Getting Started
Licensing a play or musical for performance is an important part of the process of making theatre. When you license a show, you are providing a living wage for writers and helping to safeguard their work.
We hope to make the process of licensing a title straightforward, quick, and uncomplicated. Every production is different and not every title in our catalogue is licensed in the same way. The requirements vary show-by-show, which has much to do with the wishes of the author and circumstances surrounding the title.
Some titles may be licensed automatically, with no restrictions. Other titles require additional conversation and may be restricted. Also, the licensing fees often vary from title to title. These are based on the category of your performing group (amateur or professional), the agreement with the author, and the availability of the title.
Why is a licence required to perform a show?
Titles are covered by copyright law from the moment they’re written, which means that for a certain period of time if you want to perform them publicly you need to seek the author’s permission and pay them to stage their work. Copyright in the UK is 70 years after the date of death of the author.
Do I need a licence?
If a play or musical is still within copyright, you will need permission and a valid performance licence in place before you perform it. If it is not in copyright, you do not need a licence.
Do I need a licence for the type of performance I’m doing?
If you’re doing a public performance of a copyright protected play, you need a licence. Put simply, unless you’re doing a show in your own home for friends and family, or in a school as part of the usual teaching day and during a lesson, with no other invited guests, your show will be considered ‘public’. Ticketed productions, even visiting educational companies to schools will require a licence from the appropriate rights holder.
You may host a private play reading without a licence; however, in these instances it must be an non-ticketed, unrehearsed, closed reading with people from the same organisation.
There’s a common misconception that you don’t need a licence if you’re not charging for tickets. This isn’t the case. All public shows require a licence, regardless of whether or not you’re charging.