
PAE (Performing Arts Exchange) SHOWCASING ARTIST - Juried Showcase 2009
ARTS MIDWEST SHOWCASING ARTIST - 2009
APAP SHOWCASING ARTIST - 2009
Arts Northwest Afterhours Showcase -2009
"Who saves this stuff?"
That's the question at the heart of BARRY SMITH'S ME, MY STUFF, AND I, a multi-media, solo, autobiographical comedy about...stuff.
Writer/performer Barry Smith is certainly one who "saves this stuff," and has from a very early age. Traumatized by an early housecleaning mishap--his mother disposed of his impressive collection of first grade "See Spot run" scribblings-Smith vowed to never throw anything away again. The young Smith began documenting every detail of his existence, determined to understand himself and his place in the world by chronicling his life through ... stuff.
BARRY SMITH'S ME MY STUFF AND i is a disturbingly funny and inspiring multi-media comedy about our relationship with "stuff." Universally relatable (who doesn't have stuff?), the show examines how we attempt to hold on to our memories as a way of defining ourselves. "Both hilarious and poignant," says The Vancouver Province, "this show will make you think about your own life in entirely new ways."
"Think Spalding Gray and David Sedaris with a whole lot a audio and visual aids." The Aspen Times
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About Barry Smith
Employing a unique mix of comedy, monologue and multi-media, as well as a lifetime of bizarre experience, Barry Smith "reinvents the solo confessional memoir," says the Edmonton Journal. "Think David Sedaris and Spalding Gray with a whole lot of audio and visual aids," says The Aspen Times.
Barry Smith's first solo show, "Jesus in Montana: Adventures in a Doomsday Cult," made a stunning debut, winning Outstanding Solo Show at the 2005 New York International Fringe Festival and later Best of Fest at the 2007 Winnipeg Fringe. His second solo comedy, "American Squatter," won multiple awards and critical acclaim throughout North America, and Smith's latest work, "Me, My Stuff, and I," continues to tour the U.S. and Canada following its debut at the Montreal International Fringe Festival.
In addition to live performance, Barry Smith has been writing his weekly humor column, "Irrelativity," for The Aspen Times for 15 years, entertaining his readers with adventures in pursuit of the obvious, the irreverent and the absurd. Smith has also written and directed a number of short comedy films, released a radio sketch comedy CD, published (against all advice) a book of poetry and churned out some breathtaking to do lists.
Hailed by New York Magazine as "an energetic and versatile raconteur," Barry Smith lives and writes in Aspen, Colorado. More at www.barrysmith.com.