Barclay, Paris 1957–

views updated May 23 2018

Paris Barclay 1957

Television director

Succeeded in Mainly-White Academia

Became Two Time Emmy Winner

Resolved to Effect Change With Career

Sources

Paris Barclays resume reads like the plot for a feelgood drama. A black kid from a workingclass family bucks all odds to become a power player in Hollywood. Tearjerking twists include his struggles with racism, alcoholism, and unaccepted sexuality. Its a story worthy enough of an Emmy. In fact, it is this background that has helped Barclay win two Emmy Awards. I do think because of my experience living in both worlds, living in an African American household, and also being educated in the white world of Harvard and New York, it gives me a perspective to tell different kinds of stories than are currently being told, Barclay told the Los Angeles Times. His talent for telling these stories is respected by producers, actors, and writers throughout the television industry. Barclay explained some of his appeal to www.gay.com in saying I want to be the director who gets to the heart of whats on the page and makes it come alive, no matter what I choose to work on. Thats why I love television.

Succeeded in Mainly-White Academia

Barclay was born in Chicago Heights, Illinois in 1957. His mother was a social worker and his father was a foreman at a tile plant. I was the third boy of what would be seven kids, Barclay recalled to www.gay.com. It was a lowermiddle class upbringing at best, but I didnt mind it too much. I played lots of sports. He excelled at both football and academics and soon attracted the interest of La Lumiere, an exclusive prep school in Indiana that was looking to diversify its student body. The attraction was not mutual and Barclay only agreed to accept the schools scholarship if they also took his brother, Neil. La Lumiere agreed and the Barclay brothers became the only two African Americans on campus.

The first six months of the time I was there I was completely overwhelmed and felt totally less than, Barclay told the Los Angeles Times I felt I was not as good as these kids with their big families and big houses. It may have been responsible for my excessive overachieving. The best I could do was [study] and work at football. His efforts paid off. La Lumiere began grooming Barclay for admission into Harvard University when he was 16. He told the Los Angeles Times that he knew the school was using him as a kind of political football to be able to say they had sent one of their black students to Harvard. However, graduating near the top of his class, Barclay proved that he was

At a Glance

Born Paris Barclay in 1957, in Chicago Heights, IL. Education: Harvard University, BA, English, 1979. Politics: Democrat.

Career: Director, television series: Angel Street, CBS; Moon Over Miami, ABC; Diagnosis Murder, CBS; Extreme, ABC; Clueless, ABC; ER, NBC; NYPD Blue, ABC, 199600; Second Noah, ABC; Sliders, FOX; Brooklyn South, CBS; The West Wing, NBC; City of Angels, CBS; FastLane, FOX. Films: Dont Be a Menace to South Central While Drinking Juice in the Hood (also known as Dont Be a Menace), Miramax, 1996; The Cherokee Kid, HBO, 1996; The Big Time, TNT, 2002. Has also worked as a television producer, an actor, a playwright, a music video director, and an advertising copywriter.

Memberships: Board of directors, Directors Guild of America; trustee, board of directors, La Lumiere School, LaPorte, IN.

Awards: Emmy Award, Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series, NYPD Blue, 1998, 1999; Directors Guild of America Award, Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Dramatic SeriesNight, NYPD Blue, 1999; Founders Award, Project Angel Food, 1998; NAACP Image Award for Best Drama Series, City of Angels, 2000; Honored as One of 20 black Heroes in the Struggle World AIDS Day, Los Angeles, CA, 2001; The Stephen F. Kolzak Award, GLAAD, 2001; Other awards include: the Humanitas Prize, the Peabody Award, Television Director of the Year by the Caucus for Producers, Directors and Writers, and the Alma Award; nominated for a Golden Globe Award; nominated for Emmy Award, 2002.

Addresses: Office 4000 Warner Blvd Building 138, Suite 1203A, Burbank, CA, 91522; Phone: (818) 9545006. AgentCreative Artists Agency, 9830 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills, CA 90212.

more than a black studenthe was a smart black student that could hold his own at an Ivy league school.

Barclay was accepted at Harvard University where he earned a degree in English in 1979. He told www.gay.com, I loved [Harvard] even though I barely went to class. Most of his time was spent writing musicals16 in allincluding two shows at the prestigious Hasty Pudding Theater, Harvards comedie troupe. African Americans were still rare on campus, yet it wasnt the white students who shunned him, but the black students. Harvard was very cliquey at the time, and the black students stuck together pretty closely, he told www.gay.com. I was a bit apart, partly because of my ambisexuality, but also because of my love for the theater. At Harvard Barclay was able to explore his sexuality for the first time. I guess by the time I was in seventh or eighth grade I pretty much knew I was strongly attracted to men. But I liked girls as well, and never exclusively identified myself as gay until late in college, he told www.gay.com.

Became Two Time Emmy Winner

Barclay was determined to make a career writing musicals and left the iviedwalls of Harvard for the rush of New York City. There he struggled with alcohol and drugsdependencies that plagued him for nearly a decade. Despite this he stayed focused on his goal and landed a spot in a musical theater workshop held by the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP). There he met famed Broadway musical composer Stephen Sondheim, who called Barclays work terrible but not untalented and advised him to focus on the black experience. Barclay recalled to the Los Angeles Times that Sondheim had said, Unfortunately youre writing musicals with white people, which means youre competing with me and everybody else whos white. Though he thought the comment racist, he did go on to adapt a short story by AfricanAmerican playwright Richard Wright, Almost a Man, which made it to the stage off Broadway.

Unlike Sondheim, whom Barclay described to the Los Angeles Times as [Someone who] never had to work a day in his life, Barclay had to work in advertising to make ends meet. He started out as a copywriter and moved up the ranks, not only because of his talent, but also because of his skin color. He explained to the Los Angeles Times, I was in demand, just for diversity, just so they could show me at the meetings. I was a big token at that time. I moved to a lot of different agencies, always upping my salary by using that token status. He eventually went from writing commercials to directing them. From there he made the leap to music videos working with various artists including Luther Vandross, Barry White, and Bob Dylan. And the rest, as they say, is a small part of history, he joked to www.gay.com. It was a history propelled by his talent for telling stories. What happens a lot when you see [music] videos, theyre flashy but theyre not trying to tell a story, John Wells, producer of the hit show ER told the Los Angeles Times. [Barclay] was telling a story in a fluid way, where the camera was very controlled and inventive. Wells was impressed enough to give Barclay his first television directing job on the 1992 CBS series Angel Street. The show was shortlived but Barclay kept busy directing many other primetime shows. Eventually Wells offered him the chance to direct a few episodes of the critically acclaimed ER. His work there drew the attention of superproducer Steven Bochco, who hired Barclay to direct for NYPD Blue in 1996.

With NYPD Blue Barclay established himself as a visionary director. Of Barclays work on that show, Emmywinning television director Thomas Carter told the Los Angeles Times, I was blown away by [the quality]. This was extraordinary work for television, both in terms of the performances he got from the actors and the way he translated the story visually. The television industry agreed and in 1998 Barclay received an Emmy award for Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series for an episode of NYPD Blue. The same year the Directors Guild of America named him Best Director of a Dramatic Series also for NYPD Blue. He repeated his Emmy win the following year. Winning the Emmy for the first time in 1998 was greatwinning it again, in 1999, really made people sit up and take notice, Barclay told www.gay.com. People also began to take notice of the fact that he was an African American in an industry where all the major players were white. There are no black people who are in a position to really run a show of influence in the country, Barclay told the Los Angeles Times before conceding, OK, maybe Oprah Winfrey. Though he still suffered from a bit of tokenism even with his two Emmy s in hand, fans of Barclay are quick to point out that he has succeeded based on his incredible talent. Wells told the Los Angeles Times, We did not hire Paris because he was a good black director. We hired him because hes a good director.

Resolved to Effect Change With Career

Barclay has also endured homophobia during his career, particularly while directing the Boys N the Hood spoof Dont Be a Menace to South Central While Drinking Your Juice in the Hood. He was not yet completely open about his sexuality when he took on the directorship. I realized I empowered people to make it an issue by not being open about it, he told the Los Angeles Times. So I said, From now on Im not going to do this. If Im open about it, it can never be an issue. The people who are homophobic or feel thats important to know, [they] will not ask me for jobs. This decision brought him considerable peace of mind. When it was a secret, held apart and inside out of my own fear, I think I felt more isolated, he told www.gay.com. Along the way he became a role model for other gays and lesbians in the entertainment industry. I counsel people in their careers to be as open as they are comfortable being, he told www.gay.com. In 2001 the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) awarded him its highest honor, the Stephen F. Kolzak Award for his inclusiveness of and advocacy for the gay and lesbian community. He is also an active fundraiser for Project Angel Food, an organization that provides meals to people who are ill with HIV and AIDS, and was rewarded with that organizations Founders Award.

Barclay continued to make powerful television through the end of the 1990s, however he also ran into powerful struggles, both with himself and his coworkers. In 1999 Barclay partnered with Steven Bochco as coexecutive producer of City of Angels. The show, a drama about an innercity hospital, was considered groundbreaking because it was the first primetime series to feature an all AfricanAmerican cast. The media interest was high and Barclay became a spokesperson for the show along with Bochco. However, the show suffered from poor ratings and its leading actress, Vivica A. Fox, made an early departure. Behind the scenes, Barclay and Bochco butted heads over the direction of the show. Barclay wanted to integrate the cast, Bochco was adamant it remain all black. Every hospital Ive researched in the innercity has a mixed staffblacks, whites, Asians, Latinos, Barclay told the Los Angeles Times. Though the rift between the two men was wellknown on the show, no one expected Barclays sudden departure in the summer of 2000. Barclay made his resignation in an email sent by his agent to Bochco. The move set the television industry abuzz with gossip and rumors. It also severed the relationship between the two men. Barclay later denied that it was solely artistic differences that caused him to leave the show. Its about what I want to do with my life, he told the Los Angeles Times. I want to be emotionally involved with something that will make a difference. He came to this decision during a workshop held during the Sundance Film Festival. It was such a spiritual experience, Barclay told the Los Angeles Times. I had just planned to chill out, but it was truly lifechanging. I saw how minorities working in film were respected and empowered. It was then that I felt I was in the wrong place in my life. With City of Angels I kept chipping, but I couldnt get the statue out of the rock.

Barclay went on to direct an episode of the acclaimed show The West Wing for which he received an Emmy nomination in 2002. He also signed with John Wells Productions to develop projects including the TNT original movie The Big Time which premiered in October of 2002. He is currently directing a series on the Fox Network called FastLane. Barclay also returned to his original lovethe musicalwith the 2001 production of Letters from Nam adapted from the book Dear America: Letters Home from Vietnam. Despite a crazy schedule, Barclay manages to find time to serve as on the executive board of the Directors Guild of Americahe is the first African American to do so. His productivity shows no signs of stopping. I probably will never be a great dancer, and I rap only slightly better than Warren Beatty, he told www.gay.com referring to Beattys role as a rapping politician in Bulworth. But aside from those limits, I can do just about anything.

Sources

Periodicals

Hollywood Reporter, Dec 10, 2001 p. 18.

Los Angeles Times, January 31, 1999, p. 4; September 13, 1999, p. 6; July 1, 2000, p. F1.

On-line

http://content.gay.com/channels/arts/inthelife/904barclay_000403.html

http://content.gay.com/channels/news/mixner/mixner_barclay.html

http://www.hollywood.com/celebs/detail/celeb/lSS380

http://www.lalumiere.org/news/n_20020916_parisbarclay.html

Candace LaBalle

Barclay, Paris 1956–

views updated May 18 2018

BARCLAY, Paris 1956–

PERSONAL

Born 1956, in Chicago Heights, IL; father, a tile factory foreman, mother, a social worker. Education: Harvard University, B.A., English, 1979; studied with Stephen Sondheim and Charles Strouse at American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers Musical Theater Workshop. Politics: Democrat. Avocational Interests: Collects baseball caps.

Addresses: Agent—Creative Artists Agency, 9830 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills, CA; United Talent Agency, 9560 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 500, Beverly Hills, CA 90212. Manager—Lovett Management, 1327 Brinkley Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90049.

Career: Director, producer, actor, composer, and writer. Directed commercials and music videos; previously worked as an advertising copywriter.

Member: Directors Guild of America (vice president and member of board of directors), La Lumiere School (trustee, board of directors).

Awards, Honors: Directors Guild of America Award nomination, outstanding directorial achievement, 1997, for ER; Founders Award, Project Angel Food, 1998; Emmy Award, outstanding directing for a drama series, Emmy Award nomination (with others), outstanding drama series, 1998, Directors Guild of America Award, outstanding directorial achievement in dramatic series—night, 1999, all for NYPD Blue; Directors Guild of America Award nominations, outstanding directorial achievement, 2001, 2002, and 2003, and Emmy Award nomination, outstanding directing for a drama series, 2002, for The West Wing; Stephen F. Kolzak Award, GLAAD Media Awards, Gay and Lesbian Alliance against Defamation, 2001; Pioneer Award, Los Angeles Pan African Film Festival, 2004.

CREDITS

Television Work; Series:

Producer, NYPD Blue, ABC, 1997–1998.

Supervising producer, NYPD Blue, ABC, 1998—.

Director, creator, and co–executive producer, City of Angels, CBS, 2000.

Television Director; Episodic:

Angel Street, CBS, 1992.

"Black River Bride," Moon over Miami, ABC, 1993.

"Tricks of the Trade," Silk Stalkings, 1995.

"Witness to Murder," Diagnosis Murder, CBS, 1995.

Extreme, ABC, 1995.

"Ask Me No Questions, I'll Tell You No Lies," ER (also known as Emergency Room), NBC, 1996.

"The Big Chief," Second Noah, ABC, 1996.

"King of the Road," Second Noah, ABC, 1996.

"Gillian of the Spirits," Sliders, Fox, 1996.

"El Sid," Sliders, Fox, 1996.

"Secrets & Lies," Clueless, ABC, 1997.

NYPD Blue, ABC, 1997–1999.

"The Breeder," Sliders, Fox, 1997.

"A Reverend Runs through It," Brooklyn South, CBS, 1997.

"Calling Dr. Hathaway," ER (also known as Emergency Room), NBC, 1997.

"The Portland Trip," The West Wing, NBC, 2000.

"Mars Attacks," ER (also known as Emergency Room), NBC, 2000.

"Prototype," City of Angels, CBS, 2000.

"Weenis between Us," City of Angels, CBS, 2000.

"Assume the Position," City of Angels, CBS, 2000.

"The Indians in the Lobby," The West Wing, NBC, 2001.

"Debate Camp," The West Wing, NBC, 2002.

"Girls Own Juice," Fastlane, Fox, 2002.

American Dreams, NBC, 2002.

"Scar Tissue," The Shield, FX, 2003.

"Simone Says," Fastlane, Fox, 2003.

"Gleen," Cold Case, CBS, 2003.

Also directed "A Special Word Game," 1MMs.

Television Director; Movies:

"Reunion," America's Dream, HBO, 1996.

The Cherokee Kid, HBO, 1996.

The Big Time, TNT, 2002.

Television Work; Movies:

Co–executive producer, The Big Time, TNT, 2002.

Television Director; Specials:

MTV, Give Me Back My Life: A Harvard Lampoon Parody, Comedy Central, 1991.

Television Director; Pilots:

The Street Lawyers, ABC, 2003.

Dead Lawyers, Sci–Fi Channel, 2004.

Television Appearances; Episodic:

Bureaucrat, "The Breeder," Sliders, Fox, 1997.

City clerk, "Honeymoon at Viagra Falls," NYPD Blue, ABC, 1998.

In the Life, PBS, 2000 and 2002.

Television Appearances; Movies:

First bad cowboy, The Cherokee Kid, HBO, 1996.

Film Director:

New Edition Past and Present, 1989.

Stone Cold, 1991.

Don't Be a Menace to South Central While Drinking Juice in the Hood (also known as Don't Be a Menace), Miramax, 1996.

Stage Director:

Letters from 'Nam, 2001.

RECORDINGS

Music Videos:

Directed videos for Harry Connick, Jr., Barry White, Luther Vandross, Bob Dylan, and others.

WRITINGS

Plays:

Almost a Man (adapted from a story by Richard Wright), produced at Soho Repertory Theatre, New York City, 1985.

While a student at Harvard University, wrote sixteen musicals, two of which were produced at the Hasty Pudding Theatre.

Television Episodes:

City of Angels, CBS, 2000.

Also wrote "A Special Word Game," an episode of 1MMs.

OTHER SOURCES

Periodicals:

Los Angeles Times, January 31, 1999, pp. 4–5, 66–7.

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