Ryan Murphy's company working out details of location shoots with town officials.

PROVINCETOWN — The production company of one of the creators of "American Horror Story" and "Glee" hopes to start shooting a TV show in town at the end of the month.

Details of the production are still being nailed down, but Ryan Murphy Productions and 20th Century Fox Television have been scouting locations across town and have applied to the Tourism Department to shoot with a 130-member crew.

They seek to film at the end of March and in April at various spots, including dunes, beaches, streets and private properties in town, Tourism Director Anthony Fuccillo said.

The list of locations has fluctuated — at times including more than 17 spots — but still has not been finalized, he said.

On Wednesday, location scout Tiffany Kinder went before the Cemetery Commission to talk about shooting in one of the town’s cemeteries.

The commission asked that the production be respectful to the deceased and follow cemetery rules.

“I’ve filmed in a lot of cemeteries over the years, so obviously we understand how sensitive it is and how one needs to be respectful,” Kinder said.

Kinder, who has signed a nondisclosure agreement, could not talk about specifics of the show but did give the commission some context on what 20th Century Fox wanted to do in a cemetery.

“We’re not zooming in on any stone or anyone’s resting place,” she said. “It’s a location, and people are literally walking through the cemetery and being followed and then we pop out on to the street and start walking up the street.”

The script for the show is still being written, she said.

The production is “untitled,” Fuccillo said, and a publicist for Disney, which owns 20th Century Fox, did not respond to a request for comment Thursday.

At the end of last month, Murphy, who owns a house in Provincetown, announced the cast of the 10th season of "American Horror Story" with a video on Instagram of a gloomy beach.

This is the first production to go through the town’s new filming policy, which was developed after Starz filmed “High Town” in Provincetown last year.

That series is due out this year and centers on a hard-partying National Marine Fisheries Service officer, a murder and the opioid epidemic.

It does not appear that the latest show is set in Provincetown specifically or that it focuses on similar concepts.

“It’s not a terrible show about Provincetown in particular, but, you know, there is a little bit of supernatural things happening,” Kinder said.

It appears that the company is looking for a beach community, Fuccillo said, although his office was not being looped in on the script.

The town is working to get location agreements with the series, and Kinder and the Cemetery Commission plan to take a walk-through of the town's final resting places.