Paul Morgan Stetler is living in a state of happy collapse. After a
year and a half of hustles and headaches, his new theater company (of
which he is the co–artistic director) has opened its first
production (The Adding Machine, glowingly reviewed to the left,
of which he is the star). “We’ve put everything we have into this
production,” he says. “So far, nobody hates anybody yet.”
The New Century Theatre Company is an audacious experiment. Starting
a new professional company—that pays union wages—is risky
in the best of times. But these are the worst of times, as
professional theaters across the country panic over the coming economic
drought and whether their revenue streams will evaporate. If Stetler is
nervous, he doesn’t show it. “Actors always live in that world,” he
says. “Our world is one constant financial recession.”
NCTC was born in the same crucible as most theater companies: “in a
living room,” Stetler says, “with a bunch of actors being drunk and
bitching and moaning about things.” He’s coy about the
targets of their bitching (“I don’t want to bash other theaters”),
but drops a few hints. He and the other company members, including
Darragh Kennan and MJ Sieber and Amy Thone, aren’t cast together as
often as they’d like. They miss the Empty Space and other late,
lamented midrange theaters that used to produce “more mature and adult
work.” And they are frustrated by the inflexible conventions of making
theater: “There’s this habit of putting strangers in a room for a
four-week rehearsal period and hoping a good play comes out.”
Fundamentally, it seems, NCTC was founded on the pursuit of
camaraderie and fun. But do any of them have any administrative
experience? “No,” Stetler laughs. “Just our collective temp
experience.”
Over the last year and a half, NCTC has raised $40,000 for this
production, which will cost them $55,000. A quick budget
breakdown: Renting ACT cost $15,500, though ACT is practically
donating the space—most of that $15,500 goes to pay the
stagehands’ union wages. The five union actors in The Adding
Machine make $1,817 each, the director $2,000, the stage manager
$2,410—all on specially negotiated, extracheap union contracts.
Six nonunion actors are making $1,050 each. Four nonunion actors are
working as unpaid interns.
They don’t have much, but their recession-mindedness has forced them
to make bold choices. One of the best things about The Adding
Machine is its stark lighting. The company couldn’t afford to pay
union stagehands to adjust the overhead lights. So, for the first half
of the play, designer Geoff Korff instructed the actors to wheel
glaring bulbs around the stage by themselves. The effect is a
revelation in chiaroscuro, turning the play into an eerie stage
noir.
“It’s kind of neat,” Stetler says enthusiastically. “We’re making
big, cheap theater in a big, expensive theater.” So far, the audacious
experiment is working. ![]()

I completely understand Paul’s point at the end, but a $55,000 budget, regardless of how the money is spent, doesn’t exactly equal “big, CHEAP theatre”. Cut that number down by about $54,000 and then you’re talking “cheap”.
That being said, raising $40K to put up a show by a heretofore untested company is no mean feat.
Here’s hoping “The Adding Machine” is a financial, as well as a critical success, and that NCTC manages to come up with the remaining $15K in the meantime, because it would sure be nice if they could break even to the point of being able to fund a second production.
So it only qualifies as cheap if everyone works for free?