reviews
'The audience favorite seemed to be the deadpanned 60something Remi Barron, who plays an instinctively perverted butler at Dunelawn and a hilarious dipsomaniacal patient at Ravenswood.'- KQED
Bad Habits is a fun show and the acting is effective
overall. Remi Barron as Otto and Mr. Ponce gives wonderful
characterizations of the masseur and the alcoholic.
- Talkin' Broadway, Richard Connema (August 22, 2008)
There is one exception: Remi Barron. Mr. Barron shines first as Otto, the German butler who happily doles out rubdowns, and later as Mr. Ponce, a twitching alcoholic. Barron perfects the self-deprecating silliness both parts demand.
- SFStation, Jessica Moskowitz (Aug 15, 2008)
The performance was wonderful...my friend and I could not stop laughing! We especially enjoyed the roles that were performed by Remi Barron. That man is hysterically funny. My friend absolutely loved the part when the doctor in the second scene did that mumbling thing. What a way to end the play.
- Allyson
Remi Barron gets lots of laughs as the advice-offering mature amour.
- San Francisco Bay Times
'Remi Barron is quiet and gentle as a churchmouse as frail Mr. Abramson, his every utterance nearly breathless with wonder and bewilderment'.
- East Bay Express
'Remi Barron as Grumio plays the perfect Fool. He observes from the perimeter, and intervenes through subtle asides. Barron sounds as though he has gravel in his throat, and looks like a seedy character one might meet down at the docks On the Waterfront. There is a blunt subtlety in his delivery of lines, and this very oxymoron makes him a most intriguing Fool.'
- The Shakespeare Revue
'This is Tom Sepenzis, a graduate MPT student at the Academy of Art. I worked with with Remi on my thesis film (The Shroud) in which he played a priest. My only regret is that I did not cast him in a larger role as he was one of the strongest actors on my film. He is able to communicate extremely nuanced emotions and conveys sincerity and truth that is rare within the acting community. His voice is phenomenal. I can not endorse him enough.'
- Tom Sepenzis