Baltimore Sun

Barry Walter Moore

Retired Towson University professor who chaired the department of electronic media and film dies at 76

- By Jacques Kelly

Barry Walter Moore, a retired Towson University professor who had been chair of the department of electronic media and film, died of complicati­ons from chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease April 26 at the University of Maryland St. Joseph Medical Center. The Towson and Loch Raven Village resident was 76.

Born in Philadelph­ia, he was the son of Benjamin Moore, an engineerin­g designer, and Esther Smith, a homemaker. He was a 1964 graduate of Springfiel­d High School and earned a bachelor’s degree in history, a master’s degree in American studies at Penn State University and a doctorate in film studies at the University of Michigan.

While in Ann Arbor, he met his future wife, Colleen Mazur. They married in 1977.

A year later they moved to Baltimore’s Bolton Hill, where Mr. Moore started his career as a professor of film studies at what was then called Towson State University.

“Over the next 30 years, he saw the university grow, and with it, he led the expansion of the film program to become chairperso­n of the newly formed department of electronic media and film,” said his son, Ian Moore.

“Barry was a principal architect of creating the department,” said a university colleague, Michael Angelella. “He taught students who went on to become noted film profession­als. He inspired a student, Mike Flanagan, who went on to be a successful film director [“Dr. Sleep” and “Gerald’s Game”] and Shelly Strong, a film producer. In my view, his role at our institutio­n was legendary.

“In this landscape of academia, he studied management and had a proactive, take charge mentality. He ruffled feathers and he got things done. Our department became bigger, stronger faster.”

Said Ian Moore: “My father’s dedication to his students and his love of teaching were evident to everyone who knew him. He was known for his passion for film and his ability to make even the most complex creative concepts accessible to his students.”

His son said Mr. Moore “did not like the pomp and circumstan­ce associated with academia.”

“My father was an accomplish­ed amateur photograph­er and a lover of Bob Dylan, Los Angeles, film noir and hard-boiled detective novels by Raymond Chandler and James Ellroy,” Ian Moore said. “He was known for his coffee and cigarette addictions. He quit smoking cold turkey upon being diagnosed withCOPDin­2017.“My father had a passion for street photograph­y, often venturing into areas of Baltimore to capture the faces of its people there. He was interested in the daily lives of those in the vicinity of the [2015] Freddie Gray incident. He empathized with the unhoused and with people from different walks of life from his.”

Another Towson University colleague, Peter Lev, said: “We often visited the Baltimore Museum of Art together. He thought the [American artist Richard] Diebenkorn exhibit was excellent and went twice. He had 6,000 photograph­s of the eccentric personalit­ies he’d meet on the street on his computer.

“Barry liked folk rock music and was responsibl­e for changes in programmin­g at the Towson radio station, WTMD. He was involved in making it more community-based with an alternativ­e rock format,” Mr. Lev said.

“He was in seventh heaven when Bob Dylan won the Nobel Prize [in 2016],” Mr. Lev added.

Mr. Moore was a cat fancier who had an affection for his pet, Warren.

“My father was the only one Warren loved,” his son said.

A celebratio­n of his life is being planned for June at Towson University.

Survivors include his son, Ian Moore of Fall City, Washington, and two grandchild­ren. His wife, Colleen Mazur Moore, a music columnist for magazines and assistant at Stoneleigh Elementary School, died in 2014.

 ?? COURTESY ?? Barry Walter Moore was an amateur photograph­er and loved detective novels and Los Angeles.
COURTESY Barry Walter Moore was an amateur photograph­er and loved detective novels and Los Angeles.

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