Center for the Arts Director Pamela Tatge talks about
the commission and research process for Rinde Eckert's "The Last Days of
the Old Wild Boy" (Nov. 15-17) in this entry from the Center for the Arts blog.
I met Rinde Eckert for the first time in 2008 at a gathering of universities who had been awarded Creative Campus grants from the Association of Performing Arts Presenters. Rinde had just finished creating a work entitled Eye Piece at his alma mater, the University of Iowa.
He worked with theater students and faculty to research the effects of
macular degeneration and the experiences of people dealing with eye
disease, including those who have lost or are losing their vision. A
Grammy Award-winning musician, writer, composer, librettist, and
director, Rinde is one of this country’s most innovative performance
artists whose work spans music genres of all kinds, experimental theater
and dance. When he spoke about his work in Iowa, I was struck by his
generosity of spirit—how he took students into his production that other
faculty members were unable to cast in their productions. I saw how
moved he was by the process of making the work and how it was every bit
as meaningful to him as the end product. I thought, this person can
collaborate with anyone in the world, but he chooses to work with
university students—this is a unique and special artist, a perfect fit
for Wesleyan.
The Center for the Arts is in year three of the four-year Creative Campus Initiative, funded by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
One of the Initiative’s primary goals is to support generative artists
in theater, music and dance (including faculty artists and visiting
artists) who work with scholars and materials in both arts and non-arts
disciplines to advance the artists’ research and extend the arts into
campus curricular and co-curricular life.
Rinde became an ideal
candidate for a commission. We invited him to Wesleyan in November 2010
(he remembered his first trip to Wesleyan was when he was attending
graduate school at the Yale School of Music). Rinde Eckert has built a dynamic theatrical logic that he describes as “fiercely interdisciplinary.” When Rinde met with the Theater Department
and Center for the Arts staff he discussed the idea of writing a play
about “otherness.” In the spring of 2011, Eckert was invited by the
Theater Department to create a work over the course of 2012 that would
result in a Department production in the fall of 2012, devised by
Eckert, faculty and visiting designers, and theater students.
Over the course of the two years, Eckert was in regular conversation with Kari Weil, University Professor of Letters at Wesleyan who has published widely on theories and representations of animal otherness (Thinking Animals: Why Animal Studies Now, 2012). He conducted a module in Weil's spring 2012 course, Thinking Animals: An Introduction to Animal Studies. In addition, he discussed his ideas extensively with John Kirn, Chair of Wesleyan’s Neuroscience and Behavior Program. He also presented a Music Department Colloquium and met with other faculty members across the campus.
During the summer of 2012, Eckert was awarded a Creative Residency by Wesleyan’s Institute for Curatorial Practice in Performance
(ICPP). He spent a week working on the piece in the Bessie Schönberg
Dance Studio; discussing his creative process with ICPP students and
students at the Center for Creative Youth; working with music collaborator Ned Rothenberg; and meetings with scenic designer and Adjunct Associate Professor Marcela Oteíza to prepare for the fall rehearsal period.
The Last Days of the Old Wild Boy
emerged as a work about a man raised by wolves who finds himself toward
the end of his life at the top of the food chain. Powerful and erudite,
he longs for a return to the wildness of the wolf he was—but how does
one recover one's original, less conditioned or acculturated self?
Marcela
became an essential collaborator in the development of the piece. She
devised a visual identity for the work anchored in 144 small wooden
benches that measure 10.5” x 18” x 8”. The benches are unfinished, in
their natural state, but at the same time, they are hand-crafted,
“man-made.” The actors arrange them horizontally when they form the
camp-fire but as the world of the play becomes more “civilized,”
vertical structures emerge. As the play develops, the actors literally
sculpt the set before our eyes. The effect is tremendous.
In his program note for The Last Days of the Old Wild Boy,
Rinde writes: “I’ve been thinking about nature and culture. I’ve been
considering wolves. I’ve been interested in our self-descriptions, the
line we draw between ourselves and the rest of everything. We are
storytellers. We tell stories around the fire, protected by it, warmed
by it, and if we get too distracted, burned by it.”
This is a play
with big ideas enacted by Rinde Eckert and eight student actors: Sivan
Battat '15, Solomon Billinkoff '14, Mikhail Firer '13, Audrey Kiely
'13, Matthew Krakaur '14, Jiovani Robles '13, Alma Sanchez-Eppler '14,
and Christine Treuhold '13. This is a world premiere, developed by an
extraordinary artist with the help of Wesleyan faculty members and
undergraduates—don’t miss this, it’s Wesleyan history in the making.
The Last Days of the Old Wild Boy
World Premiere
Written and directed by Rinde Eckert
Performed by Rinde Eckert and Wesleyan students
Thursday, November 15 & Friday, November 16, 2012 at 8pm
Saturday, November 17, 2012 at 2pm & 8pm
CFA Theater
$8 general public; $5 senior citizens, Wesleyan faculty/staff, non-Wesleyan students; $4 Wesleyan students
Click here
to watch a preview video of "The Last Days of the Old Wild Boy" which
features interviews with Rinde Eckert and Alma Sanchez-Eppler '14.
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