Synopses & Reviews
Dazzling dramas on American themes from the Nobel laureateOn a cold winter's day on the Dakota plains, Catherine Weldon receives a caller, Kicking Bear, bringing news of Indian rebellion. In the fort nearby, a tiny community splinters apart over how to react. In Ghost Dance, first performed in 1989, Walcott turns a story with a foregone conclusion -- Sitting Bull and his Sioux followers will die at the hands of the Army and Indian agents -- into a portrait of life at a crossroads of American history.
In Walker, an opera first performed in 1992 and revised for its revival in 2001, Walcott shifts his attention east, taking for his subject David Walker, the nineteenth-century black abolitionist. In Walcott 's hands Walker becomes a classical hero for his people: a leader who is also a poet.
Derek Walcott was born in St. Lucia, the West Indies, in 1930. His Collected Poems: 1948-1984 was published in 1986, and his subsequent works include a book-length poem, Omeros (1990); a collection of verse, The Bounty (1997); and, in an edition illustrated with his own paintings, the long poem Tiepolo's Hound (2000). His most recent collections of plays are The Haitian Trilogy (2001) and Walker and The Ghost Dance (2002). Walcott received the Queen's Medal for Poetry in 1988 and the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1992. He has also been given the 2004 Anisfield-Wolf Lifetime Achievement Award.
"And what about our tribe? Speak in me, what?
Tell me the voice that lives inside me, what will happen?
They will know the rapture of exaltation,
the feathers in their hair will make them eagles
over the broken mountains, the lakes will enter
and prickle their cold skins like the fishes,
they will tire like the salmon of a ladder of stones,
and not only the Sioux, not only the Sioux,
the Arapahos, the Cheyennes, the Brules, the Ogalalas,
to the drum in the heart, before the wide silence."
from The Ghost Dance
The Ghost Dance takes place on a cold winter's day on the Dakota plains, when Kicking Bear brings news of a rebellion to a white widow named Catherine Weldon; when the alarm seeps into the tiny fort nearby, its mixed company splinters apart in the face of the perceived threat. First performed in 1989, it is a parable of American life at a crossroads, drawn from a story with a historical conclusion: Sitting Bull and his Sioux followers will die at the hands of the Army and Indian agents.
Walker, first performed as an opera in 1992 and revived (in a revised version) in 2001, is named for David Walker, the nineteenth-century black abolitionist from Boston who advocated violent revolt against slavery and galvanized his generation. In Walcott's hands he is a classic hero, a political leader who is also a poet.
In both Walker and The Ghost Dance, Walcott brings to life the broken communities whose charismatic leaders would change American history.
"These two verse dramas show 1992 Nobel Prize winner Walcott at the top of his form. They are lean, focused, and powerful . . . These are history plays at their most energetic. Highly recommended."Thomas E. Luddy, Salem State College, Salem, Massachusetts, Library Journal (starred review)
"These are history plays at their most energetic. Highly recommended . . . These two verse dramas show 1992 Nobel Prize winner Walcott at the top of his form. They are lean, focused, and powerful. The first, Walker, is a recent revision of an opera, first performed in 1992, which has become a play with music. Centering on the last day in the life of black abolitionist David Walker, in Boston on Thanksgiving Day in 1830, it has a small cast, one set, a limited time frame, and swift movement. When the characters rise in passion or when a lyric moment occurs, they break into song, suggesting the austerity of a Greek tragedy. The other play is also historical, set against the larger canvas of the Indian uprisings in North Dakota in 1890. First performed in 1989, The Ghost Dance is a perfectly balanced portrait of the crisis of conscience that white men and women on army posts faced during the sad and hopeless Ghost Dance revivalism, through which the tribes in their last gathering expected to roll back time and restore their world. Walcott's verse here captures the epic nature of this moment in history, giving it character, color, and pathos. The characters are well drawn, the scenes are beautifully built, and the play moves forward with astonishing swiftness."Thomas E. Luddy, Salem State College, Salem, Massachusetts, Library Journal (starred review)
"These theater pieces by Nobel laureate Walcott illustrate two lesser-known movements in American history . . . Haunting and beautiful, The Ghost Dance uses events surrounding the late-1890s Ghost Dance movement among the Plains Indians as the background of a two-act meditation on relations between whites and Indians. Its complex portrait of life in the Old West belies simple-minded settler-bad-Indian-good thinking. Instead, like John Ford in his ambivalent film masterpiece, The Searchers, Walcott presents fascinating characters and allows us to judge them as they are carried along by history."Jack Helbig, Booklist
Review
"The Walcott line is still sponsored by Shakespeare and the Bible, happy to surprise by fine excess." --Seamus Heaney,
The Boston Globe
Synopsis
Dazzling dramas on American themes from the Nobel laureateOn a cold winter's day on the Dakota plains, Catherine Weldon receives a caller, Kicking Bear, bringing news of Indian rebellion. In the fort nearby, a tiny community splinters apart over how to react. In Ghost Dance, first performed in 1989, Walcott turns a story with a foregone conclusion -- Sitting Bull and his Sioux followers will die at the hands of the Army and Indian agents -- into a portrait of life at a crossroads of American history.
In Walker, an opera first performed in 1992 and revised for its revival in 2001, Walcott shifts his attention east, taking for his subject David Walker, the nineteenth-century black abolitionist. In Walcott 's hands Walker becomes a classical hero for his people: a leader who is also a poet.
Synopsis
Two dazzling dramas on American themes from the Nobel laureate Derek Walcott, Walker and Ghost Dance.
On a cold winter's day on the Dakota plains, Catherine Weldon receives a caller, Kicking Bear, bringing news of Indian rebellion. In the fort nearby, a tiny community splinters apart over how to react. In Ghost Dance, first performed in 1989, Walcott turns a story with a foregone conclusion--Sitting Bull and his Sioux followers will die at the hands of the Army and Indian agents--into a portrait of life at a crossroads of American history.
In Walker, an opera first performed in 1992 and revised for its revival in 2001, Walcott shifts his attention east, taking for his subject David Walker, the nineteenth-century black abolitionist. In Walcott 's hands Walker becomes a classical hero for his people: a leader who is also a poet.
About the Author
Derek Walcott was born in St. Lucia in 1930. His
Collected Poems: 1948-1984 was published in 1986; his recent works are
The Bounty and
Tiepolo's Hound, illustrated with his own paintings. He received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1992.