Reprinted with permissionthis is part of a message
Patrick Gabridge posted in a discussion over at
playwrightbinge yahoo group. Very wise words Mr.
Gabridge.
. . .It's not realistic to expect that your early
work will be universally loved and produced. Writing
plays is a tough thing, and it takes years to get good
at it, and even then you still write stinkers (or at
least I do). Also, as you build a body of work, it's
so much easier to get productions, because you know
which work is better and more likely to get picked
(and people notice that you have a track record). I
have a pretty sizable collection of short plays, but I
don't submit them all with equal frequency. Some are
stronger than others.
I would think a beginning writer would be lucky to
have an acceptance rate of 5% (1 in 20).
Sometimes I talk to fiction writers, and they talk
about how they got so many rejections, 15 or 20,
before placing a piece. That must makes me laugh. I
just added up the numbers in my database, and I've had
about 704 rejections of play submissions since 1990.
I don't mind getting a rejection, because I know that
I'm doing my job (of sending plays out) and the
theatres are doing theirs (reading the scripts and
making decisions). I'm much more perturbed by
theatres who never respond (I've done my job, but
they're shirking theirs). The percentage of folks who
respond can be quite high.
I must say, I'm a bit befuddled by the focus so much
on rejection. Almost all of a writer's submissions
will be rejected. That's just the way it is. If it's
going to drive you into deep depression, you're better
off being in another business, because it never goes
away. My rule with rejection letters is: read them
once and file them away. I don't dwell on them or
study them. If they say something nice, I put them
into a file for follow-ups. If they don't, I put them
in a file that doesn't require follow ups.
The best way to stop being bothered by rejections is
to get lots of them, because you're sending out lots
of scripts. This means you're doing your job. A
rejection is not cause to need a shoulder to cry on,
it's just a sign that you should send out something
new.
By all means, if a script is rejected time after time,
maybe you'd better get the message. Maybe it's time
to stop sending it out. (Not everything we write is
pure genius. Except perhaps Mr. Levine.) Write
something new. Write something better.