1912 – The constitution and by-laws of the
Authors' League of America (which included 350 novelists, poets, dramatists, and magazine authors) were adopted December 13 and incorporated on December 18. 1915 – First attempt by a sub-committee of the Authors League at creating a Dramatic Contract to stake out the ill-defined rights of dramatists. 1917 – A committee headed by
Cosmo Hamilton, in which
Edward Childs Carpenter and
Channing Pollock began their yeoman service to dramatists, drew up a new Standard Dramatic Form Contract. While some producers were cooperative, those who dominated the then powerful, tightly controlled Manager's Protective Association resented its "gall".
The Shuberts sent a message via
Augustus Thomas, that they would "close their theatres sooner than sign the proposed contract…managers would treat authors individually and in no other way, and that the part of good business was for a manager to get the best and most he could". 1919 – The Authors' League granted Channing Pollock's suggestion that the playwrights form an autonomous committee of 32 "working dramatists", to unite into a "Dramatic Committee" which by then had in all 112 adherents. Out of this, the Dramatists Guild was later born and baptized.
Owen Davis is elected the first Guild President. 1920 – A Standard Form Minimum Dramatic Contract was negotiated between the Managers Protective Association and The Authors' League (not the still amorphous Dramatists Guild). Despite modern improvements, the contract had two vital defects: its use was not mandatory, and its terms were non-enforceable. No manager or author was required to become a member of his respective organization, and no one could be penalized for not using the contract. 1921 – In order that the Authors' League, by supplanting
Bronson Howard's Society of American Dramatists and Composers, might not lead to its elimination, a liaison was made with the Dramatists Guild. The two organizations, for a year, with the same officers were officially known as "The American Dramatists". 1922 – Official naming: Dramatists Guild. Edward Childs Carpenter elected second DG president. 1924 –
Arthur Richman elected third Guild president. 1926 – The birth of the first Minimum Basic Agreement (MBA). New clauses had crept into the existing polite 1920 agreement to which authors had to submit to get production; unjust trade habits were becoming precedents; red ink was blotting out protective clauses; and lastly, economic conditions had come into the theatre crying for adjustment in fairness to the managers themselves. 2021 –
Amanda Green becomes the first woman elected as president of the Guild. ==References==