Nature tells the story of writers, philosophers, scholars, Transcendentalists, and friends Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau. Both found inspiration in Nature, but in different ways - Waldo the minister and lecturer who traveled the world bringing his words to the people, Henry the pencil-maker's son who preferred to live by himself in a cabin on Waldo's property. The story is told in four locations, with the audience following the cast from one location to the next, invited to take a walk and experience Nature for themselves, as these two men so loved to do.
The story begins at a church, represented by a row of pews and an altar located right next to the Eastman Nature Center, where Emerson and Thoreau break into a traditional church service to proclaim the glory of Nature. After a brief introduction of the two men, charmingly told by the ensemble with physical theater style, we move to the second location - in the middle of the woods carpeted by fallen leaves. In one of my favorite scenes in the play, we watch Henry and Waldo walk and talk far away from us, exaggeratedly miming speech and action, as the ensemble behind us speaks their words as one. The third location is a quaint little open-air cabin, which serves both as Henry's remote solo cabin, and Waldo's home that he shared with his wife Lydian and their children. The final location is a field where Henry is growing beans and complaining about "progress." This is where the rift between the men first appears, Waldo arguing that some progress is necessary. The rift deepens back at the cabin, where Henry lives with Waldo's family while he is overseas on a lecture tour, only to come home and find that Henry has taken his place. The two men argue as we follow them back through the woods and to the church, where they're reconciled only after Henry's death when Waldo speaks at his funeral. All through the journey Nature is with them, lovingly watching over them and guiding them, and at the end reminds them that She is what brought them together in the first place.
Emerson (Tyson Forbes) at Nature's pulpit (photo from the 2014 production by Eric Melzer) |
the cast of Nature (photo from the 2014 production by Eric Melzer) |
There are so many wonderful things about Nature that I can't even begin to tell you about all of them (the whimsical sound effects, the exaggerated apple-eating, the charming letter delivery). It truly is something you need to experience yourself. Return to Nature, take a walk, watch the sky through the trees, be embraced by the earth, and let this talented group of artists take you on a journey that you'll never forget. There is just one more stop on the 2016 Nature for the Nation tour, in Rochester (more info here). But Nature never ends, and hopefully neither will Nature. Like the TigerLion Arts Facebook page or follow them on Twitter for information on the 2017 tour, which will take them to the East Coast but will hopefully also include a few Minnesota stops. This beautiful and important story, so well and appropriately told, needs to be heard and is an absolute joy to experience.*
Watch this video to get a small taste of what the experience of Nature can be.
*Some of this post is borrowed from what I wrote about past productions I've seen at Minnesota Landscape Arboretum and St. John's University.
Nature, as experienced in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness |