THEATRE PREVIEW
BUCKY FULLER
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine March
2000
"The success of the human experiment on-board
Spaceship Earth depends greatly upon individuals having access to tools which
empower them to see the Big Picture and take strategic action."
Science fiction? Academic treatise? Theatrical
agitprop?
None of the above, really. It's the global thinking of inventor,
philosopher, architect, engineer, individualist, mathematician, poet and
cosmologist R. Buckminster Fuller. Local actor/director Doug Jacobs was so
smitten by the words and works of Bucky Fuller when he heard him speak in Santa
Barbara in 1970 that he never quite got the ideas out of his mind. "His presence was astonishing,"
Jacobs recalls. "Then I picked up one of his [28] books, and I was sucked
right in. It was like Alice going down
the rabbit hole."
In 1995, when Jacobs was still artistic director
of the San Diego Repertory Theatre, he watched agile, rubber-limbed comic and
Shakespearean actor Ron Campbell work magic playing all the roles in "A
Tale of Two Cities." Still a confessed "Fuller fanatic," Jacobs
realized that Campbell had similar physical characteristics to Bucky in his
later years (he died at 88 in 1983).
"He has a lot of his rhythms, his lean and strong physicality,
similar mannerisms. Both were
illustrators, both like fast cars, both used to sail." It was a match made in heaven.
Using Fuller's words and copious writings, Jacobs
created a one-man show for Campbell, "R. Buckminster Fuller: The History
(and Mystery) of the Universe" (at the San Diego Rep, March 25-April
23). "His work is a very powerful
mixture of politics and poetics," Jacobs explains. "It's a poet's job to clarify the
world, expand our awareness, and re-energize ourselves. When you do political
theater, there's a point at which you back off and say, 'what are we trying to
do, save the world?' I realized that I'm working on a project where the
through-line is to save the world.
That's the through-line of Fuller's life."
During a period of workshops before the world
premiere, Jacobs and Campbell met with Fuller's daughter, Allegra. It was a daunting
challenge for Campbell to playing a real person. But after one workshop, Allegra came up to him, clutching his
arm, tears in her eyes, saying 'You were Daddy.'
Fuller was extremely farsighted, both literally
and figuratively. He was one of the earliest proponents of renewable energy
sources. His dymaxion map was the first
to show the continents on a flat surface without visible distortion -- a
one-world island in a one-world ocean.
He's best known for the invention of the geodesic dome, the lightest,
strongest, most cost-effective structure ever devised. He coined the term Spaceship Earth, to help
us band together and see the Big Picture.
But in 1927, at age 32, Fuller was on the verge of
suicide. His first child had died, he
had a newborn, he was bankrupt, discredited and unemployed. Suddenly, he realized that his life belonged
to the universe, not to himself, and he devoted the next half century to his
'experiment in individual initiative.' He was hellbent on discovering what it
would take to "make the world work," that is, to provide adequate
food, energy and shelter for 100% of humanity to enjoy a high standard of
living. He firmly believed that the
actions of the individual create positive social change.
All this history and mystery finds its way into
Jacobs' theater piece. The setup is an
evening with Buckminster Fuller. "
He never prepared," says Campbell.
"He just wanted his thoughts to flow. It was like the ultimate improvisation; all he had to go on was
the universe. He was incredibly inspirational.
But what he wanted to inspire was your personal integrity, your personal
responsibility to save the world.
"'Don't do what everyone else does,' he said.
'Find something you see that needs to be done and do it.' It seems simple, but it gets so deep and
complex. For me, it's like improv, too.
Though I have a set script, I'm trying to get ideas across, rather than
how the character feels. After the workshop, people were buzzing. They wanted to talk about the universe, not
the play.
"The audience gets to go on this Mr. Wizard
science ride with me. And all of a
sudden, we're talking metaphysics and getting people to do something about the
world. It's one of the toughest things
I've ever done.
"Some of this stuff is like interpreting
Shakespeare. 'Love is omni-inclusive.'
'There is no up or down.' 'The wind doesn't blow, it sucks.' You can scratch your head till it bleeds
with some of these things. When I had to learn one plus one equals four, that
was hard to wrap my mind around.
"Bucky was a poet. He also had a quirky sense of humor. There are a lot of laughs.
Part of it is that the universe is kind of a funny place. There's a silliness to it. Underlying it all
is a man who was willing to just wonder.
We want people to walk away from the theater with the sense that we're
all sharing this planet, we're all crew-members on Spaceship Earth. We spend
every day thinking about one thing at a time.
For 1 1/2 hours of this piece, we're going to challenge, ask, cajole and
nudge the audience into thinking about everything.”
©2000 Patté Productions Inc.