Getting your unsolicited script made, or at least read by a production company is about the toughest way to break into the industry, but lots of people still ask me about it so here’s my two-pennies-worth…
If I go back only ten years I could have written a list here of nearly a hundred film and television production companies who would accept scripts submitted by new writers (writers they didn’t know, and who didn’t have an agent). I know because I made a living reading for about twenty of them. Sadly, that is no longer the case. It costs money to employ readers to plough through tens of thousands of scripts each year. The reality is that of those thousands of spec scripts, only a handful will be good enough for the production company to want to develop it and try to get it made. In essence the return on the money invested in reading unsolicited scripts is too small to make it viable for most companies.
However, maybe you are that one in ten thousand whose script is pretty much perfect but you don’t yet have an agent or any credits to your name. So how do you get a production company to read your script if you don’t have an agent? Well, there are still a handful of places accepting unsolicited submissions. The two biggies are BBC Writersroom (for television drama) and the UK Film Council (for feature films). These are two large organisations with the structure and funding to read huge numbers of scripts and take forward any projects they come across that really excite them.
I’ve listed below all the places I’ve found that do still accept unsolicited script submissions. Check out their website and follow their submission guidelines. If in doubt, contact them and ask what their policy is.
Shooting People – online pitching available. Subscription required.
Do bear in mind that I’m not recommending these production companies, I’m just pulling together information that’s already in the public domain. It’s up to you to do your homework. The production companies I’ve listed range from the very well established like Red Productions and Red Planet to the brand new, 2-people outfits like Achilles Entertainments.
If you know of any others, please let me know and I’ll update the list.
Good luck!
[...] Script editor Hayley McKenzie is compiling up-to-date lists of theatre companies and television production companies who accept unsolicited scripts on her blog which is a helpful shortcut and faster alternative to [...]
By: Taking the Next Step « Michelle Lipton on August 12, 2009
at 10:34 pm
This is very useful. Thank you!
By: Helen on August 13, 2009
at 8:12 am
Thanks for the second installment Hayley.
By: JM on August 13, 2009
at 10:27 pm
Great article. I’m interested, why has the situation deteriorated in the last ten years, ie why would companies read stuff then and not now? Has the slush pile got worse during that time?
By: Griff on September 14, 2009
at 8:30 pm
Hi Griff
Glad you liked the article. I’d say that the quality of the work in the slush pile is the same as it was 10 years ago. The difference today is money. Film and television are businesses and most simply don’t have the spare cash to invest in reading unsolicited scripts. You may find a gem there but it will have cost a lot of man-hours (which don’t come cheap) to find it.
I’d also say, although it’s only my opinion, that there was also a lot of duplication 10 years ago, particularly in the BBC and ITV. The BBC had multiple points of entry for unsolicited submissions and that’s now been slimmed down to one central team (The BBC Writersroom). Similarly each ITV franchise (Yorkshire, Carlton, etc) used to each read unsolicited submissions and that has now disappeared with fewer franchisees and each one under extreme financial pressure. Reading unsolicited scripts just can’t be a priority for those businesses.
Hope that helps a bit.
Hayley
http://www.scriptangel.co.uk
By: scriptangel on September 17, 2009
at 1:57 pm
hi? this is very good.good work
By: gerard mutunga on November 11, 2009
at 4:20 pm
Thank you. This website has been very useful.
By: Hughes on December 3, 2009
at 5:38 pm