The
State Library of Victoria has named a reading room after Sir Redmond Barry, who was the first chair of the Board of Trustees of the
Melbourne Public Library. A statue of Barry was installed in front of the library in 1887. The
University of Melbourne, of which he was the first
Chancellor, has a Redmond Barry building named for him. A plaque marking the location of Sir Redmond Barry's residence is located near the corner of Josephine Avenue and High Street Road in
Mount Waverley. The University of Melbourne also established the Redmond Barry Distinguished Professor, a title awarded to multiple professors within the university who display outstanding research and leadership. The
Australian Library and Information Association's highest honour that can be bestowed on an individual not eligible for membership of the association is the Redmond Barry Award awarded in recognition of outstanding service to or promotion of a library and information service or libraries and information services, or to the theory or practice of library and information science, or an associated field.
Portrayals Barry appears briefly in the 1920 silent film
The Kelly Gang played by the film's director
Harry Southwell He appears in the 1923 silent film
When the Kellys Were Out (1923), played by David Edelsten. He appears in the 1970 film
Ned Kelly, played by acting veteran
Frank Thring. He appears as a minor character in
Philippe Mora's bushranging biopic Mad Dog Morgan, where he is played by
Peter Collingwood. He has a prominent role in the 1977 television drama
The Trial of Ned Kelly, where he was played by
John Frawley. Barry's relationship with
Marcus Clarke was the subject of the play,
The Future Australian Race, written by Bill Garner and Sue Gore. The play premiered at the State Library's Queen's Hall in 2008, and starred
Jim Daly and Luke Ryan as Barry and Clarke respectively. Barry's career and relationship with Ned Kelly was featured in
Shane Maloney and Chris Grosz's column for
The Monthly, "
Encounters" The story was later adapted in 2013 as an episode of the animated series
Australian Encounters: Heroes, Villains and Ratbags, narrated by
Geoffrey Rush. In 2015, the band Bushwahzee produced a play with music entitled
Barry Versus Kelly. The play takes place during the trial of Ned Kelly, and explores Barry's conflict with his own Irish upbringing and concerns that he will create a martyr out of Kelly. It originally premiered at Wangaratta Performing Arts Centre, and starred the show's writer Felix Meagher as Barry and singer Anthony Penhall as Kelly. ==Works==