THEATRE REVIEW:
“R.BUCKMINSTER FULLER: THE HISTORY (AND
MYSTERY) OF THE UNIVERSE”
at the San Diego Repertory Theatre
KPBS
AIRDATE: APRIL 14, 2000
Fasten your seatbelts.
Spaceship Earth is on the launchpad. In
a dizzying display of ideas, "The History (and Mystery) of the
Universe" catapults us all into orbit. The one-man world premiere tour de
force was conceived, created and directed by Douglas Jacobs, and it features
the putty-faced, Gumby-like actor Ron Campbell, inhabiting the person of R.
Buckminster Fuller, inventor, philosopher, architect, engineer, mathematician,
poet and cosmologist.
Bucky, as he was called,
was all about the Big Picture, and so is the show. It's framed as a lecture,
for which Bucky was notorious (although his could go on for 6-8 hours, and this
one only lasts two). His thoughts and
words are all over the map, and the play follows suit -- it's a non-linear
jumble of ideas and timeframes, chronicling Bucky's personal and professional
life.
We learn, for example,
that, in 1927, at the age of 32, he was on the verge of suicide. His first child had died, he had a newborn
daughter, he was bankrupt, discredited and unemployed. Shivering at the edge of the river, he
suddenly realized that his life wasn't his to take; it belonged to the
universe, and he devoted the next half-century to what he called his
'experiment in individual initiative.' He firmly believed that the actions of
each create positive social change for all.
He was hellbent on
discovering what it would take to "make the world work," as he put
it, to provide adequate food, energy and shelter for 100% of humanity. By all
reports, he was charismatic, humorous, intellectually unfettered, a genius
perhaps, or maybe a crank. But he was
unequivocally inspirational. And in his
brilliant performance, Campbell brings him to life again, jumping around the
stage and demonstrating his geodesic dome, his dimaxion map, his polyhedron,
his nostalgic longings, the history of his family and the history of the
world. The high-falutin' ideas are
often backed by thoughtful images and illustrations, slides and overheads that
help vivify the preponderance of words and lack of dramatic arc.
One could argue whether
this is a true play, but then, neither is the eternally engaging solo piece,
"Mark Twain Tonight." Both are well-crafted, deceptively simple
portraits of a man, and a personal sharing of insights, intelligence and wit.
"History/Mystery" is also a science lesson, a social treatise and a
call to arms. You may not agree with everything Bucky said. You may think he's
a cantankerous old coot. But he was a
man who thought young, who thought Big, who made other people think. And these
days in the theater, that kind of stimulation doesn't come along every day.
Douglas Jacobs has done
us all a great service. His textual choices encompass an impressive range of
topics, shrewdly culled from Fuller's vast array of writings. His technical
team has worked wonders, with grace and simplicity. And his deft direction capitalizes on the immense talent of his
star. Campbell is nothing short of breath-stopping. He flits, he sails, he soars, his every move and gesture a
graceful dance. Unlike his usual broad-brush physical comedy, here he's controlled,
understated, slyly humorous and positively electrifying. He makes us want to
understand, even when his words are so abstract, so arcane, so dense, that he
seems to leave us all in the dust. He's like some passionate professor, aching
to motivate his students to think and to act.
Come to this 'lecture'
as a willing student, filled with wonder, and you won't go away politically or
intellectually unchallenged; your brain, your mind, and maybe even your heart,
will feel Fuller.
©2000 Patté Productions
Inc.