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| Visions & Revisions |
Broadway Bypass
08/01/2005
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New York theatrical producers Jeffrey Seller (left) and Kevin McCollum are
best known for their Broadway hits Rent and Avenue Q, as well as shows removed
from the Great White Way, such as the performance art piece De La Guarda and the
revival by the New Group of Hurlyburly, starring Ethan Hawke. When Hurlyburly’s
initial run ended in March, the duo thumbed its nose at Broadway and transferred
the play to an Off-Broadway space, 37 Arts, in which they are also investors.
Features editor Emily DeNitto talked to them about their contrarian
strategy.
Hurlyburly was often sold out and received great reviews in its nonprofit
Off-Broadway run. The traditional next step is to take it to Broadway, but you
are giving it a commercial run elsewhere. Why?
Seller: Doing play revivals on Broadway is barely a commercial venture. It’s
a labor of love, it’s a labor of passion and, to some degree, it’s the easiest
way to get a show on Broadway and try to win a Tony award, because you don’t
have to develop it and it doesn’t run for a long time. But most of the plays
that come to Broadway as revivals break even or make a little bit of
money.
McCollum: We’re always trying to get young people excited about the
theater, because that’s how you create new audiences. They are not
geographically specific. Broadway means very little to them. A great show,
seeing their peers, means a great deal to them. And that’s what we’ve done. We
don’t need a Tony award. We need young people to see our shows.
Seller: We
have already gained more press because we bucked the system. There are a lot of
revivals on Broadway this year, including two Tennessee Williams shows—A Glass
Menagerie and A Streetcar Named Desire—Glengarry Glen Ross, Julius Caesar, Who’s
Afraid of Virginia Woolf. If you have seven cattle over in this field and
one in that field, the eye is going to blur over the seven and go right to the
one. That’s why when we announced our show, the New York Times thought it was
newsworthy enough to put it on the front page of the arts section, because we’re
doing the opposite of what those shows are doing.
McCollum: It’s part of our
nature, starting as booking agents and then as we moved into producing in
1993.
Seller: Well, when we did Rent, everyone expected us to go Off
Broadway, and we said, “No, we’re going to go to Broadway.” Everyone said,
“Broadway? It will never work on Broadway.” And then we blew up that
concept.
Can you spell out the cost differences between Broadway and
Off-Broadway runs?
Seller: For Hurlyburly, there was a Broadway budget of $1.8 million. Trying
to earn that $1.8 million budget in 12 weeks meant it would have had to
virtually sell out just to get back the capitalization. Meaning, once again, 12
weeks on Broadway with the rest of the cattle and no profit.
McCollum: Unless
it went longer than 12 weeks, but that’s all we’re selling.
Seller: Yeah,
we’re star-dependent, and Ethan is going to want to get on with his life and
probably go make a movie after this. Off Broadway, it costs $650,000 to move it.
In 12 weeks, it can earn back the entire $650,000 and make a profit of between
$600,000 and $1 million.
McCollum: One of the things that is different about
how we operate is that we’ve only made our living in the theater. A lot of
producers today made their living elsewhere, then came in and approached it like
art collecting. We have a small group of very, very wealthy people who are also
arts lovers, who know that they are not producers, but know they’ve gotten a
great return with us. We actually look at the economics. It’s not just a labor
of love. We put our own money into things.
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