President & Executive Director, Joseph Campbell Foundation

President & Executive Director, Joseph Campbell Foundation

President & Executive Director, Joseph Campbell Foundation

(photo from the film Mythic Journeys, a unique blend of documentary & animation)

After a sojourn in a Jesuit novitiate, Bob taught elementary school (English, Social Studies, Physical Education) before earning a B.S.S. from Northwestern University (1969). After helping to create and inaugurate the American Theater Institute (Aspen CO), he was awarded a Ford Foundation Fellowship to pursue an M.F.A. at Stanford, where he created, and was appointed Faculty Resident of, that university’s first interdisciplinary arts residence. He was as a consultant to the Board creating California Institute of the Arts (Cal Arts, Valencia CA) and a founding Faculty Fellow for the school’s inaugural season. In that capacity he mentored several dozen undergraduates, taught an array of courses, and created, edited, and published the innovative BOX:a mixed-media quarterly, featuring work by Dick Higgens, Nam June Paik, Ben Lifson, Allison Knowles, Richard Kostelanetz, Emmett Williams and others. During this interval he also lectured widely on experiential education.

Bob spent the next decade working in the professional theater as a director, playwright, and production manager. Highlights from those years include his time as production manager for the Royal Shakespeare Company’s Broadway production of Sherlock Holmes and for the Repertory Theater of Lincoln Center; the off-Broadway productions of his plays Haiku: an Environmental Construction for the Theater Based on the Words of the Gods & Other Poets at Rosetta LeNoire’s AMAS Repertory Theater andDetails (of the Sixteenth Frame) at Jean Erdman’s Theater of the Open Eye; national tours with such talents as John Cullum, Sandy Dennis, Colleen Dewhurst, George Grizzard, Paul Lipson, Yvette Mimeux, John Neville, Maureen O'Sullivan, William Shatner, and Julie Wilson; and many delightful years with Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy, for whom he served as production supervisor, director, and/or writer on various productions, including their four-play Samuel Beckett Festival, which featured the world premiere of Not I.

Meanwhile, Bob continued his commitment toeducation by serving as Faculty Artist-in-Residence at North Carolina School of the Arts (Winston-Salem NC), where he conceived directed GrassrootsGenesis(a Collective Creation in Celebration of Community) and at Union College (Schenectady NY); by designing learning games for the East Harlem Tutorial Project; and by creating for the Performing Arts Foundation (Huntington NY)a federally funded program to train artists to work in schools. He also began a quarter-century-long career as a corporate communications consultant, whose clients have included the Bell System’s Advanced Mobile Phone Service, General Electric Credit Corp., McGraw-Hill, Gordon & Breach Science Publishers, Knoxville World’s Fair, and others.

In 1979 Bob began workwith Joseph Campbellon several projects, including his multivolumeHistorical Atlas of World Mythology. Soon, Campbell asked Bob to be editorial director of theAtlas, and in 1982, they co-founded Van der Marck Editions to develop and publish that opus and “significant works that contribute to an understanding of our cultural heritage, the complex world in which we live, and the uncertain future that we face.” VdM Editions quickly became known for “books of the highest quality at competitive prices,”and the company grew explosively. For the next five years, Bob continued his work with Campbell and also served asVdM Editions’ C.O.O.and editorial director, acquiring, developing, editing, and supervisingthe publication of over thirty hardcover, trade paperback, and limited edition titles by, not only Campbell, but also, among others, Eric Fischl, Marija Gimbutas, Jamake Highwater, Dr. Albert Hofmann, Gerard Malanga, Jerome Rothenberg, Waverley Root, and Dr. Richard Evans Schultes.

As Campbell’s literary executor, following the famed mythologist’s death in 1987, Bob completed and supervised the posthumous publication of Volume I (two books) and Volume II (three books) of hisHistoricalAtlas. Subsequently, he was appointed executive editor of the Collected Works of Joseph Campbell, and he continues to produce and direct the publication of Campbell's oeuvrein print, audio, and video.

When Joseph Campbell’s widow, family, and close friends established the Joseph Campbell Foundation (JCF) in 1990, Bob was named vice president and executive director. He was appointed JCF president in 1998.

Bob has presented papers, led seminars, and conducted workshops at and for such institutions as, among others, the New York Open Center, the Aspen Institute, Palais Athena Cultural Centre (Sao Paulo), the Arkansas Art Center, Unipaz (Brasilia), Esalen Institute (Big Sur), the Smithsonian Institution, and two Parliaments of the World's Religions (Chicago, 1993; Cape Town, 1999), where he also served a member of the Assembly.

Returning to the theater in 1995, Bob was production manager of the Marin Shakespeare Festivalfor two seasons. At the same time, while serving as co-Chair of the Theater Arts Program of a community foundation known as Ross Valley Community for Schools (now: YES!), he created and ran an innovative program known as KidTech(Golden Bell award, 1997). While their peers in grades 3–8 performed in full-scale, professionally directed, musical theater productions, Kidtechs (supervised by older students and mentored by working theatrical designers and technicians) design, build, and run scenery and props, operate lighting and sound equipment, and serve as video camera operators or video directors, recording and editing the performance in real time.

Bob has been featured in a number of films, including Mythic Journeys (2008), written, directed & produced by Steven & Whitney Boe; Finding Joe (2011), a film by Patrick Takaya Solomon; Wake Up Darkness (2012), a film by Israel Kacyvenski; and the forthcoming William Shatner’s Get a Life!

He was a founding Trustee of United Religions Initiative (URI) and served briefly as URI’s Treasurer and as a member of its Global Council. He is on the Board of Directors of the Living Tao Foundation, is an ex-officio member of the Board of Opus Archive & Research Center, and serves on the Advisory Board of Spring: a Journal of Archetype and Culture.

Bob and his wife, Nola Hague, a software executive, have two sons—C.J, who is 27,and Colin, aged 25. They live in Marin County, CA, where Bob has coached soccer and track & field, mentored aspiring theater artists, and for the past decade has served as an elected Trustee of the Tamalpais Union High School District.