Freakonomics Radio - 593. You Can Make a Killing, but Not a Living
Episode Date: June 20, 2024Broadway operates on a winner-take-most business model. A runaway hit like Stereophonic — which just won five Tony Awards — will create a few big winners. But even the stars of the show will have ...to go elsewhere to make real money. (Part two of a two-part series.) SOURCES:David Adjmi, author and playwright.Sonia Friedman, theater producer and founder of Sonia Friedman Productions.John Johnson, theater producer and co-founder of Wagner Johnson Productions.Tom Pecinka, actor.Sarah Pidgeon, actor. RESOURCES:"Tony Award Winners 2024: The Full List," by Rachel Sherman (The New York Times, 2024)."Everything to Know About the Stranger Things: The First Shadow Play in London," by Tara Bitran (Tudum, 2024).Stereophonic, by David Adjmi, Will Butler, and Daniel Aukin (2023). EXTRAS:"How to Make the Coolest Show on Broadway," by Freakonomics Radio (2024).
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Last week on the show, we told you about an unusual new play on Broadway called Stereophonic.
It is a long, intimate, funny, and totally gripping show about a co-ed rock band in the 1970s
as they record an album that will turn out to be a huge hit.
Stereophonic itself has turned out to be a huge hit. Stereophonic itself has turned out to be a huge
hit. If you watched the Tony Awards the other night, you saw superstars like Alicia Keys and
Jay-Z, Daniel Radcliffe, even Hillary Clinton, who co-produced a Broadway musical this season.
But it was Stereophonic, the play with a bunch of nobodies, as one cast member said during the
Tony Awards, that stole the show, winning five awards.
Here is the playwright, David Adjmi, accepting his award for Best Play.
This was a very hard journey to get this play up here. Michael McKeel and Fran Offenhauser,
who gave me a place to live for seven years so that I could write this play. It's really hard
to make a career in the arts. We need to fund the arts this play. It's really hard to make a career in the
arts. We need to fund the arts in America. It is the hallmark of a civilized society.
When I interviewed Ajmi a couple weeks ago, I asked him what it's like to be at the vortex
of a huge hit. He has been writing plays for a couple decades, but this is his first show
on Broadway.
Here's what he told us.
I feel like I've been in a car accident.
We all feel that way.
We're just totally dislocated.
It doesn't feel good.
It feels weirdly bad.
I have a little bit of a hard time believing that.
No, I know.
Everyone does.
Because you can't take in what's good or bad.
You're just taking in stimuli. You're taking in the overstimulation, which you can't take in because it exceeds your capacity. I know it's positive intellectually, but the way I'm processing
it isn't like joyous. There's moments of joy and then we just get dislocated again because we don't
know what's happening. It's too weird. When your status changes, everyone starts to act really weird. I don't like it. Maybe David Adjmi is just an unusual person.
Or maybe the people who create theater are an unusual people tuned to a different frequency.
Why else would someone try to make a living in an industry that is so financially precarious,
even in the best of times?
And these have not been the best of times.
I'd say our costs have gone up about 30% since the pandemic.
So today on Freakonomics Radio, will the success of Stereophonic help change this grim future?
It's not that we're waiting for the audiences to come back. It's that
the core audience entirely has shifted.
Also, when you have a hot show,
how do you think about raising ticket prices? You kind of play a game of chicken with yourself and
with your audience. And we will give you some backstage gossip too. I don't know if I'm allowed
to say this. Yes, you're allowed. We'll hear all that, starting now.
This is Freakonomics Radio, the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything, with your host, Stephen Dubner. As I mentioned in our previous episode, this two-part look at Stereophonic spun out of
another series that we're making about the economics of live theater. The fundamental
problem here is that theater is
a handmade thing, and it doesn't get much more efficient even as you add technology,
the way most industries do. Stereophonic is a relatively small show with just seven onstage
performers, but they sit atop a pyramid of dozens of people who help put on the show every night.
Stage managers, wardrobe and
props managers, lighting and sound technicians, the ushers in the theater. You even have to pay
understudies, actors on standby in case anyone from the cast gets sick. It would be one thing
if you could scale up a show that becomes a hit, if you 5,000 or 10,000 tickets a night rather than the 770
that can fit into the Golden Theater where Stereophonic is playing. The show is seen by
roughly 6,000 people every week. David Adjmi, who wrote Stereophonic, he is not one of those 6,000.
Oh, I don't watch it. I don't see my shows because I can't stand watching my
own show in front of an audience. Sometimes I'll have my assistant go as me. So I teach my
assistant everything that I'm looking for and all my sticking points. And then I say, okay,
did that happen? Did that happen? Did that happen? But I don't like to watch it because I find it
too intimate and excruciating. Is it excruciating because it's a thing that you made
or it's excruciating because it's a thing that you made
that is you essentially?
Both, but more the latter.
And it's excruciating because it's live
and I can't control it, but it's me also.
It is the most vulnerable thing in the world.
I can't even tell you.
So if David Adjmi isn't in the audience, who is?
On Broadway right now, there are 35 shows running.
Last week, they collectively sold 300,000 tickets.
Who are those people?
Let's ask someone who knows.
My name is John Johnson.
I run a production company called Wagner Johnson Productions
that is a producing company as well as a general management company. Johnson is one of the lead producers on Stereophonic. I asked him,
who is coming to the theater post-pandemic? There used to be, and we used to call them
carriage trade audiences that came from the Upper West Side and Upper East Side that were women of
a certain age who would come down and see, you know, the new play from the
National Theater or, oh, Glenda Jackson's in a play. I'm going to see that. But now a new core
audience has emerged in this season. It was emerging as we've gone through each season
sequentially post-pandemic. This season is the season of, oh, it's not that we're waiting for
the audiences to come back. It's that the core audience entirely has shifted because we do have many more successes in season three post-pandemic than we did the last two.
Name some of those successes in addition to Stereophonic. have the production of O'Mary that was a huge hit off Broadway that then transferred. We were producers, lead producers on Danny and Deep Lucy off Broadway that starred Aubrey Plaza.
That was a similar sort of success story. And then further on Broadway, we're seeing,
you know, Jeremy Strong in Enemy of the People, Sarah Paulson in Appropriate. Some would say,
oh, well, Jeremy Strong was on Succession. Of course, it's going to be a massive sellout.
Sarah Paulson is a star as well. But this isn't Daniel Craig, who I've been fortunate enough to work with.
It's not folks that are global superstars.
If the core audience pre-pandemic was women ages late 50s into their 70s that were seeing shows six to eight times a year, that audience has shifted down dramatically to folks in their late 30s to their early 50s who have binged every season of American Horror Story that Sarah Paulson's in.
And now when she's in a play, they're going, oh, she's on stage now? I'm going.
The folks who binged Succession four times over are sitting there going, Jeremy Strong's in a play? I'm going to that.
I don't care how much it costs.
It's event theater. Event theater has always been there, but I think the nature of who is part of that event theater now has shifted a little bit. The other thing I noticed about the stereophonic audience,
it was the first play I've ever been to on Broadway, play or musical, where the restroom
line for the men's was longer than the women's at intermission. Did you see Lehman Trilogy two
years ago? Because it was the same way at Lehman Trilogy. I did not. But I agree. Stereophonic
fits into that same generational shift as well in terms of the new core audience,
because one would think, oh, it's a story about a band in the late 70s.
It's dead aimed towards a boomer audience.
Don't get me wrong.
It's not that we don't have folks who are in that generation who'd come and see it.
But the groundswell of support, the age range of it, you would think, oh, how is Gen Z going
to tip into a play like this when most of these folks weren't born even 20 years after the play?
But I think the nature of rock and roll, young people are coming to the theater in 2024
is that we forget because I think we have collective PTSD,
but we were locked in our houses for three and a half years.
I think people want to be around each other.
That is Tom Pesinka, the actor who plays Peter, the leader of the band in Stereophonic.
The band is never named, but they do
bear a firm resemblance to Fleetwood Mac. Peter and his girlfriend Diana are at the center of a
lot of the show's drama. The entire cast has remained intact since the show began last year
off-Broadway at the non-profit theater Playwrights Horizons. You know, off-Broadway, it felt very fake until you make it.
You have to construct intimacy.
You have to construct chemistry.
I always say that on Broadway, if you had seen it off-Broadway,
I think you're going to see a much tighter-knit group.
Sarah and I, we didn't know each other at all.
I'm Sarah Pigeon, and I'm currently in Stereophonic playing Diana.
We've done 50 performances,
and we've gotten previews close to 70.
We did 70-something performances at Playwrights
and 20-something previews.
No one's taken the show off yet.
Are you kidding?
Not at all.
At Playwrights, we canceled the first preview
because I got sick. And then we canceled the fourth to last show because someone lost their voice. So we've only missed two. There's sort of been this agreement that unless you're deathly ill, you'll be on the stage.
So you have a bunch of pissed off understudies?
I wouldn't. I don't know. You'd have to interview them.
I mean, I think it just requires a different type of stamina.
Live theater has been declared dead or dying for years.
We have TV and film, and now we have an endless stream of entertainments and distractions,
most of which require much less effort and coordination and investment than
live theater. So what would be lost if live theater did disappear?
I think a certain level of discipline, a certain level of technique, a certain level of lineage
would be lost. Working as an actor in the theater, it requires different muscles than
working in television and film. You have to do eight shows a week. It's the first time I'm
really doing that and my body's breaking down. That's just not what happens when you work in
front of a camera. You get to go nap in your trailer for four hours until they call you to
set and you're there for less than an hour and and you shoot four or five takes, and then you're done.
In this job and how taxing it can be, eight shows a week, and then our show
comes in a little over three hours, and there's singing involved, and screaming,
and laughing, and smoking, and I don't have much of a life.
I have no existence really outside of the Golden Theater
on 45th Street. Your off day is Monday? Monday. You have a Sunday matinee, then no Sunday night
show. Is that right? No Sunday night show. So what do you do between the time you're done
Sunday afternoon and then Tuesday evening show? I beat feet out of Midtown. Sometimes my mom comes into town and we get a nice dinner
somewhere and I sort of blow off some steam. There's just no time to do that when you get
home at 11 o'clock. Like who wants to have dinner close to midnight? And then Monday is spent
sleeping. I haven't done laundry in a really long time. Do you eat healthy? I love food. I like healthy food.
But recently, because of the schedule, I just find it quite difficult to find something that
I want to eat before a three-hour show and sometimes two three-hour shows. So I've been
getting these Kraft mac and cheese microwavable individual bowls. And they usually, I'm not looking at the microwave,
so they spill all over the microwave,
and I have to clean the microwave.
But it is, like, carbs and a couple hundred calories
to, like, get you through the show
and not have this huge, full stomach.
I've ordered a lot of different types of soups during this run
because sometimes my voice is a little rough.
Sunday morning
And the light is fine
Sarah Pidgeon and Tom Pesinka
were both nominated for Tony Awards,
but neither of them won.
Stereophonic did win Best New Play,
Best Direction, Best Scenic Design and Sound Design. And Will Brill, who plays the band's bassist, Reg, won Best Featured Actor in a Play. It was Brill who, during his acceptance speech, called the Stereophonic crew a bunch of nobodies. I think awards are really important for the artists.
I find them quite stressful and I find them quite difficult because there are always thousands of people who've worked so hard and they are not recognized.
That is Sonia Friedman.
She is another lead producer of Stereophonic and she is one of the most successful theatrical producers in the world.
I watch these artists work really, really hard and try to find the beauty in what they're doing.
But they aren't always kind to themselves in the process.
We're in a very, very, very difficult world. And what Stereophonic, if nothing else, reminds me is that whilst we're
making art, we must also do everything we can to be kind to one another.
Is Stereophonic to some degree a metaphor for what you and your colleagues do all day,
every day? I mean, one great thing about the theater or any of the performing arts,
but that is also a challenge
is you need to do it live and do it well every time because last night's performance might have
been great, but that's not what tonight's audience is seeing. I think what it is, is just very honest
about how we make work and that what an audience will see isn't always the mechanics of how messy it can be,
and how relationships can be really, really fractious offstage, and then they come onstage,
and nobody would ever know. I could tell you so many secrets about chaotic relationships that
happen in the wings, and then they come onstage. Well, let's have a couple.
And I'm not going to give you any, but that's the illusion of theater. And that's the magic
of theater. There's this invisible magic line between the wings and on the stage,
and they are two completely separate worlds. You step over that line and that's where the
magic happens right in front of you. And then you step behind that line and it's not always as magic.
After the break, we step behind that line.
I'm Stephen Dubner and this is Freakonomics Radio.
Sonia Friedman has been producing theater in London, New York, and elsewhere for more than 30 years.
Her shows have won dozens upon dozens of major awards.
The other night, her shows won nine Tony Awards, five for Stereophonic and four for the revival of Stephen Sondheim's Merrily We Roll Along.
She's had several other shows on Broadway this season,
including a new drama called Patriots about the rise of Vladimir Putin.
She has also produced the long-running Harry Potter and the Cursed Child and the very long-running Book of Mormon.
Normally I'm producing upwards of 12, 15 shows across the world.
And what is Friedman's advice for a would-be producer?
You should be, as a producer, as interested in the business side of it.
One of the reasons why I've had longevity in the industry is that I'm as fascinated and interested
with the numbers. I will do all my own budgets. Before I set out to do a show, I'll be the one that sits behind a computer and literally bashes it out. I need to understand where the show needs to sit in terms of what scale theatre and what the whole model of it needs to be in order to make it viable.
Does it happen now and again that there's a show that you're dying to produce, but you just can't make it work financially in the theaters that are available to you?
Yes.
How often?
It's becoming more often now because everything is getting more expensive.
In London as in New York?
London is still a better economic model than New York, but we're creeping up. I mean, we've gone up 21% our costs since COVID.
But New York's probably 40 or something.
New York is about, it's hard to put an actual figure on it,
but I'd say our costs have gone up about 30% since the pandemic.
And why is London's economic model for theater better than New York's?
When I first started producing in New York,
taking into account the exchange rate,
New York was about three times more expensive than London. It's now about five times.
The play that would cost me 1.5 million in London will now have to be capitalized between seven and eight million in New York. And because of the weak pound, that's really, really expensive for us.
And the difference, why?
I mean, it sounds implausible for two things that are so similar in such seemingly similar places to be so... It does. It does because it's exactly the same show.
It's the same set, same group of actors on the stage.
So what's driving it?
Absolutely everything is more expensive over here.
What's the biggest difference?
Is it the real estate, the renting of the theater?
The unions, number one.
Look, I'm not anti-union.
That's just a fact.
How many unions would be typically involved in a Broadway show?
I'm going to say a number.
And then I might have to come back and correct it.
I think it's about 17 unions.
There are actually 17 unions.
There are actually 13 unions. For instance, IATSE Local 751, which represents box office treasurers, and Theatrical Wardrobe Union Local 764, which represents wardrobe workers and the guardians who supervise child actors? So that's, you know, the unions.
Yes, the real estate, it is more expensive here.
It just is.
The advertising is very, very expensive.
The shops that build the sets have become much more expensive since COVID
because of the supply chain issue.
Hires of lighting, sound, all of the video equipment,
the deals for the star actors.
They know their power.
They know their worth.
Everything is more expensive and it's much, much harder, therefore, to take creative risk here in New York.
And which is why Stereophonic is beautiful and wonderful.
But it's an outlier.
It's not the norm.
Do you think it bodes well for the future? Look, I think every
season you have to have something like a stereophonic where you can prove that you can
do shows on Broadway and they can have a financial model that can withstand the costs of New York.
So how do you withstand the costs of New York?
By selling as many tickets as you can at as high a price as the market will allow.
The average price of a Broadway ticket is around $125,
but premium seats can sell for multiples of that.
And it's up to people like John Johnson to set those prices.
There's definitely a little bit of feel to it as opposed to the ticketing companies
for concerts or sporting events
in terms of the algorithm.
But that's because they're dealing with
25,000 seats in an arena
or 50,000 seats in a baseball stadium
or 80,000 seats in a football stadium.
Here, we have 800 seats a night
or in terms of Starry Phonics specifically,
770 seats a night. And I guess it's always tricky when you're selling an asset that's so perishable. For sure. We will have premium pricing now that ranges anywhere from $249 on
a Wednesday matinee all the way to $349 on a Friday or Saturday night. So stereophonic grossed
nearly $800,000 last week, which is, you know, a really good number,
but it's still, you know, not nearly among the leaders in grossing.
I'm sure some of that is size of house.
Maybe some of it is ticket price.
I don't know.
How do you look at this as an asset that you're trying to properly price and, you know, extract
the right amount of return on?
We priced the show to move early on because we knew that while it was a white hot ticket
at Playwrights Horizons, the only way that we can get it back is that if the houses are
full, that the word of mouth can continue to spread.
And how do we jumpstart that?
And we jumpstart that by saying, we're just going to price the show to move.
We had preview pricing that was $40, $80, $120 to start for the month of April.
But you have to catch up to it because now we can get $229 for them.
You kind of play a game of chicken with yourself and with your audience for something like Stereophonic because it's an unknown title.
Obviously, it's getting more well-known.
But two, it does not have a major megastar in it.
It has a group of incredible rising stars, but they're not household names. The way that we get there is by getting people in the door and really building to that moment. comp tickets. We have tons of press who also are seeing the show for free for that New York Times
feature that's coming or that TV booker for Live with Kelly and Mark or Jimmy Fallon.
Or that pesky podcast.
Or that pesky podcast, exactly.
How often do you re-evaluate your ticket pricing and strategies at a daily thing, a weekly thing?
I would say a couple times a week. You see how the show sells, you see where it goes. We're not going so out of control of sitting there on a Sunday morning, you know, pulling levers and twisting knobs there. It's usually like a Monday, Wednesday, Friday type thing.
So Stereophonic was originally booked into the Golden Theater for a relatively short run, but you've already extended that a couple times now, at least until early 2025. Could you envision this
show playing on Broadway for years and years? I mean, in my wildest dreams, sure. The surprises
are what keeps every person that you probably talked to on this podcast coming back. Because
as much as, yes, it's hard and yes, it's expensive, when something like that hits,
it makes everyone just go, yes,
this is why we do what we do. We just keep saying over and over again, when will it slow down? When
will the sales slow down? When will it sort of stop? And it just has not yet. We are going to
scale. We're going to have a London production. We're going to have a first-class national tour,
et cetera. There's going to be a film, I understand. There's lots of interest in the film.
And would an initial investment in the theatrical production get me a piece of that or no?
Doesn't get you the right to invest in it.
They have the right, but not the obligation to invest in London.
They have the right, but not the obligation to invest in the national tour.
But there's a firewall there for any movie.
The standard number you see is that only around 20% of Broadway shows recoup even their original investment.
Based on people I've been speaking with and based on some personal exposure,
I wouldn't be surprised if 20% is actually overstating it.
But whatever the case, most Broadway shows lose a lot of money for their investors.
Does it even make sense to call it investing? Should I think of it instead as essentially a way of supporting the arts with a small chance that I'll actually get some money back?
Commercial philanthropy is what some people like to call it.
When I first heard that phrase or that idea, I thought, yeah, it's unfortunately true.
But then I think, what's unfortunate about it, right?
I mean, people spend all kinds of money on all kinds of things.
It's kind of like buying a lottery ticket, I guess, is the way I think of it now.
The odds are probably a little bit better than a lottery ticket. It's on of like buying a lottery ticket, I guess, is the way I think of it now. The odds are probably a little bit better than a lottery ticket.
It's on par with most restaurants.
Let's use a gambling analogy like a blackjack table, but I'll use your lottery one as well.
A hit begets more hits as it scales up.
And so as you're coming back to buy that lottery ticket, your odds of winning again are pretty impossible.
If you have a good run at a blackjack table and then you go back the next day and be like, I'm really good at blackjack.
But it's like, no, you just went on a
run. Whereas in the instance of any of these mega hit musicals that then scale, you're walking back
to a table that you know you're going to be getting 21 over and over again, because as it
scales, it's going to continue to do that. There are tons of cliche sayings in the theater. You
know, you can make a killing or you can get killed. Anybody who was around in the 80s, like people would talk about, oh, my cat's investment returned 5,000%. That
makes the stock market or any hedge fund manager kind of, you know, blow their mind.
So on the rare occasion that a show does return 5,000%, how is that money divvied up? For instance,
do the non-household names in Stereophonic get any back end?
We'll find out after this break.
I'm Stephen Dubner, and this is Freakonomics Radio.
The new hit Broadway play, Stereophonic, is about a band getting famous as they're in the studio making their second record and how their relationships ebb and flow and sometimes crater as they are beset by the fame.
That is very much the case for Diana and Peter as played by Sarah Pigeon and Tom Pesinka.
So many plays are described as like slice of life,
but I think our play really is a slice of life.
You're coming into it in the middle of something
and you're leaving it in the middle of something.
It's more of a comma as opposed to a period.
We know that these people will live on.
We know that their careers will change or end or something.
Where do you think Diana is five years after the play ends?
I think she writes a solo album.
I think it's good.
But I think she always feels like it would have been better if she did it with Peter.
What's Peter doing five years after?
I don't know if I'm allowed to say this.
I think at one point it was said that Grover goes on to become one of the world's greatest producers, and Peter sleeps on his couch for a bit.
At least the actor playing Peter won't be sleeping on couches anytime soon.
Tom Pesinka has been performing his whole life.
He did musicals all through high school and eventually went to Yale Drama School. He's kept busy ever since.
Some stage work, some TV and film, but career success has taken a while.
Stereophonic is a big boost for him.
I'm doing interviews for the first time.
I'm doing photo shoots for the first time.
I'm doing all this stuff.
It's like so novel to me, everything.
Is it everything I've ever wanted, like on paper? Yeah, for sure. But experiencing it is a very different story. We had a big press day when the Tony nominations came out, just going from interview to interview to interview. I was so exhausted by the end of it. And I went back to the hotel room where my girlfriend and my dog were staying. I just drew a circle with my finger in the air and I said,
this is real life. That is something else. And I will participate in that for my business.
And it's fun. But I'm so glad that this stuff is starting to happen for me at 36 and not 21.
Because I think it's so easy to lose your head and blur the lines between what is real life and what is,
I don't know, something else.
When real rock stars come to see the show, I know Ronnie Wood is coming soon or just came
between Rolling Stones shows. Have you met with them afterwards?
No. And this is like a PSA to all the famous people that come to the show. Please say hello.
No one comes back.
I have a guest book, and there's one signature in it.
Ellen Burstyn.
She's the only person in my guest book, and I'd love to fill it up.
As the producer John Johnson told us,
neither Tom Pesinka nor any of the other cast members of Stereophonic are household names.
Only one of them, Will Brill,
had ever been in a Broadway show. But they are now responsible for helping create a hit that
may earn its producers and investors a very good return. Traditionally, only big stars have had
profit-sharing deals on Broadway. But lately, thanks to the broader economic discussions around income inequality, there has been a movement toward broadening this practice.
So I asked John Johnson if or how the cast members of Stereophonic may share in the show's financial upside. soon as a household name or not with an upside potential because i think in general when everyone
is along for the ride and everyone is cut in it makes the experience for all sort of spiritually
better when you say upside potentially mean if the show does well the performers start to get
a piece of the action correct and the specific nature of the show being an ensemble piece and being this band, literally, who have grown together, it just felt right.
I've done tons of shows that have had singular A-list stars that you pay a handsome amount of money and it's a 14 or 16 week run because that's what stars like to do.
Because then they're off to their next TV show, their next movie.
So I get paid $5,000 a week. That's Tom Pesinka.
But I see $2,000 something of that because of taxes and because of, you know, 20% goes to my
representation. I'm also paying other people as well. I think people don't realize on Broadway,
when you're especially running a Tony campaign, you're hiring a publicist.
You are not the show. The show has a publicist,
but I also elected to hire my personal publicist,
a stylist, someone who grooms me.
If it's a Tony event and I'm a Tony nominee,
the producers will give me a certain amount of money
to spend on those things.
But you're still spending a lot out of pocket.
Spending a lot of money.
The profit sharing, I don't know exactly what it is. Was it negotiated collectively with all of you?
Yes, we negotiated collectively for everything. Was it a union driven negotiation or no?
No, we got together as a cast. We put our points down, what was negotiable, what was non-negotiable.
Then we went to our agents and managers with that, and then they got together collectively,
and then they went to the producers.
At what point was this?
Was this before the transfer to Broadway?
Yeah, this was when we were negotiating the Broadway contract.
What were you getting paid at Playwrights per week?
$1,200, I think.
So to some kid who's listening to you and saying oh, yeah
I'd like to have a hit like that and an interesting character like that and a life like that
how would you advise them about the actual career prospects of
Paying rent and living and maybe having a family and so on
You know, that's something i've been thinking about a lot because my girlfriend and I were having those discussions
She's getting to an age. I'm getting to an age where it's like, okay, we live together.
Are we going to have a kid? Are we going to get married?
Like, what's the deal?
I want those things for sure.
But, you know, I got to get a series.
Even if you're in a hit on Broadway, it's hard.
Unfortunately, if you just want to be a theater artist you have to live a certain
lifestyle i don't want to live that lifestyle i want to live a different lifestyle i want to have
a house i want to be able to put my kids through college i want to be able to do all of that
buy my dog really fancy dog food because she's really stingy about eating kibble after this show i want to get like on a hbo series where i'm on
10 episodes or 13 episodes and i'm making tens of thousands of dollars per episode so i can
afford the life that i've decided and i'm not ashamed of wanting do you think most people who
come to new york and buy one or two broadway tickets do you think most people who come to New York and buy one or two Broadway tickets,
do you think they assume that the average performer is making a lot more money than
the average performer actually is? Probably. I also think it depends on who you are, right?
I've heard crazy stories of Hugh Jackman making, I don't know, a million dollars a week or something,
or getting a certain cut of the box office. I'm not ragging on Hugh Jackman. He's great. But also, again, lifestyle. He has a lifestyle,
and he can't just take a year out of his life and do Broadway and not get paid a million dollars a
week. Hugh Jackman did recently star in a Broadway revival of The Music Man. For more than a year,
he did eight shows a week. His salary was never made
public, but a million dollars a week would seem high. Industry people we've spoken with put the
likely figure at around $300,000, although that was likely augmented by a share of the box office.
But for most people working on Broadway, the economics are tough. I went back to stereophonic producer John Johnson.
If you read the newspapers and even the trades about the economics of producing live theater
these days, the last, let's call it five years especially, it's easy to come to the conclusion
that live theater is basically dying. It's too expensive to produce. The audiences are not the
same or are not returning there are
too many countervailing forces unions have too much leverage the theater owners have too much
leverage there are many many many other media options that audiences are taking advantage of
you sound john like the first person i've spoken with who doesn't exude that kind of death rattle
yeah it's a little dramatic.
When I started in the business,
my first boss was a legendary producer
by the name of Liz McCann.
She had worked in the theater for almost 60 years.
She used to talk about the late 70s,
the time period of which, you know,
the same thing was being said.
New York was told to drop dead.
The Bronx was burning.
Crime was up.
The theaters were being torn down.
That was a way worse time than what we're talking about now. And yet, at the same time,
what came out of that afterwards was, in the 80s, a massive boom. It was the British invasion. It was Lloyd Webber. It was Cameron McIntosh coming in with these massive shows. That's what came out
of that period of the late 70s. The other example I'd like to give is the financial crash. What we went through in late 2008, 2009, 2010, I think way worse than what we're
dealing with now from a standpoint of fundraising drying up, shows having to close prematurely.
14 shows closed at the top of 2009 right after the crash. It was almost worse than the pandemic
because everyone stayed home
and saved money, or at least now, what they want to see is different. But if they do really want
to see something, whether it be Daniel Radcliffe and Mary Lou Rowlong or Sarah Paulson or Jeremy
Strong, they will pay for it. Is it challenging? Yes. Are we dealing with costs going up? Yes. Are we dealing with not being able to figure out how to get the audiences to the shows and how to entice them in a world where you can't just take ads on television anymore because no one's watching traditional television?
How is stereophonic being marketed and sold differently now than it might have been 20 years ago?
Oh, it's almost entirely all digital now.
It's all mobile.
It's all through meta.
It's all through Instagram, Facebook.
We do still take the traditional behavioral banner ads that follow you around the internet.
We still do some prints, but not a ton.
We have dabbled into television, but we're taking specific ads. We're not taking giant flights with multiple
spots on Good Morning America or the Today Show, which was always your bread and butter.
Because again, the audience that you were going for, that demographic that was coming
six to eight times a year from the suburbs were the same folks who would get the kids off to
school and then turn on the Today Show and watch the commercials kind of roll by and go,
oh, that show, I've heard of that. I need to go see that. Now it's all in your hand. How do the costs of a digital-first marketing
and advertising campaign compare to the old school? And what's the ROI compared to the old
school? The ROI is much easier to figure out because you can actually track people. Our zip
code reporting is way more sophisticated now than it was before, whereas
you had to blanket the market with something and then you didn't see a direct correlation.
Now it's less things, but you can still see how your raps jump due to specific things of press,
like a CBS Sunday morning piece, or if your stars are on Morning Joe. There are fewer things that
give you that pop, but at least you know, if I'm on Morning Joe, there are fewer things that give you that pop,
but at least you know, if I'm on Morning Joe,
then we're going to have a good day at the box office.
There are other ways in which the theater industry intersects
with the larger entertainment ecosystem.
Here again is the producer, Sonia Friedman.
If you look across Broadway and the West End over the last 50 years,
a lot of the new shows have come from studios, Universal, Fox, MGM.
And Netflix are going to be no different in that respect.
Friedman has already worked with Netflix twice.
The first was turning a Netflix property, Stranger Things, into a live theatrical show in London.
With Stranger Things, actually, we went to them.
It was a very, very specific challenge about, can you put sci-fi on stage?
It's actually a surprisingly emotional story about a little kid who's metaphorically and literally got a monster growing inside of him.
And how does he beat this monster?
It's a very, very simple yet universal tale we're telling.
But we also wanted to see whether we could go for it, technically.
Go for it in the most extraordinary way.
Netflix loved the idea and they became our partner on it.
And theatre for them is relatively cheap, I mean, considering their scale.
I would have thought so. But, you know, it's all relative to me. When Stranger Things comes
to Broadway, they will be our partners, and I have to make sure that the financial model
still makes sense.
So that's one way for Netflix to be involved in live theatre. But there is another way. Consider Sonia Friedman's recent
production of the play Patriots on Broadway. It was written for the stage by Peter Morgan,
best known for creating the Netflix series The Crown. And Netflix is a big investor in the
Broadway show. With Patriots, that was absolutely driven by Pete Morgan. And Netflix wanted to support
the Patriots journey. I think they're going to make it into a film or something, but I can say
no more beyond that. Would you like to be involved in turning Stereophonic into a film or series?
Of course. I think it would be a fantastic series. I've heard a little talk about you producing
more TV film. Would you like to be
a full-blown producer in that realm? I would do it, but I don't want it to be what I do,
because I love theatre. Every single night, who knows what's going to happen? Seeing the audience,
just feeling and hearing. When I make TV, I've done a few. It's really exciting, but then it's done. It's always slightly anticlimactic when it comes out on telly and you go, oh, that's it.
You sit there at home on your own, you know, with a box of popcorn and then you look at Twitter and go, okay, so that's happened.
Where's the adrenaline? in where's that extraordinary cortisol hit that you get with theater which is you literally walk
in and my heart beats faster and it's terrifying and it's wonderful I mean particularly with shows
which have a lot of technical challenges is it gonna go wrong tonight are we gonna get through
it when I have nine ten shows running at any one time,
I will not be able to go to sleep in London until the curtains at least gone up in New York, just so I know that's happened. And then I'll usually wake up in the middle of the night just
to check that they've gone okay. And that's how I've lived my life for 20 years. And then we had
the pandemic. And I think that everything came into stark relief, as we all know, for 20 years. And then we had the pandemic. And I think that everything came
into stark relief, as we all know, for the world. And you had just opened Leopoldstadt,
the Tom Stoppard play in the West End. Just opened Leopoldstadt exactly about
three or four days beforehand. I had another 17 shows across the world. It was, you know,
obviously sort of shocking. And I frankly, as I talk about it now I still can't
quite believe it happened to us all and I got quite heavily involved in the lobbying and yeah
I read that you lobbied the UK government for COVID relief funding for the theater sector
very much so yes it was a moment where I had to actually figure out what theatre meant to the world.
Why theatre? Why culture? Why arts?
When we were going through this absolute crisis, the very model for us,
which was bringing a group of people together in a closed space, indoors, sharing an experience, that whole idea was under threat.
But in those dark hours, it became quite clear to me that theatre will never, ever, ever, ever die. It's absolutely essential for our mental health and our ability to communicate with one
another, our ability to have empathy. We do something beautiful and unique, which is we
allow people to come together, share an experience, go on a journey, think about the world in a
slightly different way, and in the majority of cases, on a journey, think about the world in a slightly different way,
and in the majority of cases, feel a little bit better about the world. And then, you know,
I put on my political lobbying hat, we also feed the economy. We also feed the ecosystem around the
towns and the cities, and we feed the bars and the restaurants and we create employment,
we are more than just a luxury. We're at the center of every policy. And I'm talking to the
Labour Party at the moment in the UK about all of this because they get it. They get it.
And they'll soon be in power.
Oh, I expect so. And in America and in the UK, the fact that theatre and artists have to still fight for their relevance, the fact that we still have to fight for the right for children to see shows, to read plays, to study art, to study music in schools is so short-sighted because, you know, almost every great person who walks the planet has had some
experience as they grow up of being in a school show, being in a school play,
or going to watch one, and it can change their lives.
On that note, the changing of a life, I went back to David Adjmi. He had been writing plays
for a couple decades in relative obscurity
until Stereophonic,
which itself took
11 years to write.
The whole thing was written
very freely
and very experimentally,
and I didn't know
what the structure
would be early on.
I just had these scenes,
and I didn't know
how they'd go together
or what they would be.
I don't know.
I just follow my intuitions
when I'm working.
So much of it is non-rational.
It is just me kind of like tracking these characters and saying, well, let's see how
far I can push this. It seems to me that the way you're describing writing is, and maybe this is
just because the way I think about writing, having been a writer my whole life is that, you know,
this is how you write. You look for ideas, you find a whole lot, most of them are terrible,
you throw them away, and then you sit with them and you let the unconscious come in,
and then you keep doing research and thinking and talking to people, but then what you try to create
is an original thing. Whereas much of the theater that I've been seeing over the past year,
especially in pursuit of this series that we're working on, feels, what's a non-pejorative way, constructed. I understand
there's a big market for that, probably a much bigger market for that than there is for your
kind of writing. But can you just offer a sort of defense of your kind of writing for the stage?
We're used to that kind of writing in literature, but I feel like most people who think of theater don't think of a show that's as not just thoughtful, but intense. It's an intense piece of work. It's also fun and funny and weird. But why is there not more of this?
I don't know. I mean, I love Goethe and German Romanticism.
I can hear all the commercial producers ears dropping down now.
Never mind.
And Strindberg and stuff like that.
O'Neill.
I mean, the great plays, the great capital G great plays are very, very freaking intense plays.
They go to the bottom.
And I think most playwrights don't have the courage to do it or they don't have it in their genetic material.
They don't have it in them. And I always did. And I always felt like a weirdo because in the end,
that stuff is really scary and it does scare away theaters. People don't always want to feel
too much. They want to go home and have their dinner after a show. They don't want to be ripped
open. And I do think the function of art is to discomfort the comforted.
And so that's what I'm going to do.
Thanks to David Adjmi, along with all the performers and producers of Stereophonic who spoke with us.
As I mentioned, we are working on a broader series about the economics of live theater that will probably come out sometime in the fall or winter.
In the meantime, I would love to hear your feedback on these Stereophonic episodes and what you'd like to learn about in that later series.
Our address is radio at Freakonomics.com.
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Coming up next time on the show.
I mean, this is not just a mistake.
This is a crime and this is something horrible, right?
Imagine you are a big
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next? Not what you might think. That's next time on the show. Until then, take care of yourself.
And if you can, someone else too. Freakonomics Radio is produced by Stitcher and
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where we publish transcripts and show notes. This episode was produced by Alina Kullman.
Our staff also includes Augusta Chapman, Dalvin Abawaji, Eleanor Osborne, Elsa Hernandez,
Gabriel Roth, Greg Rippin, Jasmine Klinger,
Jeremy Johnston, Julie Kanfer, Lyric Bowditch, Morgan Levy, Neil Carruth, Rebecca Lee Douglas,
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Our composer is Luis Guerra. Additional music in this episode by Will Butler,
Justin Craig, and the cast of Stereophonic. As always, thank you for listening.
If anybody ever says no to me, that's when the green monster comes out.
Wait, the green monster is Envy.
Is that what you mean?
No, sorry.
The Incredible Hulk.