The Atlanta Lawyer October 2013 | Page 17

a courthouse line Remembering The Honorable Rowland Barnes By Claudia Barnes [email protected] "Well, I've done it again, my love......signed us up for something to add to our busy schedules." Love and laughter were a daily mainstay in our lives, and the Bard plays were an extra special and added bonus. Rowland used to say that he was chosen to play the unwanted and often crazy roles to either make the best of them or help him be the clown in the play. I never knew just what he might get me involved in, but things always turned out fine. Being the only non-lawyer in the group, I always wondered if I would be "accepted" or just tolerated. I am grateful not only for the opportunity to have been in six former Bard shows, but also to be a part of the show again this year, and to know (as well as to make new friends with) some of the best attorneys and citizens Atlanta has to offer. Finally, I experience daily reminders of the fun that we always had. For some reason, Rowland had a thing with lights. Since his death I have been left in the dark at humorous times; had to explain why the light was going crazy at one of our Bard caroling events; tell why the clock in the practice room during rehearsal of '70's songs would work correctly, then go round and round in BOTH directions only to be normal when we left the room; and why my piano music box played the "Old and Wise" song one night during his trial when it had not been wound. I am guessing Rowland has been dancing and singing with me. "Thanks for the memories." Claudia Barnes Rowland and I rode to work together whenever possible. When we were preparing for an upcoming show, we would go over our parts and sing the songs on the way to work. They were our silly antics on road trips -- it was fun to add what we thought would have been fun to see happen. We shopped for prop items and clothes together, and when he bought a ridiculous suit for his Band of Brothers skit, he had the clerk in stitches as he tried to explain to her he would not be wearing it on the street, that it was for a play, and then went on to dance his part - lick his finger and touch his hip (imagine putting out a fire). Encountering some of the attorneys in court after a show was classic. When Ed Garland came before him on a m a t t e r, R o w l a n d made a statement that ended with the question, "What do you say, Mr. Garland?" The response was "True, true....", one of Ed's lines in the play. The Official News Publication of the Atlanta Bar Association October 2013 THE ATLANTA LAWYER 17