Playwright's Frequently
Asked Questions
Kevin's FAQ
[Over the years many questions have been directed at
Kevin M Reese via email, workshops, and personal conversations.
We decided to post some of them-- with his responses-- here.]
Updated
06/03/08
Why do you have an FAQ?
How do
you write your music?
Why do you write your own music?
Isn't it cheating to use a computer to
write your songs?
Do
you let theatres make their own arrangements of your songs?
Why are most of your shows fairy tales?
Which of your shows is your favorite?
Which of your shows is your least favorite?
What are your thoughts about theatres making
changes to your scripts?
How
does a theatre approach you to make a script revision for their production?
Why are you marketing your shows
yourself?
How do you decide what scripts to
write?
Do you miss performing?
Who influenced your career?
How are you
qualified to write for very young audiences?
What are
your thoughts about copyrights and infringement?
My
child wants to pursue acting as a career. Any advice?
We like your script-- but want you to change the ending. Will you do
it?
Q: Why do you write your own music? Wouldn't your
shows be better if you collaborated with someone else?
A: When I was writing my first show, Little Red Riding
Hood back in 1993, I had a wonderfully talented musician working on the music with
me. I didn't have all the MIDI equipment that I have today so I was having to do it all by
hand (and I'm NOT a pianist!). I wrote the lyrics and vocal melody lines and she was going
to write the accompaniments. She came back all excited with a song that used MOST of
my lyrics, but the rest of it was entirely from her. It was nice-- but it wasn't MY
song. I asked her to go back to my melody and I commissioned her to just do the
arrangements for me. Her arrangements are better than anything I could have come up
with at the time (actually, they're some of my best songs) and I'm very grateful for her
work. But I've worked alone ever since.
Would my shows be better if I had someone else do the music?
Maybe. But it wouldn't be my show (please don't deduce that I'm a power freak.
If you knew what playwrights go through, the give and take that goes on during the
original production, you'd understand). When I write a show, the songs are so
integral to the story. When I write a lyric, I have the melody going in my
head. The accompaniment I come up with (with
the help of MIDI software) is my idea of how the song should go. Having another
person involved in the creative process would only take up valuable time as I waited for
them to come up with the accompaniment I liked. If I ever got a musician involved
with my shows, it would be to reduce my accompaniments down to piano so other theatres
could use a live pianist during their production, if they desired.
Q: Why are most of your shows fairy tales? Why
don't you write many original stories?
A: Because adapting fairy tales are so much easier! I
grew up with those stories. All the basic elements are already there: plot,
conflict, rising action, resolution-- I just take what's there and add my two cents.
I've only been writing scripts since 1993. I'm a relative newcomer.
I'm still learning my craft. I've done a few original scripts (Toy Land, Buddy, the
Magic Snowman, Cuddle Bears, Squash It!, Boo Castle, Adventure of the
Fluoride Fandango) and they're HARD. I'll eventually
get into writing original stories, but right now, I'm honing my skills in the shallow end
of the pool. By the way, if you've ever been around child audiences you know that
writing for kids is no piece of cake. They're a very demanding audience in their own
right (but also very gracious!).
Q: Which of your shows is your favorite?
A: Whichever one a theatre is considering! Actually, I
have a lot of favorites. Little Red Riding Hood will always be a favorite
of mine because it was my first project and it is dedicated to the memory of my
Mom. It is probably my tightest show and it's been performed the most so far.
I also wrote the role of the Wolf for myself to play. It toured for seven
months. I have great memories of that show. I like Beauty & the Beast
a lot, as well as Wizard of Oz and Alice in Wonderland. I just revised Pinocchio for a touring
production, adding more songs, and I like how that runs now. There's really nothing
all that special about my A Christmas Carol (it's 95% Dickens-- I just cut it
down to under an hour), but it's done a lot and it's produced every year by the Wichita Children's Theatre in
Kansas, directed by- and starring John (JB) Boldenow and I cry every time (in a good way!)
from his portrayal of Scrooge. I look forward to seeing that every year. Among
my shorter shows, I really like how The Three Billy Goats Gruff turned out.
The Little Red Hen, The Elves and the Shoemaker and The Three Little Kittens
are still fun for me to watch. Toy Land is my favorite original script.
It is really like talking about your kids. There are things
you love about them, and things you wish had turned out differently-- but you love them
the way they are-- and you are so proud when someone else appreciates them. And of
course since I'm marketing the scripts myself, whenever I think of an improvement, I can
revise the shows over the years! Sometimes, when I'm in the audience for one of my
shows (I travel a few thousand miles a year to catch various productions around the
country), I sit back and marvel that I actually had a part in what I'm seeing
onstage.
Q: Which of your
shows is your least favorite?
A: Oh, yeah, right! Then nobody would produce that show
anymore! Actually, I don't have a "least favorite." If
I didn't like the show, I wouldn't offer it to theatres to produce.
Case in point is the musical version of my Night Before Christmas. I felt so guilty
seeing it in my catalogue that I finally took it off. I plan to
rework it and maybe then I'll make it available for production. It
has one of my very favorite songs I've written in it ("Mom's and
Dad's Like Christmas, too")
Q: What are your
thoughts about theatres making changes to your
scripts?
A: They can't, it's forbidden. I like what I wrote or I would
have changed it myself. I've been in the theatre long enough to know that
theatres revise scripts all the time: A director sees a script and thinks of something else that s/he
believes may be funnier or easier to stage. I did it-- a lot (that's why I got into
playwrighting to begin with). The problem I have with that is that my name is on the
program as the writer and I may get blamed for a director's poor choice. The writer
in me would rather they find another script to produce and leave mine the way I wrote it.
But on the other hand, I am also a businessman and I want theatres to produce my
shows. I'm adapting my shows all the time. I'd rather a director just come to
me and ask me to make some changes for his production. More times than not, I would
make changes for them (usually I'll incorporate many of the changes I made for them into
the published script-- so It's a win-win situation). I don't charge theatres when I
adapt my own scripts-- but I will sue the pants off of everyone involved if I find out
about a change that may adversely affect my reputation or the marketability of my scripts.
I take the copyright notice that is found in the front of all my scripts very
seriously.
Now, of course, this doesn't apply to cutting the script or
rearranging the script-- only to ADDING to the script. Neither does it apply to
minor "cosmetic" changes: A word here or there; changing a
"he" to a she" if your changing the character's sex because of your
casting; changing a line to correspond to your technical set up (referring to a blue fence
that is green in your production would be silly); updating a contemporary reference (the
reference to a film that was popular in 1994 can be changed to a popular film of
2003 with
no problem). What I really have a problem with is adding jokes, changing the words
to songs, adding another character or another song (jeez!), etc. The bottom line is:
Just ask. It doesn't hurt to ask, the worse thing that could happen is I'll
deny your request-- but most likely I'll find a way to satisfy your needs. It sure
beats a lawsuit.
For more on revising published scripts, click
here.
Q: How
does a theatre approach you to make a revision to your script for their production?
A: With lots of candy and a big smile!
Actually, it's
really pretty easy. Most theatres call or email and say that they like one of my
scripts but they need help working around a limitation. For example, one theatre was
working with another Goldilocks & the Three Bears script and for some reason
had to abandon it. They liked my version, but they had two Baby Bears (twins)
leftover from the previous script and didn't want to have to let one of the actors go.
They asked me if I could revise the script. I did, and it turned out pretty
well (I NEVER would have come up with that concept on my own, but I doubt I'll ever sell
that version to another theatre because now there are 4 bears). I've added
characters to scripts when a theater needed to use more actors in their production.
We now offer non-musical versions of all my shows because of a lot of requests
I've received over the years by theatres. I don't charge theatres for my revising
one of my shows because I'll probably turn around and offer that revision to other
theatres.
What won't I revise? That's a tough question. I
won't make any changes just to make a character more "politically
correct." I won't change the story to accentuate a particular lifestyle or
social/political stance. I will suggest to a theatre (who asks for changes
that I am not willing to make) that they contact a more capable playwright than I to write
such a play from scratch. I like my stories the way they are, that's why I wrote
them the way I did-- but I am willing to make SMALL changes to accommodate a particular
theatre's particular limitations.
Q: The musical
styles in your shows are so diverse: Rock, Pop, Country, Caribbean, Rap, Funk-- how do you write your music?
A: Oh, the musical Muse visits me in a dream and I merely. . .
. Nah, I do it all on a computer. I don't really consider myself a
"musician" or a "composer." I am a "COMPU-SICIAN."
I write the lyrics, melody line and chord chart of the song, then I input the
chords into a nifty little "generation" program (Band-in-a-Box) that spits
out an accompaniment in whatever style I choose. I then I fine tune it and convert
it to a MIDI file and dump that into a "sequencer" program (Cakewalk
SONAR)
and doctor up the accompaniment until it sounds the way I want it. Then I use my
trusty Roland SC-88 Sound Canvas sound module and record the accompaniment as WAV files in
five different keys and burn that onto a CD to be used as the Performance
Soundtrack. And finally, I dump the MIDI file into Finale to print out the sheet
music. The hard part is coming up with the melody and chord charts. After
that, it takes about 8 hours per song to get it ready for the actors to use.
I suppose most "real" composers will Pooh-Pooh
my technique
(some have). That's OK. I spent twenty years as a musical theatre performer--
that's where I learned my musicianship and instead of spending ten years developing my
piano skills, I spent more than that learning computer and recording skills. The bottom line
is: my kids come back from seeing one of my shows and they're singing my
songs! That's all the encouragement I need.
Q: You use a computer to write
your songs? Isn't that cheating?
A: I don't think so. If it weren't for computers and the
software I use, the 31 musical shows and almost 200 songs that I have "written" would
not exist to entertain the million kids that have seen the
shows.
I look at it this way: a "real" composer has spent
years and years developing their skills: learning piano and other instruments,
music theory, orchestration and songwriting. I have spent years and years developing
MY skills: musicality and computer technology. Through my training and
professional experience as a working singing actor, I have studied lots of songs and
musical styles, I have a sense of what is pleasing for an actor to sing and what is
pleasing for an audience to hear. Using my abilities at the computer I can find a
marriage between the lyrics I write and the accompaniment that I feel best suits
them. Rock groups rely on members of their group to provide input
("licks") on their instruments for the songwriter, I rely on the software to
provide the input for me. I listen to what the program gives me. If I like it,
I use it, if I don't like it, I make adjustments to the program until I DO like it.
The computer is my "band."
I can't express my gratitude enough to Peter Gannon and his gang at
PG Music for their wonderful accompaniment generator, Band-in-a-Box. If I hadn't
come across that software package when I did, I would have given up trying to write
musical plays for kids.
FYI: My computer set up is: HARDWARE--
Intel Quad-core running Vista -64 with 4 GB RAM, Fireface 800, Sonar
Pro, Digitech Studio Vocalist EX vocal processor, Alesis Monitor One studio monitors, BBE Sonic Maximizer, Behringer Powerplay Pro Headphone Amp,
Sure SM-58 microphones, SOFTWARE:
Band-in-a-Box, Powertracks Pro Audio, SONAR, Finale, Easy CD Creator, and
WordPerfect. PLUG-INS: Native Instruments Komplete, UAMy proficiency with all that "stuff" allows me to write the
shows I write.
Q: Would you consider letting a theatre do their own arrangements to
your songs? We have a very talented Musical Director and would like to use a
large band.
A: No.
Never. I did that once-- hated it. A theatre I've worked with many times was doing my Pinocchio
and wanted to have their Music Director make new arrangements of the songs. They had
a special sound they felt their audiences expected from their shows and promised that only
the accompaniment would be changed-- not the melodies/harmonies. I didn't recognize
most of the songs! It was my show-- but it wasn't. It was kind of like sending
your child to a friend's house for a slumber party and when they come home they have
assumed a British dialect! They're the same kid, look the same, smell the same, but
they just sound different and you wish you had never let them go to the darn slumber
party. I imagine someday I'll provide band charts so theatres can have their own
bands play the scores, but right now it's only available on CD-- sounding EXACTLY as I
like it.
Q: Why are you marketing your plays
yourself? Why don't you let a "real" publisher handle your plays?
A: KMR Scripts is a "real"
publisher. KMR Scripts is a registered publishing company with
Bowker's Books in Print. But aside from that, I really believe I can do a better job than they
can. Other publishers won't help you adapt one of their shows to your stage-- but I will.
They won't give you permission to video tape your show for archive purposes-- but I
will. If, at 10:00 PM on dress rehearsal night, you run into a problem with the
music or need help making an effect work, they won't answer their phone-- but I will.
Nobody knows these shows as well as I. Nobody else would give you the special
treatment when you produce my shows like I will. How many thousands of shows
does Samuel French handle? I only handle 57. Who can afford to give you more
personalized service?
Probably the biggest reason I handle it myself is so that I can
continue to improve the scripts over the years. The Odd Couple script Neil
Simon signed over to Samuel French forty years ago is the same script producers are given
now. I'm sure Mr. Simon has thought of a couple changes he'd like to make to the
script since then. I certainly don't mean to imply that I am in Mr. Simon's league
when it comes to playwrighting, but when I think of an improvement to one of my shows, I
can easily make the change and offer it to my customers.
I would be lying to you if I didn't also mention that I don't want
to share my fees and royalties with anybody else. But if you compare prices, my
royalty is as cheap (if not cheaper) as any other show out there of similar length and my
music and script fees are cheaper. Also, as far as I know, none of the
"real" publishing houses offer Performance Soundtracks on CD with each song in 5
different keys. Or, if they do, I was the first back in 1994. Man, I should
have trademarked that idea!
Q: How do you decide what scripts to write?
A: I only write shows from stories that appeal to me.
I'll probably never write a Little Prince script because I don't like the
story. I grew up with fairy tales and have some very fond memories of
listening to them as a kid. When I wrote for Wichita Children's Theatre,
we would sit down and plan the next season around January. I'd tell them
what stories I would like to adapt and they chose which ones they wanted.
I've never just written a script and peddled it for a first production. I've always
had a theatre waiting for it. The few original scripts I've written came about when
I expressed an interest to develop a particular plotline and the producer liked the idea,
so we went with it. Monica Flynn (producer) and John (JB) Boldenow (director) with
Wichita Children's Theatre have demonstrated an amazing amount of faith in me because they've actually printed the season brochures way before the script was ever
written.
What stories appeal to me? Ones that I can inject my sense of
humor into. Ones that allow me to create fun, wacky characters. Ones that
have a happy ending. I don't like preachy stories, stories that
deal with death or have sad endings. My
shows are for entertainment, but, of course, there are some life lessons to be learned
from fairy tales (that's why they were written in the first place). I don't strip or
sanitize the stories of negative characters, but I try to find a way to make those
characters grow and learn a lesson. I know that doesn't always happen in "real
life," but kids will learn the difference between fantasy and reality soon enough.
Q: Do you miss performing?
A: No. . . . I mean, Yes. . . . I mean, sometimes. . . .
Aw, I don't know! That's not where my life is right now. I
go to
perform once or twice a year when an actor got sick or when some special production
came up
at Wichita Children's Theatre. I performed for over a million people (75% of them
were kids) when I was "acting." Now, I'm a family man who lives out in the
middle of nowhere. I wouldn't enjoy being in a show somewhere knowing that I was
missing my little girl's first word or not be there when our oldest comes home from school
all excited about something he learned that day. It sounds corny-- but it's true.
Whatever "strokes" I was getting onstage as an actor, I get in different
ways now. What I do now is VERY rewarding to me. Plus, in a way, when a
theatre across the country does one of my shows, I'm there with them.
A couple years ago a dear friend of mine asked me to
be in his production of "To kill a Mockingbird." I played
Atticus. I did an OK job, had fun with the cast/crew and really
enjoyed the experience. But I discovered an interesting thing:
I don't really miss performing for adults. I'm so lucky to have
found that out-- many people go the rest of their lives wondering if they
made the right choices. I have no doubts whatsoever.
Now, put me in front of a group of kids.....
That's another story!
Q: Who or what influenced your life the
most?
A: The list is a mile long. I believe we are the product
of everything we experience. We are influenced by people we love as well as people
we hate, our triumphs and our worst failures and mistakes. Everything we see, hear,
feel, think, do (and don't do!), and dream changes us-- for good or bad-- and I am the
person I am today because of it.
I thank my God for everything I have, but as far as people go,
number one would have to be my family: my Mom and Dad and my brothers and
sister, my wife, Janelle, and our kids. Leonard and Edie Gittinger, my
"adopted" grandparents. My Aunt Cathy and Uncle Rocky Weaver got me into
my very first play when I was 15. Karen Reece talked me into auditioning for the
chorus of "Li'l Abner" in high school (and I ended up getting the lead-- and catching the acting
bug!). Barb Robinson helped me get accepted and get a scholarship to the School of
the Ozarks theatre department. John Mizell, Jim Meikle, Carveth Osterhaus,
and Kay Creed were crucial to my training as an actor/singer. Kevin Segner, Dr. John
Moad, Denis Schoenhofer, Dr. Glen Patton, Mark Pease, Albie Frizzle, and Kelly Mulcahy
have had an enormous influence on me as friends. John (JB) Boldenow,
Monica Flynn and Wayne Bryan have not only been wonderful mentors "in the business" but I've enjoyed
their friendship as well.
Q: What makes you qualified to write shows for very young audiences?
A: I don't know that I'm "qualified," but I've
written almost thirty shows for audiences under five years of age. I have had no
"formal" training in dealing with youngsters, I never took any college courses
in child development or child psychology. I never had any idea I would be
concentrating on children's theatre back then. But I was a professional actor for 10
years, doing shows for children. During most of that time we would tour one show and
perform it over 100 times. That experience allowed me to see the effects that subtle
performance changes had on kids of all ages. During my time with Wichita Children's
Theatre (1988-1996) I designed and presented over 300 classes and workshops for kids age 3
and up. As a result, I am comfortable speaking and playing with any age of children
and I'm confident that they are comfortable with me as well. I guess
the biggest part of my "training" is from my experience as a
stay-at-home Dad to our four kids.
Q: What are your thoughts about copyrights and copyright infringement?
A: I don't really want to add to the volumes of things said
about this-- but I will. Suffice it to say that I am in support of protecting my
copyrights-- my property rights-- as a creative artist. I think the current
copyright terms are fair. I own the copyright to my creations for as long as I am
alive and can receive income from the exploitation of my work, then after I'm gone, my
heirs own the copyright for 75 more years. Then the copyright expires and it goes
into public domain to be available to anyone for any purpose for FREE. The problem
is, a lot of people can't seem to wait that long to get their grubby little hands on other
people's property. I could not afford to write shows or compose music if I was not
being paid for it. I would have to be working 40-60 hours a week at a Walmart to put
food on my family's table.
I've noticed that a lot of people think "if it's on the
Internet, it's public domain" because you can't get more "public" than the
Internet. A lot of folks have the attitude that if you change the form of the work
(i.e.: if you change some of the words of a poem, if you re-arrange the music of a
song convert it into a MIDI file or if you take a picture of a statue), it's fair
game . That's not true. The creator of the original work (or whoever the
creator designated as the owner or the copyright) owns the property rights of EVERY form
of that work-- whether s/he created that derivative form or not. By "property
rights" I mean the sole right to control how a work is exploited.
Let's go to the hypothetical for a moment. If every creative
artist (writers, composers, artists, computer programmers, etc) were to completely destroy
all traces of their work, how would that impact me? If my answer was that it would
be an inconvenience or that I would miss having that work-- but that I would find an
alternative replacement (or I would create my own unique work)-- I would say that is a
healthy and legitimate response. If my answer was that it would effect my
livelihood (my ability to make income), my next question would be: has that creative
artist received the compensation (monetary or otherwise) s/he is lawfully entitled?
In other words, am I receiving LEGAL and ETHICAL financial gain from someone else's
creation. If I am, that is good. If I am not. . . .
Q:
My
child wants to pursue acting as a career. Any advice?
A: Lock him (or her) in his room until he forgets this crazy
notion! Actually, I'm only half-kidding. When I'm asked this question in a
workshop, I say just about everything I can to dissuade kids from entering the arts as a
profession. Not because I don't think it's a good profession to be in (I'm in it
myself!), but because the fail rate is so high in theatre. The odds are great that
in 5 years they won't be in it anymore. I figure if anything I say can
make them think twice about pursuing theatre as a profession, I'm doing them a favor
because they don't have the "umph" to live that kind of life. Most people
would be very satisfied to join a community theatre or find some other avocational outlet
for their creative juices. But if a kid is REALLY meant to be in the theatre,
nothing I say-- or anyone else-- will deter them. I believe it's very similar to the
calling into the ministry. Read an actual
letter from a concerned Mom.
Q:
We
like your script-- but want you to change the ending. Will you do
it?
A: No... probably not... perhaps.... maybe.... It depends on WHY you want the
ending changed and WHAT you want the ending changed to. I adapt
fairy tales for kids' entertainment-- not for social issue
education. I try to keep to the original plot line as much as I can
(though I usually up-date it) and especially try to keep the message of
the original. I get occasional requests to make my shows more
politically correct. I won't do that. I'll let someone
come up with a new fairy tale that conveys a specific political
stance. I like the message/ending of my stories or I wouldn't have
written them that way. I am amazed by people wanting to infuse
a fairy tale with statements and messages that were not addressed
in the original fairy tale. I realize theatres can get funding
easier if their shows address pet social issues but I think in the long
run, they're doing the kids an injustice. Not every fairy tale needs
to address racial discrimination, child abuse, or sexual harassment.
There are plenty of very good plays written especially to deal with those
issues. If they want to commission (and pay for) a new version, I'll put in any kind
of message they want --well, almost any kind . Sometimes a
wolf dressed up like a grandma is just after some cookies. . . .
Q:
Why do you have an FAQ?
A: I'm a writer. I have an innate need to
communicate. If I'm not working on a show, I HAVE to write
something. You think this is verbose?-- you should see my
blog. (Don't worry-- it's on a very isolated website that nobody
will ever see until after I'm gone. heh-heh-heh....)
© Copyright 1999, Kevin M Reese. All
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