Alex Horn

Alexander Francis Horn (14 August 1929 – 30 September 2007), known more often as Alex Horn, was a playwright and actor and the leader of a series of controversial groups which claimed a linkage to the teachings of G. I. Gurdjieff. [1]

Alex Horn
Alex Horn 1973 play
BornAugust 14, 1929
DiedSeptember 30, 2007
OccupationPlaywright

Overview

His groups have been classed by some as cults, although others believe he was attempting to promote the Fourth Way, which can involve a degree of intense confrontation on a personal level. Alex was married to Anne Burrage (later Anne Haas) in the 1960s during which time he was running Red Mountain Ranch,[2] a part-time commune located on Sonoma Mountain in northern California. The order of events is unclear, but Anne left this group in 1969 around the time that Alex became involved with and eventually married Sharon Gans. Anne took many of the members from the ranch and started The Group, amid claims that Red Mountain Ranch had become violent and dangerous, and that Alex was becoming a cult figure. Alex and Sharon ran the Theatre of All Possibilities until 1978 when it received unfavorable press from the San Francisco Chronicle[3] and San Francisco Progress[4][5][6][7][8] in the wake of the Jim Jones tragedy in November 1978. Alex and Sharon both left San Francisco with Sharon's children in 1978 and continued to run various groups in New York and Boston. Alex Horn had five children with Anne Burrage, Maurice, Elaine, Matthew, Mary Ellen and Benjamin. He died on September 30, 2007.[9]

An article about Alexander Francis Horn, then five years old, appeared in the Chicago Tribune on February 9, 1935. The child Horn was alleged to have spread the alarm for a fire that broke out in his home. 1940 census records show Alexander Horn, aged 10, as an inmate of the Marks Nathan Jewish Orphan Home in Chicago, where he is reported as having lived for the previous five years.[10]

  • The Theatre of All Possibilities
  • Oddysey Study Group
  • The Work
  • The School
  • Fourth Way School
  • The Group

Plays

  • The Fantastic Arising of Padraic Clancy Muldoon
  • Adam King
  • Journey to Jerusalem
  • The Argument
  • The Legend of Sharon Shashonovah
  • The Magician

Books

  • Theatre of All Possibilities Vol 1 San Francisco: Everyman Publications 1978
  • In Search of a Solar Hero Shaftesbury: Element Books, 1987
  • Ponderings of a Citizen of the Milky Way Shaftesbury: Element Books, 1987
  • Top Secret Adam King Publisher EVERYMAN 1970 24th and Mission Streets San Francisco CA 94110 285-9009

Notes

gollark: I think busboy allows configurating limits.
gollark: Yes, you can.
gollark: Yes, that is true, although turtle mining has always been awful.
gollark: 10-ish TPS is *kind of playable*, at least.
gollark: Also, being able to get reasonably consistent non-terrible performance.

References

  • "Rosie, Sharon, Alex, Robert & The Work" The Gurdjieff Journal, Vol. 8, Issue 1, Number 29/2002
  • "Strange School: Real-Life Drama in SF Theater Group" San Francisco Chronicle, December 23, 1978

Quotations related to Alex Horn at Wikiquote

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