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Where Will an Agent Take You?
By Amy Holman
As I thought about the friendly sounds of the words
“representation” and “advocate,” words connected to the
jobs of literary, dramatic, and talent agents, I opened
the dictionary to look up the root meaning of “agent.”
Middle English, Latin, and Greek have it as “drive,” but
the Old Norse says it is “to travel in a vehicle.” And
so, you have to ask yourself: where will an agent take
me?
An agent is a different kind of vehicle in literary and
performance disciplines, with different mileage and
safety options to offer the client. In the best of all
possible situations, an agent puts you on the highway
with an OnStar Navigation System and introductions to
the best editors, producers, and casting directors.
Agents are ethically bound to take a commission from
work sold or obtained for their client, and not to take
any up-front fees. But what they can lay claim to
differs according to artistic discipline. Other forms of
representation and advocacy also exist for writers,
artists, actors, dancers, and musicians: from personal
and business managers, to lecture agents and art
dealers. In any case, representation of this sort is
usually necessary only when an artist has reached a
professional level, rarely when she or he is just
starting out. Below is the breakdown of different kinds
of “vehicles to travel in,” and what to expect from
them.
Literary and Dramatic Agents
Vehicle: a sports car with a trade-in option for a
larger model
Literary and dramatic agents market the rights of
literary properties and advocate on behalf of the
authors of those books, plays, screenplays, and
teleplays for the best possible publishing and
production deals. The author owns the copyright to the
work she or he writes, but the agent helps to sell that
written work to editors at the big publishing houses, or
else to theater, television, and film producers. Just
because an agent represented your first novel or
screenplay does not mean she or he will agree to
represent you on every book or screenplay you write. The
author may be the client, but the author is not the
property, and agents usually have open-ended agreements
rather than official contracts with their authors. It is
important to initially establish a time period, often
one year, during which the agent will try to sell the
work. If it is not sold during that year, both parties
have the opportunity to reassess the situation. An
agent’s responsibilities include reading manuscripts,
meeting with editors and producers, negotiating
contracts, and collecting payment for their authors.
Agents know the editors and producers they deal with and
know how to argue effectively in the author’s favor.
Once the manuscript is sold, they take a commission of
15% for literary works, 10% for dramatic works, by
collecting the advance and subtracting their percentage.
Who should travel in this vehicle and how to get a ride:
writers of almost every genre—from photography to
literary fiction, architecture to musical theater,
memoirs to graphic novels—who have book projects,
full-length plays, and screenplays; poets who have won
the Pulitzer Prize or become the U.S. Poet Laureate;
writers who have a contract from a publisher already,
and need help negotiating. Make a list of reputable
agents interested in your kind of book, play, teleplay,
or screenplay and send queries to all of them. Queries
differ for different kinds of books, and some require
proposals, but basically you need to pitch your project
to a particular person you think would be interested,
summarize the story, and include a short bio. If an
agent likes the work, she or he will call or write and
ask to read your full manuscript. If an agent asks to
read it on an exclusive—meaning she or he is the only
one reading it—give her or him a period of two to four
weeks in which to reply.
Lecture Agent
Vehicle: Vespa motorbike
The lecture agent represents writers, poets, and
performers who enjoy public speaking and can command a
large sum to give readings of their work or lecture on
various topics. They seek out speaking engagements,
field offers, and negotiate terms, but do not have
anything to do with shopping the rights of the written
works. Depending on the specialty of the agency, their
size and personal relationship with their clients, the
commission will differ. Literary lecture agents take
10—20% of payment on each job.
Who should travel in this vehicle and how to get a ride:
dynamic poets and fiction writers who can command at
least a thousand dollars for a reading of their work and
are in demand. This kind of agency is especially great
for poets whose genre has an oral tradition that
sometimes helps market their work better than a
publisher does, thus giving them an opportunity to make
a living. Query the agent with a letter, résumé, audio,
or videotape.
Talent Agents
Vehicle: four-wheel drive truck for all terrain
Talent agents get bookings for actors, send pictures and
résumés to casting directors, and either run centralized
agencies or specialized ones: theatrical (stage and
television), commercials, voiceovers, film, music, or
legitimate (theater). Nevertheless, the property they
represent is the performer herself or himself, and they
take a 10% commission on each and every job, even those
that come from contacts made before signing. But unlike
literary and dramatic bookkeeping, the actor is usually
responsible for paying her or his agent that 10%, though
some theaters will subtract the commission from an
actor’s pay. Try to be ethical and not forget to pay
them. Some talent agents can be very understanding when
it comes to hard financial times and let you pay in
installments.
Who should travel in this vehicle and how to get a ride:
actors, musicians, and commercial and voice-over artists
who have actually acted in professional productions,
played gigs, and received good notices in theater, film,
radio, or on television. Make lists of talent agencies
you want to target and send appropriate materials—8”
x10” photo, audition or demo tapes/CDs, résumé, and a
short, introductory letter. When you get a call to come
in for an interview, go in with your hair and face
looking like it is in your publicity photo, since that
is what they wanted. Have a working phone that takes
messages.
Personal Managers/Business Managers
Vehicle: Airstream mobile home
Personal managers are for when you actually have a
career to manage, and are not organized to juggle all
the offers and the tasks needed to achieve success. They
help you with every aspect of your career: from physical
presentation, to selecting the best roles for your
career path, to publicity and promotion. Personal
managers can be used in place of agents in some
professions, and will either take a 15% commission or
ask for a retainer. The people in the business of
advocating for actors’ rights lean towards commissions
rather than retainers as ethical business simply because
it is easier to gauge how well the manager is managing
your career. When you are making $100,000 or more a
year, you can afford to hire a business manager to help
you make investments, secure a retirement plan, and buy
a house.
Who should travel in this vehicle and how to get a ride:
Actors, musicians, singers, and dancer-choreographers
who have begun to make a living from their talent and
can benefit from strategists. Send queries to personal
managers with your résumé. Ask your bank, friends, or
union for references of ethical accountants and business
managers.
Art Dealers/Galleries
Vehicle: trailer, parked
Visual artists usually do not have agents or personal
managers, though they can benefit from business managers
when they make a good living. Art dealers/galleries
represent sculptors, painters, sketch artists,
photographers, environmental artists, installation
artists, and collagists, and take no less than 50% on
the art they sell (not-for-profit art spaces are not set
up to sell work). In the dawn of the art dealer, the
percentage was half that, and in cutthroat times, they
can try for 60%. More than one gallery can represent an
artist’s work, so it is not like an agent who drives you
to some place. It is like a temporary home to show your
work, and if the gallery promotes its artists extremely
well, and your work sells, it could lead to a
self-supporting career.
Who should get in this vehicle and how to get a ride:
visual artists with a portfolio of work ready to show
the public. Galleries are to artists what publishers are
to writers, the means by which their work gets shown to
an audience, so it is essential to find the ones
interested in your style and medium of art. Buy a guide
to galleries and make lists of people to query and meet.
Have good quality slides of your artwork to show.
Conclusion
Sometimes you can walk or take the bus to your
destination. Many writers can have good careers without
ever employing agents, because the small and independent
publishers and the university presses accept unagented
manuscripts. Most actors, however, need agents in order
to get the attention of established casting directors.
All beginning writers, performers, and artists need to
spend time creating their work and finding their style
and skills before they approach the marketplace. All
agents need to be convinced that what you have to offer
is work they want to support, and having talent and a
résumé is essential, but so, too, is a knowledge of who
they are and how the business is run. If you are serious
about your career, join organizations that offer advice
and protection against unethical business practices,
along with information on jobs. Learn to be savvy, and
don’t get into any strange cars.
List of Organizations
Actor’s Equity Association is the labor union for
theater actors and stage managers. 165 West 46th Street,
New York, NY 10036, 212.869.8530, www.actorsequity.org.
American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers
(ASCAP) is a membership of composers, songwriters, and
music publishers that protects the rights of its members
by licensing and distributing royalties. One Lincoln
Plaza, New York, NY 10023, www.ascap.com.
Association of Authors Representatives (AAR) has a Canon
of Ethics to which it holds its members—literary and
dramatic agents. Check them out at www.aar-online.org.
Dramatists Guild is a membership organization for
playwrights, composers, and lyricists and is open to all
dramatic writers at any stage. 1501 Broadway, Suite 701,
New York, NY 10036; 212.398.9366, www.dramaguild.com.
National Writers Union is a union for writers of all
kinds and has samples of fair agent agreements available
to their members. 212.254.0279, www.nwu.org.
Screen Actors Guild (SAG), a union for screen actors,
has recently not been pleased with the General Service
Agreements some talent agents are offering. Check out
their FAQ’s on the website, and consider joining:
www.sag.org. Its New York office is at 360 Madison Ave,
12th floor, New York, NY 10017, and membership is at
212.944.6243.
College Art Association (CAA) includes among its members
those who by vocation or avocation are concerned about
and/or committed to the practice of art, teaching, and
research of and about the visual arts and humanities.
275 Seventh Avenue, New York, New York 10001,
212.691.1051, www.collegeart.org/.
Bibliography
Arts Calendar, The Business Magazine for Visual Arts. PO
Box 2675, Salisbury, MD 21802; 1.866.FORARTCAL; info@artcalendar.com;
www.artcalendar.
Arts Calendar is an artist-owned and -run resource
magazine with guidelines, interviews, and articles on
grants, fellowships, residencies, art fairs, galleries,
museums, group shows, publishing opportunities,
conferences, how-to-build studios, and more for the
professional life.
BackStage.com, 770 Broadway, 6th floor, New York, NY
10003. Subscriptions vary: $9.95/week, $59.70/six
months, or $119.40/annual.
Membership to Backstage.com gives you content from Back
Stage, a weekly New York City newspaper resource for the
performing arts, Back Stage West, and BackStage.com.
Includes interviews, business information, casting
calls, news, reviews, columns, and classified ads.
Baker, John F. Literary Agents: A Writer’s
Introduction. New York: Macmillan, 1999.
Baker is the publisher of Publisher’s Weekly, the most
influential magazine of the publishing industry. In
Literary Agents, he conducts interviews with over 30
literary agents about the literary fiction and
nonfiction they represent, and how they got into the
business.
Henry, Mari Lyn and Lynne Rogers. How To Be A Working
Actor: The Insider’s Guide to Finding Jobs in Theater,
Film and Television. Fourth edition. Minneapolis:
Watson Guptil, 2000.
Updated for the 21st century, Henry and Rogers provide
interview do’s and don’ts, the cyberbiz, information for
performers with disabilities, regional contacts, and
more.
Herman, Jeff. Writer’s Guide to Book Editors,
Publishers, and Literary Agents, 2002-2003: Who They
Are! What They Want! And How to Win Them Over! New
York: Prima Publishing, 2001. Herman is an agent who has
collected responses from agents about what they want to
represent, their hobbies, and what they consider a
“client from hell.”
Poets & Writers Magazine, PO Box 543, Mount Morris, IL
61054-7463, 815.734.1123; poet@kable.com;
www.pw.org.
A bimonthly magazine resource for creative writers.
$19.95 for one-year subscription (6 issues), $38 for two
years (12 issues). Profiles of contemporary authors,
market information for poets, fiction writers, and
creative nonfiction writers, news, announcements, and
classified ads. The magazine is part of the nonprofit
service organization Poets & Writers, Inc.
Smith, Constance. Art Marketing 101: A Handbook for
the Fine Artist. Cincinnati: F & W Publications,
2000.
This book contains information about résumé writing,
portfolio preparation, marketing, legal concerns,
contracts, and other important business topics for
artists. While this book is intended for visual artists,
most of the information is relevant to artists in all
disciplines.
Amy Holman has neither a car nor an agent but loves to
travel through metaphor. She teaches writers how to
navigate the literary marketplace and get published. She
writes essays on publishing issues and reviews of poetry
books by women, and is a contributor to the publishing
guide Pitch Craft, forthcoming from The Writer in
2004. For Poets & Writers, a national nonprofit,
she edits A Directory of American Poets and Fiction
Writers and directs the Publishing Seminars. As a
poet, her work has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize
and selected for The Best American Poetry 1999. She
is published in the animal-rights anthology And We the
Creatures, from Dream Horse Press, and the print and
online journals CrossConnect, Rattapallax, Del Sol
Review, American Letters & Commentary and Van Gogh’s
Ear. She is writing a novel, and has fiction in the new
journals Night Train and Shade, and a personal essay in
the unique anthology The History of Panty Hose in
America, from Espresso Press. Amy Holman is also
pursuing a new part-time career in voiceovers.
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