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REVIEW
Crumbs of Hope
An important partnership continues between a local theater and a Los Angeles actor/playwright.

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BY STEFFAN SILVIS
ssilvis@wweek.com


A Piece of Cake

Stark Raving Theater at Theater! Theatre!
3430 SE Belmont St., 232-7072
10 pm Fridays-Saturdays
Opens July 14
$9.50

Raymond J. Barry will be taking his work to Dublin and Siena this August.

"Barry pushes the limits of our company. He has a lot to say in a beautifully theatrical way."

--Dave Demke, Stark Raving Theater's artistic director


The world's a gray dystopia, where a sexually transmitted plague has made human contact dangerous. Intimacy has become a foreign concept to the surviving population, whose only glimmer of hope is the promise of a piece of cake dispensed by a mysterious cake provider who might very well be ruling the government.

A Piece of Cake marks the second premiere of one of playwright Raymond J. Barry's plays at Stark Raving Theater. Barry is a well-known performer who was a staple at La Mama and the Living Theater in New York, and, most recently, a film actor who has done memorable work in Born on the 4th of July and Dead Man Walking.

Barry first came to Portland in 1997 to perform his electric play Back When/Back Then at Stark Raving. Having made an indelible mark on Portland's theater, Barry let Stark Raving premiere his play Pornographic Panorama, a tough, serious-minded piece that took the soul-destroying sex farce to its logical extreme. The partnership between Barry and Stark Raving has given Portland some vital theater. Barry spoke to Willamette Week from his home in Los Angeles.

Willamette Week: You've worked on A Piece of Cake for some time.

Raymond J. Barry: I started it in 1984 when AIDS really began to strike New York City. It was a strange time in the theater as many friends and acquaintances began dying. I remember entire apartment buildings in Chelsea that were decimated, and you began hearing rumors that the government was involved. I never believed this, but clearly the right wing was happy about what was happening, as it fed into their Christian bullshit about God hating gays. So, I began to play with the notion of switching the power base, turning the usual majority of this country into a minority. I came back to the piece in 1990 after having moved to LA, and the isolationism of that place had a great influence on my writing. People are more separated in LA, and it's a young society where there's an idea that people can be replaced pretty easily. This idea of replaceability--the idea that we just use each other to entertain each other--is a theme that I played with in Pornographic Panorama. How this effects the ideas of loyalty and love is what I'm exploring in A Piece of Cake.

This is the second premiere of yours with Stark Raving. Were you happy with the company's first, Pornographic Panorama?

Yes. I'm thrilled that Stark is premiering my work, as I love to see what they make of it.

You are often at the center of your own work as a director and actor. How much involvement have you had in Stark's process of your work?

My involvement is superficial. I think complete involvement would be a pain in the ass for them. While they would be trying to fulfill the play, I would probably be trying to rewrite it. Productions fare best when a director is in charge. They don't need an outside force pressing on them.

You are continually honing your plays.

Plays are always unfinished. Sam Shepard, Brecht and other playwrights have always continued to rework their plays. In fact, I've just added a character into the dynamics of Back When/Back Then, which I think has really propelled the play forward.

You've actually developed a number of partnerships with small theaters.

I've a very good relationship with Smoke Brush in Colorado Springs, as well as the Magic Theater in Omaha. I've also begun working with the New Theater in Dallas, Texas. They do my plays, though we've only known each other over the telephone. But it's great to have these little pockets of theaters supporting my work. Plays are now very fragile things, and there aren't many places left where people are interested in the theater or are offered a theater education. It's almost as if the theater has become esoteric for the majority, which is sad.

Do you ever feel that you're devoting your life to a dying art?

I feel like I'm fighting for my life writing. It's a very hard thing to be doing, but for me it's as important as food.

 

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