Marc P
Monday 19th January 2015 11:30pm
17,698 posts
Not all Mr Writer. Everybody sends in letters. Make some calls find things out first is my advice, to whom to send etc. Not picking on you sorry if that seems so, I disagree a lot with some of the advice on here and jump in, but I am an equal opportunities twat in that regard
Nobody is going to jump up and down about a spec script sent in where the writer says a famous actor wants to do it. Production companies work with famous actors all the time - they make them famous after all. Secondly they would want to know why the famous actor didn't approach them with project. Thirdly most won't even get that far because it will have been filtered out before the person who should be looking at it does - that is the nature of the beast. And unfortunately for us all - rightly so. Producers, unless they know someone, will treat scripts with 'names' attached from unknown and unsolicited writers with a degree of scepticism, because they would expect such approaches to come from agents, professionals like themselves or the actor himself.
The best pitch is always a prepared pitch. Your script is unsolicited but you can at least try to get some solicitation to it before presenting it unheralded through a letterbox to a script disposal factory. Which is what the BBC and most production companies are with regard to unsolicited material - they just don't get read.
If you have a bit of a USB a bit of added value, make it work for you. Network, speak to people (INCLUDING THE ACTOR!) maybe the actors agent, if the actor had been in a sitcom before, find out about that company.
99 percent of all sitcoms ever made were not made by a script sent in on spec.
This is a true statistic. People are people, and people buy people before they buy product. So speak to people, the idea of the writer in a garrett being discovered is just wrong nowadays. I have been a hermit now for some years and I can tell you it is no way to get work!