Film rights are rights under copyright law to produce a film as a derivative work of a given item of intellectual property . In US law , these rights belong to the holder of the copyright, who may sell (or " option ") them to someone in the film industry—usually a producer or director , or sometimes a specialist broker of such properties—who will then try to gather industry professionals and secure the financial backing necessary to convert the property into a film. Such rights differ from the right to commercially exhibit a finished motion picture, which rights are usually referred to as "exhibition rights" or "public-performance rights".
27-452: Merrily We Roll Along may refer to: Merrily We Roll Along (play) , a 1934 play by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart "Merrily We Roll Along" (song) , a 1935 composition used as the Warner Bros. theme for Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies Merrily We Roll Along (musical) , a 1981 musical by Stephen Sondheim and George Furth, adapted from
54-399: A leopard skin rug after returning to a party, and the tabloids have been covering the scandal and trial nonstop. The trial has been very stressful for Niles, and his friends, along with Ogden, try to convince him to take a cruise to escape the stress. Niles seems unconvinced and wants to stay with his friends, but abruptly two tabloid photographers jump in with the leopard skin rug and stage
81-573: A Lifetime . The idea had now evolved to tell a story backward about an idealistic but ambitious playwright and his difficulties. The Broadway production, directed by Kaufman, opened on September 29, 1934, at the Music Box Theatre , where it ran for 155 performances. The 55-member cast included Kenneth MacKenna as Richard Niles, Walter Abel as Jonathan Crale, Jessie Royce Landis as Althea Royce, and Mary Philips as Julia Glenn. The play has not been revived on Broadway, and its tour following
108-483: A moment he embraces her too. The act one curtain comes down. In Scene I, it is 1925 in Crale's studio. Julia arrives, practically giddy with excitement. Niles is to return soon from an eight-month cruise and she is excited to see him again. While Crale and Julia are trying to figure out which port he will arrive at, Niles comes into the house accompanied by Albert Ogden, the boat's captain. Julia asks Niles whether he's finished
135-429: A painter named Jonathan Crale. Crale used to be a close friend of Niles, but they have since parted ways. After the arrival of newspapers gushing praise for Niles's newest play, Julia returns heavily drunk and collapses onto the drink table. After returning to her feet, she leaves the party and Niles for good. After one of the guests, Ivy Carrol, cuts her hand picking up glass, another guest, David, retrieves iodine to treat
162-468: A photo op. Niles breaks down crying and agrees to go on the cruise, and the curtain comes down. In Scene III, it is 1923 in Althea's apartment. Althea is having a party to celebrate the success of Niles's newest play. At the party is Harry Nixon, Althea's husband. He On a journey from Hollywood to New York in 1931, Hart was inspired to write a play about an American family's difficulty over 30 years coping with
189-441: Is a play by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart . It concerns a man who has lost the idealistic values of his youth. Its innovative structure presents the story in reverse order, with the character regressing from a mournful adult to a young man whose future is filled with promise. The 1934 Broadway production received mostly good notices but was a financial failure and has not been revived on Broadway. The 1981 musical adaptation
216-581: Is important for an entertainment lawyer to determine how 'clean' a chain of title is. In the United States entertainment industry, "life rights", or "life story rights", are said to be acquired when a studio strikes a deal with a person so that supposedly only that studio can adapt their life story into an audiovisual work. Since real-life events and facts cannot be protected by copyright, an exclusive right to depict someone's life may not be granted. Rather, life story deals are made mainly to avoid lawsuits from
243-572: The United States , the need to secure film rights of previously published or produced source materials still under copyright stems from case law . In 1907, the Kalem Company produced a one-reel silent film version of General Lew Wallace 's novel Ben-Hur without first securing film rights. Wallace's estate and his American publisher, Harper & Brothers sued for copyright infringement . The United States Supreme Court ruled in favor of
270-403: The chain of title . This lineage can become cloudy if the underlying rights are divided. Producers may purchase the rights to a specific region (i.e. a country, the entire world, or the universe) and/or they may purchase ancillary rights such as merchandising rights. In some cases, it may be uncertain as to the exact owners of a particular version of a script and to the exact set of rights. It
297-437: The 1934 play Merrily We Roll Along (film) , an upcoming American coming-of-age musical comedy film based on the 1981 musical " Goodnight, Ladies ", an old folk song which contains the line "Merrily we roll along" Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Merrily We Roll Along . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change
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#1732875751897324-502: The Broadway production was short. Critic Brooks Atkinson of The New York Times wrote: "After this declaration of ethics, it will be impossible to dismiss Mr. Kaufman and Mr. Hart as clever jesters with an instinct for the stage." Time wrote, "Superbly staged...; superbly acted by the biggest cast seen in a legitimate Broadway production this season, Merrily We Roll Along is an amusing and affecting study...." Despite good notices,
351-401: The challenges of life in the 20th century, beginning with their innocence and optimism at the century's start to the dashed hopes caused by the stock market crash of 1929. But before he could realize his vision, Noël Coward 's British version of a similar story, Cavalcade , premiered, and he shelved the idea. A few years later, Hart turned to Kaufman, his collaborator on the 1930 hit Once in
378-416: The contract may allow the producer to renew the option for a certain price. As it is common for scripts to be stuck in development hell , the options for a script may expire and be resold on multiple occasions. As well, producers who purchase an option and rework the script own the rights to their own derivative work, while the original rights holder owns the underlying rights. This lineage is referred to as
405-452: The event that a project fails to come to fruition. Should the project be greenlit, an option provides a legally binding guarantee to purchase the film rights. The contract for an option will specify the length of time it is valid for. If the producer is unable to have their project greenlit within the specified timeframe (e.g. two years), the option will expire. The rights holder can then put the previously optioned rights up for sale again. Or,
432-413: The last time they saw the "real" Niles was the day he got on the boat, and regrets telling him to take the cruise. Crale slumps into an east chair and plays a chord on his accordion, and the curtain comes down. In Scene II, it is 1924 in the courthouse. The divorce proceedings for Richard Niles and Helen Murney have attracted large crowds. Helen filed for divorce after catching Niles cheating with Althea on
459-415: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Merrily_We_Roll_Along&oldid=1186667903 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Merrily We Roll Along (play) Merrily We Roll Along
486-431: The nation was 'ill housed, ill clad, ill nourished.'" In 1981, the play was loosely adapted as a musical of the same name with a book by George Furth and lyrics and music by Stephen Sondheim . While the original Broadway production was a notorious failure, the musical has since been successfully staged with numerous changes. Sondheim contributed new songs to several of the show's incarnations. Film rights In
513-407: The opening night of his newest play. His life is empty, petty and loveless. Among the guests at the party is Althea Royce, his materialistic wife; Sam Frankl, a prolific composer; and Julia Glenn, Niles's final remaining true friend and a struggling alcoholic. The party guests play poker and talk until Cyrus Winthrop, an art dealer who invented a material called "cellopaper" a long time before, mentions
540-460: The plaintiffs, establishing the precedent that all adaptations are subject to copyright. When producers option a script, they are purchasing the right to buy certain rights to intellectual property. A general option fee is 10% of the cost of the rights, should the producers manage to secure full financing for their project and have it "greenlit". Because few projects actually manage to be greenlit, options allow producers to reduce their loss in
567-436: The play he's been working on, and Ogden replies yes; Niles has finished a yacht-set comedy play called "All On Deck" that Ogden is sure will be a hit. This isn't the play Niles had been writing his friends about; he had been working on a more serious play about coal miners. When Julia asks Niles why he abandoned that play, he replies, "[People] don't want plays like that now." Niles leaves, and Julia breaks down. Julia laments that
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#1732875751897594-509: The play was not a financial success, as the demands of the large-scale production made it expensive. In retrospect, the Times has noted that the play suffers from a "Depression sensibility. The notion that you can't get ahead without selling out is one that held particular appeal.... There was something both morally and politically suspect about worldly fortune at a time when, as Franklin D. Roosevelt said in his 1937 inaugural address , one-third of
621-460: The plays of Althea Royce, who is at the height of her peak as an actress. She has only recently married Niles. Julia and Crale arrive, trying to rekindle their friendship with Niles. Niles has cut off all contact with Crale, and Crale is now going to Niles's favorite lunch spot to see if he can talk to him. Julia and Crale reminisce about their past for a bit, but then Niles appears. Niles and Crale's reunion quickly devolves into blows. Julia pleads with
648-477: The time when he was just starting out and wrote plays for art, not money, and tells him to remove Althea's bad influence from his life and focus on the woman who truly loves him: Julia, who has taken up drinking to cope with witnessing Niles's destruction. Crale leaves, and Niles is about to start following his advice when Althea enters. She has divorced Harry to be with Niles. Niles receives word that Harry has killed himself in response. Althea embraces Niles, and after
675-535: The two to stop fighting as an excited crowd gathers. The curtain comes down on the crowd's cheers drowning out Julia. In Scene III, it is 1926 in Richard Niles's apartment. Niles's brother George comes to visit, and confronts him about rumors of an affair with Royce, who is married to Harry Nixon. He denies it, and the conversation is interrupted with news that his latest play's movie rights were bought for $ 75,000. George leaves and Crale enters. Crale reminds Niles of
702-540: The wound. After Ivy and David leave, Althea confronts Niles about his possible affair with Ivy and how he only cares about making a hit. The argument is reaching a climax when Ivy returns, and in the heat of the moment Althea throws the iodine in Ivy's face and proclaims that everything is over between her and Niles. The curtain comes down. In Scene II, it is 1927 in the Restaurant Le Coq D'Or. Several guests are chatting about
729-414: Was initially a failure but has subsequently been more successful, having been revived several times. The play has three acts of three scenes each. Every scene is set earlier than the previous one. In Scene I, it is 1934, and Richard Niles is a pretentious 40-year-old playwright who writes successful but forgettable frothy comedies. Niles is hosting a party for his wealthy friends at his Long Island home on
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