ATCA Responds to Samuel French's Ban of Reviews on Wooster Group's THE ROOM

By: Feb. 01, 2016
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Trouble is brewing in LA. The Wooster Group's production of Harold Pinter's THE ROOM, which will run February 4-14 at REDCAT, is dealing with issues regarding reviews, after licensing company Samuel French forbade all promotion and reviews.

A London representative for the Pinter estate told the LA Times: "The fact is that it was very late in the day last year when we heard they were planning to present the play in Los Angeles and unfortunately, the rights were not available when they applied for them."

Now the American Theatre Critics Association (ATCA) has released a statement on the matter:

"In reference to the recent Wooster Group/Harold Pinter situation in Los Angeles and scattered reports of troublingHarold Pinter (1930-2008): What would he say?analogs around the country, the American Theatre Critics Association strongly reaffirms our bedrock tenet that arts criticism is journalism," stated Wm. F. Hirschman, chair, ATCA executive committee.

"Therefore, the decision to review a production to which the public is invited with admission charged is at the discretion and judgment of journalists and their editors.

"Most of our members respect requests not to review a workshop production or one still (within limits) in previews. We also recognize that under any and all circumstances, it is the unquestioned right of a production to refuse to give complimentary tickets.

"But we do not recognize the right of any group, including the licensing company, author or estate, to restrict coverage of a public event.

"There is a separate recent report of a company given rights to a classic, frequently-produced play. But the company reportedly had been told by the playwright or his representative that it not only must ban reviews, but that the company would be fined if the production were reviewed. The demand has since been rescinded but remains troubling. First, this is objectionable behavior that tries to restrict not only artistic freedom of expression, but also freedom of the press. Second, it is foolish in its futility in this cyber world in which anyone's opinion can go viral seconds after the curtain goes down."

ATCA was founded in 1974 and works to raise critical standards and public awareness of critics' functions and responsibilities. The only national association of professional theater critics, with members working for newspapers, magazines, radio and television stations and websites, ATCA is affiliated with the International Association of Theatre Critics, a UNESCO-affiliated organization that sponsors seminars and congresses worldwide.

ATCA administers the Harold and Mimi Steinberg/ATCA New Play Award, the Francesca Primus Prize honoring an emerging female theater artist, and the M. Elizabeth Osborn Award for a previously unrecognized playwright; recommends a theater for the Regional Theater Tony Award; and votes on inductions into the Theater Hall of Fame.

For more information on ATCA or this issue, visitwww.americantheatrecritics.org or contact chairman Wm. F. Hirschman at muckrayk@aol.com.



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