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Horizon
Rinde Eckert
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Rinde Eckert, author of And God Created Great Whales,
is back on stage with his new theater work entitled Horizon. Like Great Whales,
Horizon addresses the big questions of life through radical storytelling. Horizon
centers on a theologian named Reinhart Poole who has been fired from a seminary where he
teaches ethics. Why he is fired relates to some fear the head of the seminary has about
what Poole teaches. Perhaps when this fever dies down, we can start again, is
the explanation and excuse by Pooles superior. The timeframe is Pooles last
class. Poole is loosely based on the life and teachings of German-American Reinhold
Niebuhr and Eckerts grandfather who was a Lutheran minister at a seminary in
Fremont, Nebraska.
Eckert, who composes original music for his plays and also takes the
leading role, is a minimalist. Horizon has three players, Eckert as Reinhart Poole
and David Barlow and Howard Swain who play a variety of roles. Barlow and Swains
roles include Pooles students, Pooles family members, the head of the
seminary, and two stonemasons who are characters from a play Poole is writing. The set is
limited to a collection of props: a couple of piles of cinder blocks, tables, and easels
that hold a series of chalkboards. The opening music repeats in the manner pioneered by
Minimalist composer Philip Glass. In the post-modern style, Eckert as playwright fractures
time and thus the action of Poole teaching the last class begins multiple times. In a
scene featuring a rose that is deemed nothing more than a rose, Eckert also makes a nod to
Gertrude Stein who was a precursor to the minimalist art movement.
The complexity that brings life to this subject of a man struggling to
accept the loss of his career as a Socratic professor much engaged with appreciative
students is that the professor is writing a play about stonemasons who are constructing
and reconstructing the foundation of a church that once stood in Europe. The church is
supposed to become a tourist attraction in a dying mid-western town. The problem is the
stonemasons cannot get beyond the foundation. In a breach of reality, Poole deconstructs
what the stonemasons have built. Therefore it is not clear if the problem of progressing
beyond the churchs foundation is part of Pooles play or merely that Poole
cannot decide how to write his play.
Horizon continually flips into alternate realities that involve
the subjects of Pooles teachings faith, revelation, martyrdom, truth. In a
couple of scenes, characters stand and move on cinder blocks as if they were walking. The
first time this happens, one of the characters turns out to be the devil who says,
Man is afraid of the truth. The elevated players tipping the cinderblocks as
they walk effectively change themselves from ordinary characters to supernatural beings.
Eckert reaches into some primitive pocket of the mind as these actors move on ordinary
cinderblocks.
Another movement technique that Eckert uses is subtle puppetry. Shadows
cast by hands represent unseen horses fleeing a still landscape. Professor Pooles
hands held over the head of first one actor and then the other suggest a puppet master
with his marionettes. A hand thrust over the cinderblock wall becomes a rose and a fight
ensues in the window of the wall that tracks like an episode from Punch and Judy.
The recorded music consists entirely of Eckerts
compositions, performed by him on such instruments as an antique organ. Occasionally the
three actors break out into comic harmonies that include barbershop and country styles.
The acting team of Eckert, Barlow and Swain work together like a well-oiled machine. No
one, including Eckert, upstages anyone else. Although the 90-minute work could benefit
from cutting about 20 to 30 minutes of spoken text, the subject matter and approach are
engaging.
Washington, November 3, 2005 - Karren L. Alenier