Tcl scripts are normally setup to run using slightly more than you have shown. It is typically and most robustly done like the following:
#!/bin/sh
# \
exec tclsh "$0" ${1+"$@"}
They use the shell initially because there was no standard installation location for tcl so the location could not be relied on. Instead, by starting the system shell and using that to start the tclsh executable you could be certain to run the installed tclsh as long as it was present on the PATH. The shell evaluates the script and sees the exec tclsh "$0"
which causes it to execute the installed tclsh binary and pass it $0 (the script file name) as the first argument, which re-runs the script using the tcl interpreter.
The second line in my example comments out the third line when the script is evaluated by the tcl interpreter. The backslash causes the second and third lines to be treated as a single comment when read by tclsh so that tcl doesn't try and run the exec again.
In your snipped the # -*-tcl-*-
is marker to indicate the mode to be used by emacs when editing the file. See the documentation.
There is not really enough to go on for the error message. It doesn't seem to be from the Tcl interpreter itself. (That is 'git grep' in the tcl sources does not match that string).