The 17 Rules of Show Business
Editorial
In 2000, local playwright/performer/producer Dean J. Seal offered a show titled "The 17 Rules of Show Business," a jaundiced view of the performing arts from a longtime insider. Eleven years later, the actual rules seems about as true as ever, so we asked Seal to share his list:
- Get the money.
- All original material should be personal and emotional and therefore impossible to steal.
- Every contract has a loophole.
- Then Picasso’s Fourth Rule of Show Biz: All art is theft.
- There’s a new way to fuck up the show every night.
- Drink a glass of water before you go onstage.
- Never tell the performers how small the house is, and never tell the house how bad the show was.
- If you have comps, your job is to lead the applause, and not dish the show 'till you’re out of the house.
- Never let the truth get in the way of a good story.
- Make the easy stuff look hard, and the hard stuff look easy.
- Don’t wait 'till you’re ready.
- Get off the stage before they stop clapping.
- From Chekhov: No art is ever finished, it is merely abandoned.
- A good review does not sell tickets; it's only a tool to sell tickets.
- Lead actors take home the flowers, character actors bring home the bacon.
- It’s always your friends and family who fuck you.
- The secret of show biz is sincerity, and if you can fake that, you've got it made.