapter 4: Throwing "The Book" at You, or: The Plainly Visible Secrets of Successful Libretti
    Chapter 5: Knowing the Score, or: Music and Lyrics
    Section Three: Practical Application
    Chapter 6: The Spirit of the Thing, or: Adaptation
    Chapter 7: The Bogus Condition, or: Writer’ Block
    Chapter 8: It Ain’t Kid Stuff, or: Writing Musicals for Young Audiences
    Chapter 9: Speed Kills, Shift Happens, and Other Homilies, or: Writing Comedy
    Chapter 10. Well, Maybe Thou Shalt Steal, or: Influences
    Section Four: Your are What you Submit, or: Presentation, Format, and Packaging
    Chapter 11: Audio with Pictures, or: The Art of the Reading
    Chapter 12: Acceptable Margins, or: Proper Playscript Formatting
    Chapter 13: Sound Advice, or: Demo Recordings
    Section Five: Random Thoughts, Coda, and Appendices
    Afterword: Random Thoughts
    Coda
    Appendix I. The Race and the Mix, or: Deconstruction in Action
    Appendix II. Grants and Development Programs
    Appendix III. A Better–Than–Average–Shelf–Life, or: The "Addional Reading" List
Samples From this Title
You Might Also Be Interested In...
  • Perfect 10: Writing and Producing the 10-Minute Play (Paperback)
  • From Assassins to West Side Story: The Director's Guide to Musical Theatre (Paperback)
  • Copyright© 1999-2008 Heinemann, a division of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.
    Terms of Use | Privacy Policy