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| Non-First-Class??? To Kill a Mockingbird | Dramatic Publishing vs The Estate of Nelle Harper Lee | |
| Last Edit: lordofspeech 08:48 pm EST 02/09/22 | |
| Posted by: lordofspeech 08:48 pm EST 02/09/22 | |
| In reply to: re: To Kill a Mockingbird | Dramatic Publishing vs The Estate of Nelle Harper Lee - sirpupnyc 05:32 pm EST 02/09/22 | |
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| Does non-first-class mean non-equity? Or non-paying audiences? Or what? Is it related to a LORT Contract? | |
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| re: Non-First-Class??? To Kill a Mockingbird | Dramatic Publishing vs The Estate of Nelle Harper Lee | |
| Posted by: sirpupnyc 10:46 pm EST 02/09/22 | |
| In reply to: Non-First-Class??? To Kill a Mockingbird | Dramatic Publishing vs The Estate of Nelle Harper Lee - lordofspeech 08:48 pm EST 02/09/22 | |
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| I don't know the definition specifically. The statement mentions theatres like the Guthrie and Steppenwolf where the existing adaptation has been done, so it certainly doesn't mean Equity/professional. Broadway/West End, first national tour, that's the idea. The Sorkin Mockingbird tour could preempt productions of the existing adaptation within a certain distance of the venue. (As when your high school is planning to do The King and I, they can be thwarted by a planned Equity tour.) | |
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| re: Non-First-Class??? To Kill a Mockingbird | Dramatic Publishing vs The Estate of Nelle Harper Lee | |
| Posted by: ryhog 11:13 pm EST 02/09/22 | |
| In reply to: re: Non-First-Class??? To Kill a Mockingbird | Dramatic Publishing vs The Estate of Nelle Harper Lee - sirpupnyc 10:46 pm EST 02/09/22 | |
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| First-Class means Broadway or like Broadway, which includes Broadway-esque tours and other productions in first class houses in other cities that are comparable, and with first class creatives and talent, etc. It can get a little fuzzy at the margins but there is not a lot produced at the margins. | |
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