My assistant, Melissa, who has been super busy processing all the Social RSVPs, stumbled upon a Finian's Rainbow souvenir program from the original production at a flea market last week. She snatched it up for $10 and brought it in for show-and-tell.
She found a pot 'o gold on the last page, left to her by that lucky leprechaun, Lee Sabinson, the original producer.
Lee wrote an article on the last page which he titled, "So You Want To Be A Producer."
Lee passed away in 1991, but his legacy lives on, with the production of Finian's currently on Broadway, and with this witty and still relevant article on Producing, which we've transcribed for you below.
SO YOU WANT TO BE A PRODUCER
By Lee Sabinson
After all what does a producer have to do? Very little! Find a play, raise the money, cast the play, raise the money, check the production, raise the money, find a theatre and raise more money!
Now you’re on your way. Finding a play is a simple thing. One little note in a newspaper that you’ve opened producing offices and you’re swamped with such items as “Bertha” a sequel to “The Sewing Machine Girl,” “Icecast,” a melodrama with four people and one set that takes place in the Antarctic during winter – you can save on your electrical equipment this way.
By now your job is jelling. The show is in rehearsal. All you have to do is find a theatre. Do you know how hard it is to find an apartment? Well there are nine hundred thousand apartments to every legitimate theatre available in New York. But suppose you find a theatre are you through with the wonderful, easy job of being a producer? You’re not! You’re just starting out! There are the critics out of town and in New York to get by. If your reviews are good out of town you wonder if the New York critics are going to come waiting to see the arrival of a new Messiah. If they’re bad you’re afraid the critics will come in bored or something.
But “Finian’s Rainbow” got rave reviews on its tryout and rave reviews when it opened. So you think the job is done? Now you sit and worry about how you can cast your road company as perfectly as that on Broadway. And when you’re through worrying about that you have one or two other worries. The show is a hit. But you’ve got to do another show. Where are you going to get the next play? And so it starts in all over again.
If there are any prospective producers among the readers
of this piece who let my words discourage them…they were not prospective
producers at all. For truth to tell, with all the headaches and heart
aches, you feel you want to be a producer. Well, I’ll tell you a secret,
so do I.
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Only 3 days until The 2nd Annual Producers Perspective Social!
Free drink! Door prizes include tickets, merch, and a Kindle!
RSVP Today!
Click here for details.(please note, due to overwhelming demand the Social will now at be Hurley's Saloon)
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