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Personal Finance
The play's the thing
August 8, 2001: 8:08 a.m. ET

Theater gives investors a new play on a high-risk, higher-payoff investment
By Bankrate's Robbie Woliver
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NEW YORK (Bankrate) - Bankrolling plays offers a high-risk, high-reward form of investing full of cliffhangers, triumphs, tragedies and plot twists.

This year, for example, the big winner for people who invest in theater is the Broadway hit "The Producers," a musical comedy about hoodwinking people who invest in theater.

In real life, the investment syndicate The Frankel Baruch Viertel Routh Group rounded up 200 people who invested $10,000 each in the "The Producers." Their $2 million investment was on the up-and-up, and represented about 20 percent of the cost of putting on the show.

The syndicate already has made back 35 percent of its investment for its 200 members and expects investments to be recouped by the end of the year. After that, it's gravy. With a hit show, the investors could eventually receive up to 20 times what they put in.

Open-call investing

Steven Baruch, who handles new investors for the company, said he is open to all inquiries.

"With all modesty," said Baruch, "we are the only company that invites in small investors."

The group is credited with making it possible for smaller investors, those with $10,000 in risk capital, to make a play on plays.

There's more to it than dollars, though.

"We try to make this as much fun as possible," Baruch said.

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  Invest in theater because you want to. There are lots of perks besides making money, and you're not going to make money all the time.  
     
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  Andrew Benerofe  
Investors, for example, receive tickets, CDs, framed posters, show jackets and lots of correspondence from Baruch. But investors want more than a good seat. He said his plays during the past 15 years have had an annual internal rate of return of almost 40 percent.

Andrew Benerofe, a Westchester, N.Y.-based real-estate investor and developer, is part of that group who invested in "The Producers." His wife, Froma, attended high school with Baruch. Over the years, the couple has invested in 30 of Baruch's stage productions. Their first, "Penn & Teller," an off-Broadway production, returned his $10,000 investment threefold, Benerofe said.

"Most of the plays made money, but some didn't," said Benerofe, whose investment group recovered 25 percent of their "Producers" investment by opening night, and expect to continue to earn an additional 10 percent a month. Benerofe estimates that his $10,000 will yield $200,000. "This show was special," he said. "No one anticipated the hype."

While "The Producers" is a unique situation and it is unusual to reap such a profit so fast, it is possible to make money by wisely investing in a theatrical vehicle. And it doesn't have to be a big Broadway production.

The play's the thing

"Invest in theater because you want to," advises Benerofe. "There are lots of perks besides making money, and you're not going to make money all the time. There have been several plays that I thought would be hits that made nothing."

Out of the 30 shows in which Mr. Benerofe invested his usual $10,000, he said, "almost all have made money." But it's sometimes difficult to judge – he recently went bust on a seemingly no-brainer Broadway revival of "Sound of Music."

"You have to look for profitability. Low overhead. Few actors," he said.

And then for a show such as "The Producers," written by Mel Brooks and based on his hit movie, those rules of thumb get thrown out the window.

"The story was great, and people were falling down laughing during previews and when reading the script. Those are all good signs," he said.

There are several ways to find a good property in which to invest. But securing a producer is key, said Patty Casterlin of The League of American Theaters and Producers, a theatrical trade organization.

Maria DiDia, of Maria Productions, whose properties include the hit "Blue Man Group," agreed. Producers are the ones who raise the money, and they are always on the hunt.

Finding your seat

There are several ways to find a producer, ranging from checking out the Yellow Pages to scouring playbills. Casterlin suggested contacting a performing arts center in your community. Also read reviews in your local papers, or New York publications; they include information on producers.

But the best starting point, DiDia suggested, is Price Berkley's Theatrical Index, which many regard as the Bible of the theater business, available on a subscription basis. The Theatrical Index can be ordered via e-mail or by phone, (212) 586-6343.

Price Berkley, publisher of the venerable 38-year-old publication, said, "Anyone interested in investing in Broadway, off-Broadway or regional theater will find the necessary contact information in the Theatrical Index for all productions, well in advance of their debuts."

"Investing is very risky," warned Mr. Berkley, who recently invested (and lost) $15,000 in an off-Broadway play that recently closed. "But then you get a small show like 'Wit,' which is about cancer, that started off very small and ended up on Broadway and then on TV. Those investors will make lots of money for the next 10 years." Baruch, by the way, passed on "Wit."

For most ventures, Mr. Berkley says the range can be as little as $5,000 for individual investors, with large investments into the millions usually covered by corporations.

Profit potential and prime perks

"What's unique about investing in live theater," said Shirley Chait, of Manhattan-based Omnibus Productions, "is that the compensation scheme is a lot more lucrative than, say, investing in movies."

"Investors are now making more money because taking the show on the road can ensure profitability, even if the play doesn't do well on Broadway," Chait said. "Franchise productions that tour the world make huge profits. Broadway doesn't count heavily on talent and production costs like Hollywood, which makes investing economics attractive."

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  What's unique about investing in live theater is that the compensation scheme is a lot more lucrative than, say, investing in movies.  
     
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  Shirley Chait  
"Creating a portfolio of several off-Broadway, Broadway or touring shows can reduce the risk of failure. Also, anyone can invest in a local playwright or local play, and anyone can invest in a show that will end up on Broadway," she said. "You don't have to be in New York. Almost all plays evolve from outside of New York."

The Frankel Baruch Viertel Routh Group is credited with bringing down investment costs to a reasonable $10,000. The group had to conduct a lottery for potential "Producers" investors, narrowing it down from 300 interested parties.

Learning your lines

There's more to finding a good vehicle than finding a producer, though. Potential investors also need to do their homework.

"You have to read reviews of past work, know what's out there, what plays are being launched. You have to study and analyze the play you're considering. Read descriptions of the play, look for commercial appeal and potential. You have to read the business plan," said Benerofe.

Watch out for star vehicles, he warns: Big-time salaries can eat up the profits.

"Find someone to back who's interested in making money. Focus on the business aspect and not the art appreciation. And most important – don't invest more than you can afford to lose.

"It's profitable and great fun to invest in theater," he added. "You're invited to opening night and you attend the party with the cast. And it's just fun seeing it all happen, a hit generated from scratch. All that and you can make money, too."  graphic

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Most stock quote data provided by BATS. Market indices are shown in real time, except for the DJIA, which is delayed by two minutes. All times are ET. Disclaimer. Morningstar: © 2018 Morningstar, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Factset: FactSet Research Systems Inc. 2018. All rights reserved. Chicago Mercantile Association: Certain market data is the property of Chicago Mercantile Exchange Inc. and its licensors. All rights reserved. Dow Jones: The Dow Jones branded indices are proprietary to and are calculated, distributed and marketed by DJI Opco, a subsidiary of S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC and have been licensed for use to S&P Opco, LLC and CNN. Standard & Poor's and S&P are registered trademarks of Standard & Poor's Financial Services LLC and Dow Jones is a registered trademark of Dow Jones Trademark Holdings LLC. All content of the Dow Jones branded indices © S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC 2018 and/or its affiliates.