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Savior Behavior

Published 7:00 am Friday, September 14, 2007

Savior Behavior

As the battle lines draw ever more heated between the faithful (from Christian crusaders to Islamic Jihadists) and the faithless (obnoxious atheists like Richard Dawkins and pro-war, anti-God Christopher Hitchens), one yearns for some middle ground, some good-humored analysis of religious belief, even if it’s of the wacky kind. That’s a good reason to check out Barry Smith’s solo show Jesus in Montana, which arrives in Seattle with a long tail of critical raves from fringe theater festivals across the U.S. and Canada. The Aspen-based writer-performer has a different perspective on the appeal of religious belief, as this autobiographical story demonstrates. Like a lot of earnest young people, he went looking for Jesus; unlike most of them, he met him, or at least a guy who claimed to be him, in the great state of Montana. He even lived in his basement for a while, and devoted himself to a series of very strange beliefs and behaviors. After three years of this, Smith moved on, and his comic musings, a portrait of the artist as a young religious nut, are reputed to be as funny as they are thoughtful.

Fri., Sept. 21, 8 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 22, 8 p.m., 2007