Blog Post

Start of a new era

  • by Mike Baughan
  • 30 Mar, 2020

Write Off! 2020

So, sat in lockdown at home this is the time of Covid-19. Hopefully if you're reading this you're getting through it, or have gotten through it relatively unscathed. But then there's all that time sitting and waiting and wondering what to do with yourself during the lockdown.
Write. Inspire. Create.
Creativeness is abound and people will now have the time to really consider and think about things they have always wanted to start, or have started and never finished. Let the ideas flow, maybe garner some inspiration from the oodles of TV and Film you have been consuming. I know I will.
Before all this hub-bub began I was considering basing the plays that came in around a central theme, wide enough in it's scope to include a vast majority of stories, but narrow enough to be focused and grounded in a way that will have people talking long after they have left the theatre and maybe made an impact in their world, but I wasn't entirely sure what that theme should be.
In amongst the frankly ridiculous amounts of television I was watching I came across a documentary series following around ambulance drivers and the trials they face. This particular episode featured on their encounters with people who had a mental illness and what became astonishingly clear was the ambulance crews complete inability to deal with those people through their lack of training and understanding. It was if these health professionals were just Physical health professionals. Give them a broken arm and they're on it and great, but give them someone suffering schizophrenia for example and they were hiding behind door frames, poking their heads and vaguely talking to the victim in a situation they were just so utterly ill-prepared for.
We need more awareness of these Mental Illnesses because as much as it seems how there is a lot of awareness out there it feels like a lot of head-nodding and no effort to educate, and that's something that theatre in particular has an amazing way to hammer home to people.
So please, if you're reading this and you are itching to write, write for us. Your play can reflect what it's like to live with any number of types of mental illness from depression, anxiety or schizophrenia to dementia, tourettes or Parkinson's. It could be based on the people who have to treat mental illness or those family members struggling with those that suffer it.Your play should contain no profanity unless absolutely necessary, be roughly 10 - 20 minutes long, no longer please, a maximum of 5 characters/actors with minimal staging required. Those selected to be performed will be posted on this website in July. Deadline for getting your plays in is 21st June. Any questions please use the Contact page on this website or via the Facebook page 'Free Spirit Theatre'

Good Luck and get writing!
by Richard Shaw 10 March 2019

Being a theatre producer is about lots of things, but one of them is letting go. There’s a truckload of preliminary work. For 'Light Delay' this meant getting the request for play submissions out there, dealing with all the submissions (we had over 300 and every e-mail needs to be acknowledged), answering any questions, reading and discussing the plays, helping compile the longlist, shortlist, finalists and, of course, selecting the final play. The venue needed to be arranged, ticket prices confirmed.

Then you move on to the budget, the Arts Council grant application, the casting call and auditions, the poster for the advertising. By this point you’ve invested a huge amount of time and effort and you have a pretty good idea of how you’d like the play to look and feel. But you know that’s not your call. That’s down to the director. And then rehearsals begin and things really start moving forward – except that you’re not needed at rehearsals. You’re not going to bond with the cast, because you’ll barely meet the cast. At this point, you have to start letting go. You may have built the boat, but now you have to stand on the shore and wave the cast and crew good-bye and let them do the sailing towards the opening night.

You’ve known this all along, but when that point is reached, it still hits home. Sure, you’ll still be needed to help out along the way, to offer encouragement and moral support if it’s needed (and even if it’s not needed, just to try and feel useful), maybe to help spend the grant if you got it. But you’re no longer key personnel.

There is no moral to this story, or any suggestions to how to approach this scenario – but if you are thinking of producing a theatre show, just be aware that it happens. Let it go - but don't freak out! And don’t let it stop you. I’ve already started planning the next one!


by Richard Shaw 18 December 2018

When I posted the ad for submissions of full-length plays to the ‘Playwriting UK’ Facebook page, I hadn’t anticipated that we’d go viral! Within days we’d received plays from Europe, USA, Canada, Russia, Australia and South Korea. To date we’ve received over 170 submissions, which is about 5 times more than we dared to expect. It’s fantastic and daunting in equal measure. If you are reading this and did submit – thank you, and bear with us while we get through them all.

This is the first time we’ve had to consider anywhere near so many submissions, fitting it in around our days jobs, so thank God we put in the ‘rule’ to pick out your best 10 pages for us to read first!

We’ve learned a lot in this process, especially about what to do to prevent your play going in the ‘Rejected’ pile, so to help out all you budding playwrights, here’s a few points we’d like to share. Some may seem obvious, but experience tells us they are not obvious to everyone 😊

1. Read the submission rules. We hate to reject anything simply because it doesn’t meet the rules, but equally it isn’t fair on everyone else if we choose something that doesn’t meet them. So if we ask for plays with no more than 10 actors, we have to stick to that. If actors can double up, then please specify this – don’t leave us to try and work it out, because we’re reading 1700-ish pages already and don’t have the time, so we’ll simply end up ruling you out.

For the length of the play, we know it can be difficult to know exactly how long it will run, and give latitude because of that, but if a play is over 200 pages long, it’s not going to be 90 minutes maximum, so unfortunately we can’t accept it, even if it’s brilliant.

2. Get it proof-read. If we read 10 pages and there are 3 or 4 typos, it puts doubt in our minds. If you’re careless with the presentation, are you careless with the characters, or the plot? When you’re up against 170 other plays, make sure we can’t find a reason to have doubt in our minds. At the very least get the 10 selected pages you want us to read proof-read. 

3. Include the character list, with ages/relationships/gender (if not obvious from the name). We don’t want to spend time working out if Bev is the son/daughter/father/mother of Lindsey/Stevie (Fleetwood Mac confused me as a kid). If your characters can be of any age/ethnicity, state that.

4. Include the synopsis. Basically this should be what we would print in the programme. We are your first audience, so tell us what a real audience would be told to put the play in context.

5. Put everything in one document. This is purely to make life easier for us. I download and then e-mail out the plays to our creative director. It saves us a bit of time if we only have to download then read a single document and we’re grateful for any time we can save.

6. Thank you for submitting all your plays – we really do appreciate it! Don’t be discouraged if yours doesn’t get selected – it doesn’t necessarily mean it isn’t very good or that we didn’t like it, just that in the end, we can only choose one.

Happy Holidays!

Richard Shaw (Producer)


by Richard Shaw 18 November 2018
Today we launched Free Spirit Theatre - not only on this site, but also on Facebook -  https://www.facebook.com/freespirittheatre.co.uk and Twitter -  https://twitter.com/fstheatreuk
 Please Like, please Follow, and if you're feeling very loving and generous, please donate - 

https://www.justgiving.com/crowdfunding/freespirittheatreuk.

We look forward to bringing you the best in original writing and original theatre!

by websitebuilder 11 November 2018
Soon we'll be going live with Free Spirit Theatre - with this web-site, on Facebook, on Twitter and on YouTube. We're moving on from NOMAD Drama- after our hugely successful WRITE-OFF 2018, we felt the time was right to move forward. NOMAD took it's name from the nomadic nature of moving from theatre to theatre for each production, but we've now found a home at the fantastic Dovehouse Theatrein Solihull. With Free Spirit Theatre we will continue to put the emphasis on new writing - we're planning to produce one new full-length play every spring and a WRITE-OFF every autumn. Exciting times are ahead and we hope you'll all come along for the ride!!

Richard Shaw - Producer
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