"We are living in an imperfect world, where people expect us to be perfect." -- Marion Barry
Although Marion Barry became internationally known for his very public downfall,
the story of his life before and after that event is less widely known. THE NINE LIVES OF MARION BARRY
explores Barry's improbable personal history though archival footage of him as a young
activist in the '60s and rising African-American political star in the '70s, chronicling his
resugence on the D.C. political scene in 2004 with his most recent campaign. Directors
and producers Dana Flor and Toby Oppenheimer received unparalleled first-hand access
to Barry and his ex-wife Effi (who died in 2007), as well as to many others close to Barry
throughout his life.
Born a sharecropper's son in segregated Mississippi, Barry had nearly finished his
Ph.D. in chemistry when he joined the civil rights movement. In the mid-1960s, when
Washington, D.C. was run by white southern congressmen wielding complete power over
the city, the tireless Barry was at the forefront of changes that enabled the people of D.C.
to gain representation. Elona Evans-McNeill, a Barry campaign staffer, explains, "The
city was like a plantation. We didn't have elections. No mayor, no city council. We
couldn't vote. Congress controlled D.C." Today, many are still working to bring a fully
autonomous local government and a vote in Congress to D.C. residents.
Surviving beatings and brutality as an activist, and suffering a shotgun blast to the
chest at the hands of Black Muslims in 1977, Barry went on to become the pride of his
generation as America's first black activist mayor. The city flourished during his initial
tenure, with new shops, theaters, offices and jobs. Journalist Harry Jaffe states, "He had
the potential to be Martin Luther King's successor, a leading political figure of our era."
In January 1990, after three terms as a hugely popular leader, Barry committed
what many saw as political suicide when he was filmed smoking crack in a hotel room
with an ex-girlfriend. Sentenced to six months in federal prison, Barry's political career
seemed over - but instead of disappearing from the public stage, he returned from prison
and was reelected mayor for the fourth time in 1994 with an astounding 56% of the vote. After a hiatus from political life, Barry staged another political reemergence in 2004 when,
at age 69, he was elected to a seat on the city council representing Ward 8 (the city's
poorest). Today, at 73, Marion Barry remains an enduring force in D.C. politics, and
continues to represent Ward 8.
In addition to a wealth of archival footage and interviews with Barry and his ex-wife
Effi, THE NINE LIVES OF MARION BARRY includes interviews with: former presidential
candidate Jesse Jackson; Marshall Brown, Barry's campaign advisor; deputy mayor
Ivanhoe Donaldson; campaign staffer Elona Evans-McNeill; Carroll Harvey, co-founder of
Pride, Inc.; political advisor Max Berry; TV reporters Jim Vance, Bruce Johnson and Mark
Feldstein; authors and journalists Adrienne Washington, Tom Sherwood, Harry Jaffe,
George Pelecanos, Jonetta Rose-Barras and Jonathon Agronsky; filmmaker Bruce
Brown; Regardie's magazine publisher Bill Regardie; professors Michael Fauntroy and
Maurice Jackson; and Sandra Seegars, Barry's opponent for city council in 2004.
THE NINE LIVES OF MARION BARRY is Dana Flor and Toby Oppenheimer's first
feature documentary. Flor wrote and directed the Emmy®-winning documentary "Latinos
in Beisbol" and the Emmy®-nominated documentary "Cesar Chavez." Among her other
projects are "True Stories of the NYPD" and "Latin Jazz - The Perfect Combination,"
serving as writer and producer on both.
Oppenheimer co-produced the Emmy®-nominated CINEMAX documentary "Devil's
Playground," which premiered at the 2002 Sundance Film Festival, and directed "The Cult
of Cindy."
THE NINE LIVES OF MARION BARRY made its world premiere as the closing
night documentary at the AFI-Discovery Channel SILVERDOCS festival in June.
THE NINE LIVES OF MARION BARRY is an HBO Documentary Films
presentation in association with Cactus Three; a Flor Films production; directed and
produced by Dana Flor and Toby Oppenheimer; executive producers, Kathryn Anne
Tripp, Julie Goldman, Krysanne Katsoolis and Caroline Stevens; editors, Dan Marks,
Charles Olivier and Pax Wassermann; camera, Toby Oppenheimer and Dana Flor. For
HBO: senior producer, Nancy Abraham; executive producer, Sheila Nevins.
Photo credits: courtesy DC Public Library, Star Collection, © Washington Post
