As an actor, Barr received a
Joseph Jefferson Citation for an Actor In A Principal Role for his portrayal of Philip Mbuso in the drama
Victims at the Organic Theatre Greenhouse in 1992. In 1994 he was a principal actor in the Chicago Theatre Company production of
Pill Hill, which was the recipient of a Joseph Jefferson Award for Best Ensemble. Additional acting accolades that David has received include the
Best Actor Award from the Association Of Theatre Artists & Friends in 1989 for his portrayal of Creon in the Stage Left production of Antigone. Barr's first full-length play was
The Death of the Black Jesus, which premiered at the Unicorn Theatre in Kansas City, Mo. in January 1995. (In the theater's pre-season booklet "21st Season of Plays," the title is given as
Betrayal of the Black Jesus.) The success of this play led to an
Illinois Arts Council Fellowship (1995) and the Black Theater Alliance Awards. The play was the winner of the
National Playwriting Award sponsored by the
Unicorn Theatre, and the winner of the
Mixed Blood Versus America National Playwriting Contest sponsored by the
Mixed Blood Theatre. His adaptation of the
Walter Mosley novel
A Red Death had its world premiere in September 1997. It won the 1998
Edgar Allan Poe Award, sponsored by the
Mystery Writers of America in the Best New Play category. Barr's two-act drama,
Black Caesar, was the winner of the 1997
Theodore Ward Contest for Playwriting, sponsored by Chicago's
Columbia College. PerformInk, Chicago's entertainment trade paper, published
Black Caesar in October 1999. In January 1999, Barr received his second Illinois Arts Council Fellowship for Playwriting/Screenwriting. His play ''Ev'ry Time I Feel the Spirit
, based on the life of Marian Anderson, was the winner of the 1999 Unicorn Theatre National Playwriting Award''. It opened at the Unicorn Theatre in June 1999 and at
Pegasus Players in November 2000. In September 1999, his full-length play
The Face of Emmett Till (formerly
The State of Mississippi vs Emmett Till) debuted at Pegasus Players. The play was developed with Mrs.
Mamie Till Mobley and is based on the life and tragic death of her son
Emmett Till and was revived in the fall of 2003, again at Pegasus Players. == 2000 To Present ==