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THEATER & MUSICAL THEATER Guidelines Webinar Doug Sonntag, Performing Arts Director Eleanor Denegre & Carol Lanoux Lee, Program Specialists Katie Patterson,

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Presentation on theme: "THEATER & MUSICAL THEATER Guidelines Webinar Doug Sonntag, Performing Arts Director Eleanor Denegre & Carol Lanoux Lee, Program Specialists Katie Patterson,"— Presentation transcript:

1 THEATER & MUSICAL THEATER Guidelines Webinar Doug Sonntag, Performing Arts Director Eleanor Denegre & Carol Lanoux Lee, Program Specialists Katie Patterson, Division Specialist Apply: http://arts.gov/grants/organizations-applyhttp://arts.gov/grants/organizations-apply

2 What we’ll cover today: Welcome Theater & Musical Theater Overview Applying to Art Works Q & A

3 Welcome The National Endowment for the Arts is a public agency dedicated to advancing artistic excellence, creativity, and innovation for the benefit of individuals and communities. The NEA awards grants to arts organizations of all sizes across all 50 states and 6 U.S. territories.

4 Discipline Overview: Theater & Musical Theater The National Endowment for the Arts seeks to fund groundbreaking, innovative theater and musical theater in the American spirit that is bold, passionate, profound, creative, and engaging and that demonstrates serious, exceptional, and rigorous aesthetic values. Projects funded by the Arts Endowment should help to fully realize an organization's mission and may provide support for organizations and artists in the creation and refinement of work, the public presentation of plays and musicals from all cultures and periods, and opportunities for professional development.

5 Discipline Overview: Theater & Musical Theater This encompasses the entire spectrum of the nonprofit theater and musical theater field, including the production or presentation of traditional or classical repertoire, new plays and musicals, development laboratories, showcases, artist residencies, work for young audiences, experimental work, community-based work, outdoor historical dramas, and puppetry.

6 Art Works Outcomes Creation: The creation of art that meets the highest standards of excellence. Engagement: Public engagement with diverse and excellent art. Learning: Lifelong learning in the arts. Livability: The strengthening of communities through the arts.

7 Eligibility Requirements Nonprofit, tax-exempt 501(c)(3), U.S. organizations; Units of state or local government; or Federally recognized tribal communities or tribes Three-year history of programming Meet the reporting requirements on any previous NEA awards

8 Application Limits Organizations may submit only one application under the Art Works guidelines, with limited exceptions such as: Parent (and Related) Organizations Applicants to Media Arts (July deadline) Applications to another category such as Our Town Please see the “Applicant Eligibility” section of the guidelines for more information on application limits

9 Grant Amounts Grant requests range from $10,000 to $100,000, and require a one-to-one match. No grants will be made for less than $10,000. In the past few years, more than half of the agency’s grants have been for less than $25,000.

10 We Do Not Fund General operating or seasonal support Individuals Individual schools Facility construction, purchase, or renovation Commercial, for-profit enterprises Creation of new organizations Academic degrees Re-granting Projects that replace arts instruction provided by a classroom teacher or an arts specialist in schools

11 Art Works Processing Timeline Application Deadline: NEA-GO Upload: Panel Review: National Council on the Arts Review: Notification: Earliest Project Start Date: February 20, 2014March 6-20, 2014Summer 2014October 2014November 2014January 1, 2015 July 24, 2014August 7-21, 2014Fall 2014March 2015April 2015June 1, 2015

12 Deadlines February 20, 2014, Application Deadline January 1, 2015: Earliest Beginning Date for Arts Endowment Period of Support Creation Commissioning, development, and production of new work, translations, and adaptations. Development programs and labs for new work, which may include the hosting of artist residencies, showcase productions of new work, development workshops, and festivals of new works or works in progress. Development of innovative new works that involve media, technology, or new models. Engagement Production or presentation of existing contemporary or classical work that is planned for the 2014-15 season (with project activities beginning on or after January 1, 2015).

13 Deadlines July 24, 2014, Application Deadline June 1, 2015, Earliest Beginning Date for Arts Endowment Period of Support Engagement Production or presentation of existing contemporary or classical work. Local, regional, and national touring. Community-based projects. Documentation and preservation of America's theater and musical theater heritage. Services to the field that assist organizations or artists in administrative, developmental, technical, and related areas. Innovative methods of engaging audiences. Learning Professional training. Exposure and enrichment projects for youth, adults, and intergenerational groups. Professional productions of Shakespeare's plays performed for middle- and high-school students in underserved schools. Livability The development of plans for growth of the theater and musical theater sector in the local community. The development of artist live/work spaces. Festivals, performances, and other activities in public spaces that are intended to foster community interaction and/or enhance the unique characteristics of a community. The engagement of artists and theater and musical theater organizations in plans and processes to improve community livability. Community-based partnerships that integrate theater and musical theater with livability efforts.

14 Reminders: What is new this year? Deadlines have changed Our website (arts.gov) has a new look Most application materials are now submitted online via NEA-GO; see the How to Apply instructions for details No grants will be made under $10,000 Letters of support are required Program evaluation resources are available

15 How to Apply Find our guidelines online at: arts.gov in the “Apply for a Grant” Section.

16 How to Apply Select “Grants to Organizations.”

17 How to Apply Select “Art Works” to learn more about the category. Browse through “Key Information for Applicants” for other important information.

18 How to Apply After you read about the Art Works category, select Theater & Musical Theater.

19 How to Apply Read about the project types supported at each deadline. Then select “How to Prepare and Submit an Application.”

20 How to Apply Step 1 of 2: Submit through Grants.gov (February 20 or July 24 deadline): SF-424 (Application for Federal Domestic Assistance) This is the only item you submit through Grants.gov. If it is not successfully submitted by the deadline you will be unable to submit your other materials in NEA-GO.

21 About Grants.gov Grants.gov is an online, government-wide electronic application system through which all applicants must submit. Don’t wait until immediately before your deadline; submit no later than 10 days prior to the deadline. You are required to change your password every 60 days. Obtain a DUNS number and register with SAM (System for Award Management) in order to use Grants.gov—allow at least 2 weeks for registration or renewal. See www.grants.gov for more details or call 1-800-518-4726.www.grants.gov

22 How to Apply Step 2 of 2: Submit through NEA-GO (March 6-20; or August 7-21): NEA Grant Application Form (including answers to narrative questions, financial information, bios) Items to Upload (Programmatic activities list, statements of support, special items, and work samples)

23 NEA GrantsOnline™ System (NEA-GO) You will submit the Grant Application Form and electronically upload other items using the NEA-GO system two weeks after your Grants.gov application deadline. Prepare these materials well in advance of the application deadline and have them ready to upload once NEA-GO becomes available to you.

24 NEA GrantsOnline™ System (NEA-GO) Accessing the system: After your SF-424 is successfully submitted through Grants.gov, go to “Track My Application.” The notes box there will have a link to NEA-GO and information about when the system will be open. User Name = Grants.gov Tracking Number Password = NEA Application Number This information will be available 2 days after you submit your SF-424 to Grants.gov (but no earlier than 10 days before the application deadline).

25 Tips for Successful Applications Please read the guidelines carefully. Be aware of the new application deadlines. You should attempt to submit your SF-424 through Grants.gov no later than 10 days prior to the deadline, so that, in case you encounter any unexpected issues with Grants.gov, you will still have time to resolve the issues and submit your application successfully by the deadline of record. If you have questions, please call us!

26 Resources: FAQs

27 Resources: Recent Grants

28 Resources: Sample Application Materials

29 Questions? Organizations whose names begin with A-M Eleanor Denegre 202-682-5509 denegree@arts.gov Organizations whose names begin with N-Z Carol Lanoux Lee 202-682-5020 leec@arts.gov Apply: http://arts.gov/grants/organizations-applyhttp://arts.gov/grants/organizations-apply


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