Rafael Barba

Rafael Barba
Law & Order character
First appearance "Twenty-Five Acts"
Portrayed by Raúl Esparza
Time on show 2012–present
Seasons 14, 15, 16, 17, 18
Credited appearances 86 episodes (total)
Preceded by Alexandra Cabot
Casey Novak

Rafael Barba is a fictional character portrayed by Raúl Esparza, who joined the cast of the long-running NBC crime drama series Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, during the 14th season episode "Twenty-Five Acts". The character was promoted to a series regular for the 15th season.

Character overview

Assistant District Attorney Rafael Barba transfers from the Brooklyn District Attorney's office, to Manhattan, after requesting a lateral move. Barba is brought in to work with the Special Victims Unit at the behest of temporary SVU captain, Steven Harris (Adam Baldwin), due to the aftermath of the Delia Wilson case which saw members of the District Attorney's office "lawyer up". He is an aggressive, often ruthless prosecutor, who puts pressure on not only the detectives, but also the victims and witnesses, in order to achieve outcomes.[1]

Character within SVU

In his first case with the Special Victims Unit, he prosecutes a rape similar to a best selling erotic novel Twenty-Five Acts by Jocelyn Paley (Anna Chlumsky), who is the rape victim. Barba tells the detectives to uncover anything and everything about Paley and her attacker. After rushing to put Paley on the stand to testify, Barba and the detectives discover that Paley did not write the book, which forces Barba to get creative with the trial. Barba taunts the defendant with a belt tied around his neck, resulting in him lashing out and choking Barba from behind the way he did to the victims. After this, the jury finds the defendant guilty.[2]

Barba goes head to head with the Suffolk County District Attorney, Pam James (Jane Kaczmarek), in the episode "Beautiful Frame", after a Manhattan rape victim is charged with the murder of her ex-boyfriend in Suffolk County. Detective Benson questions the charges against the woman and gathers enough evidence for Barba to put another man on trial for the same murder, as Barba and James race to get a conviction before the other. Barba and the SVU detectives uncover a scandal within the Suffolk County DA's office, as one of James' investigators set the young woman up for the murder. Barba offers to spare James' office of more embarrassment as long as the investigator is convicted for the murder in Suffolk County.[3]

In the episode, "Funny Valentine", Barba and the detectives have a tough time convincing pop star Micha Green (Tiffany Robinson) to testify against her abusive boyfriend, hip-hop artist Caleb Bryant (Eugene Jones). After a shooting that kills her manager with Bryant as a suspect, Barba and Detective Olivia Benson (Mariska Hargitay) convince Green to testify in the grand jury. But when she finally takes the stand, she tells Barba that her boyfriend was not at the scene and instead says Barba and Benson put those words in her mouth. After Bryant escapes prosecution, the couple flees on a vacation, where Bryant ultimately beats Green to death.[4]

Towards the end of the fourteenth season, Barba becomes close with the squad, and they rely on his legal advice on many of their assigned cases. In the episode "Undercover Blue", Benson goes to Barba in an attempt to provide evidence that could potentially clear Detective Brian Cassidy (Dean Winters) of rape. Barba already had the evidence and, although he was not prosecuting the case, keeps a close eye on the trial.[5] In the season finale, "Her Negotiation", Detective Amanda Rollins (Kelli Giddish) calls Barba in to the precinct on a weekend for a class-B misdemeanor because she believes that the offender, William Lewis (Pablo Schreiber), is more dangerous than the charges. It turns out that Lewis is a serial rapist and murderer, and Barba makes an unsuccessful attempt to convict him.[6] In the Season 15 episode "Psycho/Therapist", Barba tries Lewis once again, this time for several rape/murders and for kidnapping Benson. The case becomes complicated when Lewis opts to represent himself in order to further torment Benson. Barba is able to convict Lewis on most of the charges, but not of attempting to rape Benson.<ref name"Psycho/Therapist">"Psycho/Therapist". Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. Season 15. Episode 10. January 8, 2014. NBC. </ref>

In the Season 15 episode "October Surprise", SVU pursues Barba's childhood friend Alex Muñoz (Vincent Laresca), a frontrunner for the mayor of New York City, for indecent exposure and possession of child pornography. Although Barba is initially reluctant to aid in the investigation, he becomes more focused on doing the right thing when it becomes clear that Muñoz is guilty. Barba gives Muñoz the opportunity to "get ahead of it" by alerting him to severity of the charges, which irritates the detectives, particularly Detective Nick Amaro (Danny Pino). Barba is ultimately forced to bring charges against Muñoz, despite repeated warnings and threats from Muñoz, his manager, and Munoz's wife, who happens to have had a relationship with Barba. A handful of details regarding Barba's early life was also revealed in "October Surprise"; it is mentioned there that he grew up in the Bronx and attended Harvard University on a scholarship.

The series also provides a few details about Barba's family. He had a difficult relationship with his father; he says that the elder Barba "has been dead 15 years, and my hand still curls into a fist whenever I think of him."[7] He and his mother, Lucia (Mercedes Ruehl), take care of Barba's grandmother Catalina (Anne Betancourt). When Catalina can no longer take care of herself, Barba tries to have her moved to a retirement community against her will, rather than have Lucia leave her job as the principal of a charter school to take care of her. When Catalina dies of a heart attack shortly before the move, Barba blames himself.[2]

In the seventeenth season, ADA Barba is relentless in getting perpetrators behind bars and in "Intersecting Lives," Barba goes after Riker's correctional officer Gary Munson (Brad Garrett), who was raping female inmates. As Barba brings charges against him, the entire prison guard system turns against him, feeling that Barba's office rushed to charge their fellow officer based on inmate lies. Barba is ominously threatened in the courthouse elevator and on the steps outside following a press conference. In the following episode, "Heartfelt Passages," Barba reveals he has been receiving threats even before the Munson case; Detectives Carisi and Rollins proceed to help Barba identify them and assign him a security detail.

Development

I don't think there's anything nice about [ADA Rafael] Barba. He's kind of an a--hole, but I love him ... And that's OK. He's fundamentally a good person and gets the job done.

Raúl Esparza on Barba's character.[8]

Raúl Esparza was approached by Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Executive Producer Warren Leight to appear in the series as an Assistant District Attorney. Leight had previously worked with Esparza in the 2012 Broadway production Leap of Faith and Leight insisted on writing a character for Esparza that would complement his acting strengths, "because he wanted to keep working together". He initially had reservations on accepting the role, as he didn't believe that it would satisfy his onstage work and that acting required a different set of skills. However, Esparza believed the role would offer him "recovery" time from the Leap of Faith Broadway production, which "fell apart". He signed up for the role, as "it was the best time to step away from a place where my heart was broken."[8][9]

Prior to being cast as Barba in SVU, Esparza appeared in a 2009 episode of Law & Order: Criminal Intent, in which he portrayed an ADA who had a dirty secret,[10] and a 2010 episode of Law & Order,[11] in which he portrayed a less-than-honorable journalist.[12]

On July 12, 2013, it was announced that Esparza would join the main cast as Barba, in the series' fifteenth season.[13] On the promotion, Leight expressed, "Making him [Esparza] a series regular is a small way of acknowledging his enormous contribution to our show". Barba is the first regular ADA on the series, since Alexandra Cabot (Stephanie March) in the eleventh season and the first male.[14]

Reception

The New Yorker television critic Emily Nussbaum praised Esparza's portrayal of the character, stating that, "[Esparza] is a major asset as the dandyish A.D.A. Rafael Barba."[15] According to AM New York newspaper, Esparza is "most familiar to TV viewers as Manhattan Assistant District Attorney Rafael Barba on 'Law & Order: SVU.'"[16]

According to Esparza, Barba's "flashy, high-fashion suits ... and snappy suspenders" are popular online, with Kate Stanhope of TV Guide, adding that the character's "designer duds have been a hit with fans."[8]

Credits

Esparza has been credited in 86 episodes of SVU (appearing in 62) as Barba.[17]

Seasons Years Episodes
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
14 2012–13
15 2013–14 × × × × × × × × × ×
16 2014–15 × × × × × × ×
17 2015–16 × × × × × ×
18 2016–17
Seasons Years 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
Episodes

  Regular cast

× Regular cast + no appearance

  Recurring cast

  No credit + no appearance

  No episode

References

  1. "Twenty–Five Acts". Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. Season 14. Episode 3. October 10, 2012. NBC.
  2. 1 2 "December Solstice". Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. Season 16. Episode 16. February 25, 2015. NBC.
  3. "Beautiful Frame". Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. Season 14. Episode 11. January 9, 2013. NBC.
  4. "Funny Valentine". Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. Season 14. Episode 16. February 27, 2013. NBC.
  5. "Undercover Blue". Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. Season 14. Episode 17. March 20, 2013. NBC.
  6. "Her Negotiation". Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. Season 14. Episode 24. May 22, 2013. NBC.
  7. "Padre Sandunguero". Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. Season 16. Episode 12. January 21, 2015. NBC.
  8. 1 2 3 Stanhope, Kate (January 30, 2013). "Law & Order: SVU's Raul Esparza: There's Nothing Nice About ADA Barba". TV Guide. Retrieved June 24, 2013.
  9. Cutler, Jacqueline (November 21, 2012). "'Law & Order: SVU's' Raul Esparza: 'I have been part of critically acclaimed glories'". Zap2it. Retrieved June 24, 2013.
  10. "Lady's Man". Law & Order: Criminal Intent. Season 8. Episode 11. June 28, 2009. NBC.
  11. "Blackmail". Law & Order. Season 20. Episode 12. January 15, 2010. NBC.
  12. Gans, Andrew (October 3, 2012). "Raúl Esparza Lands Recurring Role on NBC's "Law & Order: SVU"". Playbill. Retrieved June 24, 2013.
  13. "Justin Hartley Joins ABC's 'Revenge', Raul Esparza Upped To Regular On 'Law & Order: SVU'". Deadline. Retrieved July 17, 2013.
  14. "Law & Order: SVU Promotes Raul Esparza to Series Regular for Season 15". TV Guide. Retrieved July 17, 2013.
  15. Nussbaum, Emily (June 10, 2013). "The pulp appeal of "Law & Order: SVU."". The New Yorker. Retrieved June 24, 2013.
  16. Feeney, Sheila (June 10, 2013). "Stage veteran Raul Esparza embraces the role of the bad guy on screen". AM New York. Retrieved June 24, 2013.
  17. Rafael Barba — IMDb
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