The SASE

THE PLAYWRITING SEMINARS > BUSINESS > SASE

Order 'I'm no good at all at coming up with an original idea. I can recognize it. That's my talent. Anyone who thinks they know what the public wants is an idiot. I'm still surprised and delighted the public likes what I like. I produce absolutely for myself.'

-- Cameron Mackintosh




The SASE is a Self-Addressed Stamped Envelope. They're an essential part of this business if you hope to get scripts returned or requests to see your work from Literary Managers, and guidelines for Competitions.

A full-length play normally needs a 9.5" x 12.5" envelope for safe mailing to a theatre or competition.


An SASE won't do you any good if you're sending a script to one of the few Competitions having guidelines saying they won't return it. Refusing to return scripts doesn't say much for their attitude toward playwrights. But no nefarious plots may be afoot either. These folks might have just strained a lot of backs lugging anywhere from 400 to 1,200 pounds of scripts to the local post office every year. And they may not have the staff or enough volunteers to stuff all those scripts back in SASEs. Have pity, but not much.

The practical response is not to rule out Competitions that refuse to return scripts even if you send an SASE . . .

The only real reason -- other than sentimental ones -- to get scripts back is to send them off again to another Competition or Regional Theatre. Most of the time, between being thumbed by readers and slammed around at the post office, they'll be banged up so badly by the time you get them back that they won't be unusable without a lot of cosmetic tinkering.

A rule without exceptions . . . You don't want the condition of your script to be so ratty that it telegraphs to the next place you send it that it's just been rejected by some other theatre.


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