For Immediate Release: June 26, 2025
Contact: publicaffairs@culture.nyc.gov
NYC DEPARTMENT OF CULTURAL AFFAIRS' MATERIALS FOR THE ARTS PROGRAM RECEIVES MORE THAN $7 MILLION WORTH OF DONATED ITEMS FROM NYC’S FILM, TV, AND THEATER INDUSTRY AFTER FIRST YEAR OF AN EXPANDED PARTNERSHIP WITH MAYOR’S OFFICE OF MEDIA AND ENTERTAINMENT
One year after partnering with the Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment to bolster film, TV, and theater donations, MFTA has received 3.2 million pounds of donations valued at $7.4 million from NYC-based productions like The Marvelous Ms. Maisel, Succession, and American Horror Story
Donations have been made available to over 2,000 MFTA members, including public schools, nonprofits, and city agencies, fueling affordable, accessible arts programming across the city
MFTA distributes donated lighting equipment for cultural organizations at Silvercup Studios for free. Courtesy of MFTA.
Photos of Materials for the Arts and film, television, and theater donations are available here.
Queens, NY – Materials for the Arts (MFTA), a program of the NYC Department of Cultural Affairs, and the Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment (MOME) today announced that through an expanded partnership between the two agencies, MFTA has distributed 3.2 million pounds of free items donated by film, television, theater, and entertainment productions valued at a total $7.4 million to its members – including cultural nonprofits, public schools, and more – over the past year. MFTA’s partnership with MOME has robustly expanded MFTA's visibility within the film, television, and theater industry. In 2024, two new, MOME-funded staff positions began working at MFTA to expand engagement with the city’s dynamic film, TV, and theater communities. MOME production coordinators actively encourage the productions they support to donate to MFTA, further encouraging sustainable practices across the sector. Through this collaboration, information about donating to MFTA is now featured on MOME’s resource pages for NYC film, television, and theater productions. Thanks to these efforts, donated props, costumes, and other materials from television shows like Prime Video’s “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel,” HBO’s “Succession,” and FX’s “American Horror Story,” are now fueling affordable, accessible arts programming across NYC cultural community.
Left: Succession. Courtesy of Warner Media / HBO Max. Right: wardrobe from Succession donated to Materials for the Arts. Courtesy of MFTA. Photos available for download here.
“Film, TV, and theater productions are a huge part of our city’s creative industry and cultural dynamism, tapping into the talents of so many New Yorkers to tell stories rooted in New York. This partnership taps into the incredible resources this sector brings to New York, and showcases the power of collaboration between city agencies and our cultural partners to support NYC’s creative community,” said Cultural Affairs Commissioner Laurie Cumbo. “Through the contributions of New York’s world-class film, television, and theater productions, Materials for the Arts is helping to build a more sustainable and equitable cultural ecosystem—one where resources are shared, and creativity knows no bounds.”
"We are proud of our expanded partnership with the Department of Cultural Affairs to support Materials for the Arts across NYC's creative sectors, including film, TV and theatre," said Commissioner of the NYC Mayor's Office of Media and Entertainment, Pat Swinney Kaufman. "NYC is a global hub for film & TV production, supporting hundreds of thousands of jobs for New Yorkers, and the Materials for the Arts program allows the industry to give back to local communities and promote a circular economy by reducing unnecessary waste."
“These materials, props, costumes, and furniture are now fueling creativity in classrooms, community spaces, and cultural organizations across the five boroughs,” said Materials for the Arts Executive Director Tara Sansone. “We’re proud to work with the Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment and the film, television, and theater industries who are eager keep these items out of landfill to contribute to a cleaner, greener, more creative NYC.”
While these industries have long donated to and collaborated with MFTA, in 2022, MFTA held its first offsite donation distribution events with film and television production warehouses. Typically, MFTA members visit the program’s warehouse in Long Island City to pick up donated materials. The new offsite distribution events at prop warehouses across the city allowed MFTA to make available the contents of entire production warehouses – where film and television productions store their props, costumes, and other materials between shoots – to its members, while also contributing to zero-waste show wraps, diverting tons of materials from the waste stream and fueling affordable arts programming across the city.
Top: mahjong gabling scene from The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. Courtesy of Prime Video. Bottom: local cultural organization Think!Chinatown with a mahjong table from The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. Courtesy of Think!Chinatown, photo by Luke Liu. Photos available for download here.
Building on this new approach to make these in-demand items available to MFTA members, the expanded partnership with MOME launched last year has significantly grown MFTA’s capacity to offer such opportunities. From 2023 to 2024, MFTA saw a 14% increase in the number of donations from film, television, theater, and entertainment productions. Materials for the Arts is proud to have worked with popular films and television shows including: HBO’s “Succession,” FX's "FEUD," Netflix’s “YOU,” FX’s “American Horror Story,” Hulu’s “Only Murders in the Building,” Bleeker Street’s “The Friend” CBS’s “FBI: Most Wanted,” and Prime’s “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.”
MFTA members, in turn, use the donated supplies to support a vast range of cultural programming. Examples include:
Materials for the Arts has also received donations from iconic theater productions, like Broadway’s longest running show, “The Phantom of the Opera,” which officially closed last after 35 years at the Majestic Theatre. After a Blue Man Group closed in February 2025, MFTA also received props, clothing, and lighting equipment from the renowned production when it ended its historic, 34-year run.
Looking forward, Materials for the Arts is working with MOME to deepen its engagement with the Broadway and off-Broadway community and further strengthen its partnerships with the film and TV industries to continue promoting sustainability and creativity across the city. MFTA’s MOME-positions align with the Adams administration’s Green Economy Action Plan, announced last year, which aims to create over 400,000 “green collar” jobs in NYC by 2040. Through MFTA’s partnership with MOME, MFTA continues to expand its role in fostering a circular economy within the arts.
Film, television, and theater productions interested in donating to Materials for the Arts for the Arts can email filmandtelevision@mfta.nyc.gov for inquiries.
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About Materials for the Arts (MFTA)
A program of the NYC Department of Cultural Affairs, with support from the Department of Education and Friends of Materials for the Arts, MFTA is NYC’s largest reuse center supporting nonprofits with arts programming, public schools, and City agencies. On average MFTA collects millions of pounds of supplies each year which it provides, free of charge, to its member organizations. In addition to providing materials, MFTA has the MFTA Education Center, Gallery, Artist-in-Residence and Designer-in-Residence programs, and Third Thursday public programming, which are supported by Friends of Materials for the Arts. Learn more at nyc.gov/mfta.
About the Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment
The Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment’s mission is to support and strengthen New York City’s creative economy and make it accessible to all. Including film/TV, music, theatre/live performance, digital games and publishing, the creative industries account for roughly 440,000 local jobs and have an economic impact of over $150 billion annually. MOME comprises four divisions: The Film Office, which coordinates on location production throughout the five boroughs; NYC Media, the City’s official broadcast network and production group; the Press Credentials Office, which issues press cards; and Creative Sector Programs to advance industry and workforce development across NYC’s creative sectors.
About NYC Department of Cultural Affairs
The New York City Department of Cultural Affairs (DCLA) is dedicated to supporting and strengthening New York City’s vibrant cultural life. DCLA works to promote and advocate for quality arts programming and to articulate the contribution made by the cultural community to the City’s vitality. The Department represents and serves non-profit cultural organizations involved in the visual, literary, and performing arts; public-oriented science and humanities institutions including zoos, botanical gardens, and historic and preservation societies; and creative artists at all skill levels who live and work within the City’s five boroughs. DCLA also provides donated materials for arts programs offered by the public schools and cultural and social service groups, and commissions permanent works of public art at City-funded construction projects throughout the five boroughs. For more information, visit nyc.gov/culture.