Leonard Kastle: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 02:46, 6 February 2009
Leonard Gregory Kastle (born 11 February 1929) is an opera composer, librettist, and director, though he is best known as the writer/director of The Honeymoon Killers, his only venture into the cinema, for which he did all his own research. He was educated at the Curtis Institute of Music studying under opera composer Gian Carlo Menotti and also the Juilliard School. He is an emeritus member of the SUNY Albany music faculty.
His operas include Deseret (1961), on a libretto by Anne Howard Bailey about Brigham Young, which he directed for NBC Opera Theater. He writes in a Romantic style that the music academy does not hold in high regard as something for contemporary composers to do. His favorite composer is Gustav Mahler, who was not at all respected when he was in music school.
Kastle has also written The Pariahs, about the sinking of the whaling ship Essex, a trilogy of operas about the Shakers known under the collective title The Passion of Mother Ann: A Sacred Festival Play, a children's opera called Professor Lookalike and the Children, a piano concerto, sonatas for piano and violin, and three unproduced screenplays, Wedding at Cana, Change of Heart, and Shakespeare's Dog. In a 2003 interview for the Criterion Collection, he said that no producer wanted Wedding at Cana, just another Honeymoon Killers, which he did not want to do.
After The Honeymoon Killers, Kastle returned to teaching and composing. After the Criterion release of the film, he was rediscovered by a new generation of cult film enthusiasts and occasionally attends film related events such as The Ed Wood Film Festival in 2007 where he served on the panel of judges[1]
References
- ^ EdWood update: Kastle keeps court THE MOVIEGOER by Casey Seiler, entertainment editor for TimesUnion.Com September 14, 2007