Programming

The 2026 cycle continues DDP’s commitment to cross-border, accessible, relational, and dramaturgically rigorous support for playwrights while sustaining the capacity of our collaborators and organizational leadership.

DDP’s 2026 programming includes:

Early Career Mentorship (ECM), a.k.a. The Apprentice Circle, is paused for 2026.

Playwright Eligibility for 2026 DDP Cycle Programs

The Match

3-Month Track
  • TBA

6-Month Track
  • TBA

12-Month Track
  • TBA

Professional Experience (Playwrights)

Career

Early-Career

Early-Career playwrights are writers in the first several years of their practice who are still developing a body of work. They may have readings or workshops but typically have few or no professional productions. Education-based work (MFA productions, class readings, university festivals) does not count as professional experience.

These writers may be within 3 years of graduate school, or within 5 years of undergraduate.

This is not a rule, just a guideline.


Mid-Career

Mid-Career playwrights have several years of sustained writing practice and a growing body of work, including workshops or professional productions. They may have regional or national recognition and are actively expanding their artistic networks and opportunities, though they may still be developing visibility or access in certain areas. 

Usually, this writer has been outside of schooling for 3+ years, but there may be exceptions. At DPP, we consider most artists to be in their mid-career. Mid-career is not a marker or any metric of ‘success’.


Legacy-Career

Legacy playwrights are long-practicing writers and cultural elders whose artistic contributions, mentorship, and sustained creative presence have shaped their communities or artistic ecosystems over time. Professional production history is not required; recognition may come through lineage, storytelling practices, cultural stewardship, teaching, or long-term creative output.


Experience

Developing

This is a playwright who has limited to no professional experience. They do not have professional production; their early work is usually exploratory or education-based projects.


Emerging

This is a playwright in the process of emerging or re-emerging within any stage of their career. This may include playwrights who have been writing and submitting consistently for many years, but are looking to achieve a specific career goal such as a full production, a production of a certain level, publication, getting an agent, ect. 

An emerging playwright may have a few festival selections, semi-finalist or finalist status, or small-venue professional productions. They have a few professional workshops, labs, projects, or productions. This includes multilingual, experimental, or cross-border practices not yet institutionally recognized. 

Because of this, emerging is individual to each person, but generally, playwrights who have yet to receive a significant national or international prize or fellowship, have a Broadway production, have a significant production at a League of Resident Theatres (LORT)* C or above, or have been commissioned at a LORT C or above.


Emerging-Established (or Established Emerging)

This is a playwright who has also had significant success in certain areas (established) while pursuing growth in others (emerging). This may include playwrights who have been working consistently for many years, but are looking to achieve a specific career goal.

This playwright typically has had multiple professional productions OR multiple commissions OR recurring institutional relationships. They are growing in visibility in the field. 

This playwright may have received a significant national or regional prize or fellowship, had a significant production at a League of Resident Theatres (LORT)* C or above, or have been commissioned at a LORT C or above.


Established

This is a well-established playwright with name recognition, significant productions, awards, fellowships, etc. They have reached many of their career goals. They have a national or international presence. They may have publications, major awards, multiple institutional partnerships, or recognized productions.

This playwright has received a significant regional, national, or international prize or fellowship, has had a significant production at a League of Resident Theatres (LORT)* C or above, or has been commissioned at a LORT C or above.


*Note, the LORT designation is unique to the United States; a local regional equivalent can be used where LORT does not apply.