You Wrote a Script! Now What?

It's finally over! You've spent 30 days (and nights) pounding out a kick-butt script and now it's time to return to the proverbial "real world." This is a place without acts, scenes, special effects, or carefully crafted dialogue; one where you can no longer use the excuse, "Dude, I’m writing my script."

You may not know what to do with yourself when you reenter this world, but pretty soon you’ll be back in the swing of things. And after you’ve learned to refrain from blurting out scene directions in the cafeteria, you'll be well on your way to a full and healthy Frenzy recovery.

But Script Frenzy doesn't have to be totally over! Especially, if you like the script you wrote during the event. After catching up on time lost during April, you may want to:

  • Register your script with the Writer's Guild.
  • Revise your script until you are happy with it.
  • Submit your script to a contest (or five!).
  • Register Your Script

    If you are planning on entering your script in any contests, it’s a really good idea to register your script with the Writers Guild before you do. In order to keep your ideas legally safe, you can register online or by mail. It is super-easy, and the fee is only $20, which is definitely worth the protection for your newly written intellectual property.

    While this is not a requirement, we did see in the forums that some of you are planning on submitting to contests, so we thought we would mention it.

    Revise Your Script

    Whether it’s with a writing group, your close friends, or your younger brother, sharing your newly written script with other people (especially with other writers) makes the revision process much easier. The YWP Script Frenzy forums are a great place to find a revision partner. We even created a Script Swap forum. Once you find a partner, you can either FrenzyMail or email your scripts to each other.

    Before you begin the revision process, check out this awesome revision advice from the Script Frenzy Program Director, Jen Artz! She says the best revision advice out there is to read your script aloud.

    You can either do this by yourself, or with a group of very dedicated friends who would like to take parts and read through your script. It does not have to be acted out, and you won’t need props; all you’ll need are enough copies of your script for all the friends who would like to read parts, a comfortable living room, and some serious snacks!

    Submit Your Script

    Once you’re done revising, it’ll come time to submit to contests and become rich and famous. (Then we can ride on your coattails, say we knew you when, and borrow money from you.)

    Many of the contests out there require you to be 18 or older, or to pay a lot of money, but we found some just for teens and kids. Most of these contests are annual, so if you miss them this year, they'll be back again in 2011.

    CONTESTS

    Action on Film International Film Festival Short Scene Competition

    Deadline: June 1, 2010

    Entry Fee: $35 (student fee)

    About: While we all love a great action film, action is more than super kung fu skills, fast cars and explosions. Action is also lovers walking on a beach, a kiss, hard edge dialogue and even more than that. So, any film or video that has movement, life, excitement, and fire, that is what we are looking for and yes of course, we want your shoot ‘em ups and films with fight scenes too. In short, we want to celebrate it all. Give us action! Submit a written scene, 5 pages or less, that shows what you think of action!


    Annual Actors’ Theatre Young Playwrights contest

    Deadline: January 2011

    Entry Fee: $5

    About: Actors' Theatre continues its groundbreaking efforts to bring new playwrights and exciting, innovative theater to their area, by putting the quills in the hands of our youth! The winning plays will receive staged readings with age appropriate actors during the Young Writers' Festival Weekend, April 2011. Writers must be between the ages of 13 and 19.


    Baker’s Plays High School Playwriting Competition

    Deadline: January 2011

    Entry Fee: None

    About: Grand Prize is $500! Each winner’s play will be published in a collection by Baker's Plays with a royalty earning contract.


    Blank Theatre Company Young Playwrights Festival

    Deadline: March 2011

    Entry Fee: None

    About: The Blank Theatre Company Young Playwrights Competition & Festival is the premiere nationwide forum dedicated to developing and producing plays and musicals by playwrights 19 years of age and younger. Since 1993 we have developed and produced 172 plays and musicals by playwrights as young as 13 years old!


    Eerie Horror Film Festival

    Deadline: August 1 2009

    Entry Fee: $20-25

    About: The 2009 Eerie Horror Student Screenplay Competition offers young screenwriters in the horror, science fiction and suspense genres a chance to have their work recognized by people in the industry and beyond! Students may submit feature screenplays (70 pages or longer) or short screenplays (69 pages or under). The top 3 winning screenplays in each category will be announced on all Eerie Horror Film Festival websites and winner’s information will be forwarded to industry professionals for consideration. Winners will be announced no later than September 15, 2010. This category is open ONLY to students ages 10 - 17. A parent or legal guardian MUST fill in all forms.


    Future of Cinema International Film Festival

    Deadline: April 15 2010, but submit early for reduced fee

    Entry Fee: $20-25

    About: The Future of Cinema Festival at Interlochen Center for the Arts provides a setting for high school filmmakers to meet professionals and peers, screen work, discuss trends and new developments in cinema, while creating a greater understanding of a quickly evolving art form. The competition is open to high school students age 14-18.


    Princeton University’s Ten-Minute Play Contest

    Deadline: March 2011

    Entry Fee: None

    About: This contest seeks the best ten-minute play written by a high school junior. First Prize: $500.00; Second Prize: $250.00; Third Prize: $100.00.


    Young Playwrights Festival National Playwriting Competition

    Deadline: January 3, 2011

    Entry Fee: None

    About: YPI will give you a place to be heard. Your play will be read and evaluated in writing by a theater professional; selected writers will come to New York for their Writers Conference to work with some of this country's most exciting theater artists. Who knows, your play might even be produced Off Broadway in the Young Playwrights Festival! So, do the write thing: write a play and make yourself heard. The power is in your hands. You must be 18 years old or younger on January 3, 2011—in other words, all writers born on or after January 4, 1992 are eligible to submit their work.


    WriteMovies.Com International Writing Competition

    Deadline: May 28 2010

    Entry Fee: $39

    About: Submit your screenplay, stageplay, original TV pilot, or TV spec script to this online writing competition. Only 1000 entries are accepted in each round of the contest, but it repeats twice each year. If you are under 18, you must have at least one parent (or legal guardian) sign the application form in addition to your own signature.


    Scholastic Writing Awards Contest

    Deadline: December 2010-January 2011 (varies)

    Entry Fee: $5-10

    About: The Alliance for Young Artists & Writers, a nonprofit organization, identifies teenagers with exceptional artistic and literary talent and brings their remarkable work to a national audience through The Scholastic Art & Writing Awards. The dramatic script contest is open to students enrolled in grades 7 – 12. They must attend a public, private, parochial, home-school or after school program in the U.S., Canada, or in an American school abroad. Please submit between 5 to 50 pages. Applications will open October 1, 2010.


    For more information about contests near you, check out John Dorf’s Young Playwrights Page and his contest resources.

    Another good resource for finding screenwriting competitions is Without A Box. Creating an account with the site will allow you to search over 1,000 screenwriting festivals and competitions. But be sure you check the details carefully—many of these competitions have steep entry fees, or do not allow submissions from anyone under 18 years old.

    Some Other Really Fun Writerly Things To Do

    1. Produce your script!

    How awesome would it be to make all those characters and scenes in your head come to life? You don’t have to have a movie contract or a theatre company to do this! If you wrote a play, grab your friends and family, some props and costumes, and take your script to the stage (even if the stage is in your backyard or living room). If you know someone with a camcorder, you can produce your screenplay or TV script in the same way. If you wrote a script for a comic book or graphic novel, even better! If you aren’t an artist, all you will need is one friend who is. Scripts were meant to be shared, so whether you wrote one for the stage, the screen, or the page, make sure to get it out there for all the world to see and enjoy!

    2. Write another one during National Playwriting Month.

    Event Entry Fee: None

    Event Dates: 11/01/07-11/30/07

    About: If you are a playwright, this is your chance to write another play in a month with other playwrights around the globe.

    3. Get Involved

    We have found a ton of dramatic writing summer programs for kids all around the U.S. and beyond. Don’t know your plans this summer? Consider applying to one. We will keep adding to this list as we hear of new places throughout the year.



    GENERAL WRITING PROGRAMS (INCLUDES DRAMATIC WRITING)

    Young Writers Group
    Application: Opens February
    Duration: Two weeks
    Location: Idyllwild, California
    Age: 11–13

    Alfred University Creative Writing Institutes
    Application: Due April 2011
    Duration: Five days
    Location: Alfred University, New York
    Grades: 10–12

    Young Writers’ Camp
    Application: Ongoing
    Duration: Two weeks
    Location: Duke University
    Lower age group: Grades 6–8
    Upper age group: Grades 9–11

    Emerging Writers Institute Creative Writing Camp
    Application: Rolling
    Duration: Two weeks
    Location: UC Berkeley and Stanford University, California
    Grades: 10–12

    Institute for Young Writers
    Application: September- April
    Grade: rising 11th, 12th, and college freshman
    Duration: One week
    Location: University of Massachusetts, Amherst

    Take My Word For It
    Application: ongoing
    Grade: rising 3rd, 4th, and 5th graders
    Duration:1-2 weeks
    Location: East Bay and San Francisco, California



    DRAMATIC WRITING

    Young Screenwriters
    Application: Rolling
    Duration: One week
    Location: Maine
    Age: 13–19

    UCLA Playwriting/Screenwriting
    Application: Rolling
    Duration: Two weeks
    Location: University of California, Los Angeles
    Grades: 9–12

    UCLA Advanced Playwriting/Screenwriting
    Application: Rolling
    Duration: Two weeks
    Location: University of California, Los Angeles
    Grades: 11–college freshman

    University of Kentucky Screenwriting
    Application: Rolling
    Duration: Two weeks
    Location: University of Kentucky
    Grades: 9–12

    UVA Young Writer’s Workshop
    Application deadline: March 2011
    Duration: Two to three weeks
    Location: University of Virginia
    Grades: 9–12

    Sewanee Young Writers’ Conference
    Application: Review begins March 1, 2010, but applications will remain open until all spaces are filled.
    Duration: Two weeks
    Location: Sewanee, Tennessee
    Grade: 9–12

    Screenwriting Camp
    Application: Rolling
    Duration: Two to three weeks
    Location: New York and Los Angeles
    Grades: 9–12

    The Summer High School Program in Dramatic Writing
    Application: Due February
    Duration: Four weeks
    Location: Tisch School of the Arts, New York
    Grades: Rising juniors and seniors

    Creative Writer’s Group
    Application: Ongoing
    Duration: Two weeks
    Location: Duke University, New York
    Grades: 11–12



    INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS

    Young Writers Programme
    Application: May–August
    Duration: Ongoing. Initial term of 12 weekly workshops. Second term is 10 weekly workshops.
    Location: Liverpool, England
    Ages: 16–25


    Congratulations once again on your script! Please feel free to contact us if you think we’ve missed any cool, online scriptwriting resources or contests that Script Frenzy participants should know about.