"Theatre Work is a fascinating, at times difficult, exploration into some of the deep flaws in the current American Theatre, yet it offers hope and pathways to help remedy those flaws."
Beowulf Boritt, TONY-Winning Set Designer and author of Transforming Space Over Time
Theatre Work provokes crucial questions about the future of American theatre and the people who make it. At a moment when the field is at a crossroads, Robin and Cotton provide a valuable set of considerations for moving forward with equity and care for a sustainable future."
Jessica Brater, Associate Professor of Theatre at Montclair State University and Coordinator of the BA and MA in Theatre Studies and graduate certificate in Theatre of Diversity, Inclusion, and Social Change
Natalie and Bridins book is an essential primer on the history of theater production. It then goes further to provide thoughtful insights as to how we got where we are, and foster valuable thinking about how we can conceptualize new labor and produce models for the future of the theater industry. I would recommend this book to anyone who cares about how theater sustains itself.
Jenny Gersten, Interim Artistic Director of the Williamstown Theatre Festival, VP and Producer of Musical Theater at New York City Center, and commercial producer
Theatre Work succeeds in both illuminating populations left in the dark, and offering a hand to those looking to join the cause toward equity in the workplace. Its a sharp criticism of unsustainable business practices failing workers while simultaneously providing avenues for progressive, safe, and essential restructuring in the theater industry.
Z Infante, Multidisciplinary artist focused on amplifying the voices of underrepresented and at-risk youth through the arts
"This book gives a detailed overview of how we have gotten to a place of pay inequity in the arts especially within theatre. The authors take great care and understanding to lay it out clearly and then follow through with actionable ways it could be remedied."
Katie Irish, Costume Designer and co-chair of Local USA 829's Pay Equity Task Force
Natalie and Bridin have taken considerable and incredibly thoughtful, conscious efforts to highlight the conditions and composition of todays production labor force while contextualizing it in theater industry history, rooting it in decades of systemic inequity, bias, and racism. For those of us trying to influence change in the industry, it both validates how challenging pay equity work can be (AND WHY, given the deep deep normalizing of exclusion and working for passion not payment) yet also how important and necessary and urgent it is to work rigorously to dismantle the inequitable systems and industry assumptions of how things should be because thats how its always been/thats show business. We are so fortunate to have this research and data all in one place! And a forward by artEquity's Carmen Morgan?! Yes, please!
Danielle King, Producer & Director of Organizational Culture, Williamstown Theatre Festival
This book is a must read for anyone in theater or anyone interested in getting into theater. Natalie and Bridin have done incredible research into everything from the history of the designers union to the value or not of university education. You will want to have your highlighters near with this wonderful resource. This book made me think about all behavior including my own.
Allen Lee Hughes, Lighting Designer/Educator
Theatre Work is an accessible and timely intervention that zeroes in on the white-supremacist structures governing the labor and compensation of production workers in contemporary American theatre. Building on the work of activists and advocates including the We See You, White American Theater collective, Cotton and Robin consolidate existing studies with their own industry surveys and interviews to make transparent the practices that limit and prevent equitable labor practices. From the impact of networks on recruitment to accessibility and safety issues, they expertly interrogate the areas of theatre production where inequity is most entrenched. With great hope, Cotton and Robin offer strategies for incremental change as well as grand, disruptive imaginings that might change the conversations and structures of American theatre today.
Laura MacDonald, Assistant Professor, Residential College in the Arts and Humanities, Michigan State University
Theatre Work explores the complicated dynamics of production and design work and workers in the United States with a nuanced, deep, and empathic lens. The book centers theatre production and design professionals as workers within the labor movement. The authors offer intriguing provocations and questions that the entire United States theatre community needs to explore further together.
Porsche McGovern, author of the series "Who Designs in LORT Theatres by Pronoun" for Howlround Theatre Commons
This book is an essential piece of the puzzle that is fixing the professional theater landscape. It is required reading for anyone in a decision-making role in the arts. Although the book examines a specific period of time and group of organizations, the principles are widely applicable to all businesses that seek to balance art and commerce.
Valerie Novakoff Britten, Founder of the Broadway Womens Fund and Interim Executive Director of Open Stage Project
This is a meaningful read for all theatre makers and patrons, and for those of us practitioners who are not production workers, this should be a must read - so we can better understand the experiences, frustrations, hopes, desires, and dreams of our colleagues in production. This galvanizing work by Bridin and Natalie not only illustrates how unsustainable practices have been born and preserved, but also how we can and must strive towards a fairer industry, if we join together. Onwards and upwards!
Tatiana Wechsler, NYC-based actor, singer/songwriter, and creative