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・ Barry Ardern
・ Barry Armitage
・ Barry Armstrong
・ Barry Ashbee
・ Barry Ashby
・ Barry Asher
・ Barry Ashworth
・ Barry Ashworth (rugby union)
・ Barry Askew
・ Barry Atkinson
・ Barry Atsma
・ Barry Atwater
・ Barry Atwater (painter)
・ Barry Audia
・ Barry Austin
Barry Avrich
・ Barry Award
・ Barry Award (for comedy)
・ Barry Award (for crime novels)
・ Barry Axelrod
・ Barry Azzopardi
・ Barry B. Hughes
・ Barry B. Levine
・ Barry B. Longyear
・ Barry B. Powell
・ Barry B. White
・ Barry Baldwin
・ Barry Bales
・ Barry Banks
・ Barry Banks (rugby league)


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Barry Avrich : ウィキペディア英語版
Barry Avrich

Barry Michael Avrich (born May 9, 1963) is a Canadian film director, film producer, playwright, author, marketing executive and arts philanthropist. Avrich's film career has included critically acclaimed films about the entertainment business including ''The Last Mogul'' about film producer Lew Wasserman (2005), ''Glitter Palace'' about the Motion Picture Country Home (2005), and ''Guilty Pleasure'' about the ''Vanity Fair'' columnist and author Dominick Dunne (2004). Avrich also produced the Gemini-nominated television special ''Caesar and Cleopatra'' (2009) with Christopher Plummer.
Besides films, Avrich has also authored three books and one play and supported many leading cultural institutions including The Toronto International Film Festival and the Stratford Festival of Canada. Avrich was also responsible for creating the world's first state of the art movie theatre inside Sick Kids Hospital in Toronto. children's hospital. Avrich won the Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award in 2008.
==Early life==
Avrich was born in Montreal, Quebec, the son of Irving Avrich, a garment industry executive, and Faye Avrich, a housewife. His parents immersed him in the arts as a child. In school, Avrich produced talent shows and started experimenting with films. While attending Vanier College, he gravitated to the film program and while there, he produced many films. in 1980, he moved to Toronto where he continued to study film, art and theatre at both Ryerson Polytechnical Institute and the University of Toronto. While in school, Avrich started Rent-A-Fan Club, a company that offered "celebrity status" to people as a novelty by using his fellow acting students to create fan clubs. Soon after graduating, Avrich made two short films that would get him noticed: ''The King of Yorkville'' (1985) was a satirical parody of the 1980s dating scene that was picked up by local television stations in Canada, and ''The Madness of Method'' (1995), featuring M. Emmet Walsh, won a Gold Medal at the Bilbao International Festival of Documentary and Short Films.

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