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Willie the Actor, a novel by David Barry, is published by Libros International

Released on: February 29, 2008, 3:52 am

Press Release Author: Philip Spires - Libros International

Industry: Entertainment

Press Release Summary: When Willie the Actor was asked why he robbed banks, his
answer was \"because that\'s where the money is.\" David Barry\'s book is a fictional
biography of the famous bank robber, a figure who is portrayed as both enigmatic and
strangely sensitive.


Press Release Body: David Barry, author of Willie the Actor, is himself an actor.
His stage career began as a teenager alongside Sir Laurence Olivier and Vivien
Leigh. But his best known role was that of Frankie Abbott in Please Sir!, a London
Weekend Television sitcom of the late 1970s. His co-stars, Deryck Guyler, John
Alderton and Joan Sanderson became household names, and the series was so
successful that it spawned a sequel, The Fenn Street Gang, in which David Barry also
starred. David Barry also appeared in the successful LWT sitcom, George and Mildred
in the 1980s.

In recent years David Barry has developed a career as a writer alongside his acting.
He has published an autobiography, Flashback - An Actor's Life, and now a novel,
Willie the Actor, based on the life of the New York gangster, William Sutton.

At one level Willie the Actor by David Barry is a crime novel in which a ruthless
criminal commits bank robberies. On another it achieves the feel of dramatised
documentary, for its eponymous anti-hero, William Sutton, is not fictitious and
lived a real life. David Barry introduces us to Willy in 1923 and we bid him
farewell in 1976. And it's a farewell that is fonder than the reader might have
expected at the outset.

Willie the Actor is not a "who dunnit" in any sense, because at no point in the book
are we left in any doubt about who is perpetrating the robberies. We even have an
insider's description of his crimes, a rationale and a plan for their execution.
It's Willie, of course, who is behind them. They are his claim to fame, a fame that
the novel fills out. Willie, or William, or Bill - however we meet him - did not
commit one of the robberies, however, and that one proves to be a particularly
important one for him and his future. In this case we find him falsely accused and
wrongly convicted. He was innocent and yet he was positively and definitively
identified by a string of eye-witnesses. A touch of irony here.

Willie the Actor is not even very good at being a criminal. Yes, he succeeds in the
short-term and money passes through his hands. But then he always fails, in that he
usually gets caught.

Bill Sutton's first forays into armed robbery are facilitated by rented outfits by
means of which an accomplice impersonates various forms of officialdom. To cover
their rental of this gear, the pair establish a bogus theatre school, an operation
that obviously needs to rent costumes on a regular basis. Hence Bill Sutton is
labelled with his nickname, Willie the Actor, in media reports of his antics.

But still, he is a criminal. He mixes with some unsavoury sorts, hoodlums,
gangsters, extortionists, racketeers. Many of these acquaintances, partners or
employers think nothing of shooting to get their own way. They maim, kill and deform
human obstacles that even threaten to bar their path.

But not Willie. He is different. He is an almost honourable thief who might threaten
violence but never uses it. He even displays a gentility, a compassion which
eventually allows him to go straight for a number of years, holding down a poorly
paid job in a care home for the elderly.

David Barry's portrayal of this enigmatic character is subtle in that his criminal
is always on the brink of achieving a respectability for which, we sense, he yearns.
He is capable of love, whereas his partners in crime often exploit and oppress their
women. He could have become a devoted and loyal father, but circumstances apparently
require him to take a different route. And, perhaps most enigmatically of all, he
might even have aspired to academic achievement, as evidenced by his life-long love
of literature.

But it is not to be. In the end Willie is both debt-free and penniless. He has
harmed no-one directly, but also perpetrated serious criminal acts. He has realised
none of his talents, but has achieved undeniable infamy. And eventually he aspires
to the humdrum commonplace of the ordinary, a luxury his apparent need to rob has
previously always denied him.

David Barry conveys this complexity with a true lightness of touch. We never really
get to know William Sutton, however. This is not a criticism of the book, because we
are left with the impression that neither did anyone else

David Barry's Willie the Actor is a beautifully crafted fictional biography of an
enigmatic character. David the Author, David the Actor, offers an insight into the
mind of William Sutton, a criminal who immersed himself in literature, and, via
David Barry, became enshrined in it.

http://www.librosinternational.com/author_barry_david.htm




Web Site: http://www.librosinternational.com

Contact Details: Philip Spires
Publicity and Marketing
Libros International, Carrer Agro 5, La Nucai, Alicante, Spain
http://www.librosinternational.com/author_barry_david.htm
Philip Spires is Head of Publicity and Marketing for Libros International
info@philipspires.co.uk

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