Lou Castel Explained

Lou Castel
Birth Name:Ulv Quarzell
Birth Date:28 May 1943
Birth Place:Bogotá, Colombia
Nationality:Swedish
Occupation:Actor
Yearsactive:1963–present

Lou Castel (born Ulv Quarzell; 28 May 1943) is a Colombian-born Swedish actor who became internationally known through his work in Italian films,[1] in particular for his costarring role in A Bullet for the General (1967).

Life and career

The son of a Swedish father and an Irish mother, Castel was born Ulv Quarzell in Bogotá, Colombia, where his father was working as a diplomat. He and his twin brother grew up in Cartagena.[1]

When Castel was 6, his parents separated. He followed his mother to Europe and went to school in London, very briefly at Dartington Hall School with his sister Solveig, then in Stockholm. He subsequently went to live in Rome where his mother was working in the local film industry. A communist, Castel's mother also introduced her son to politics.[1]

Interested in acting from an early age, he attended the Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia, but was quickly kicked out. His first movie role was an uncredited extra in The Leopard (1963). Two years later, he gained international fame for his performance in Fists in the Pocket, in which he played the epileptic Alessandro, who murders his mother and his brother. His career in Italy included arthouse pictures, but also Spaghetti Westerns and also softcore erotica.[1] He enjoyed particular success with his starring roles in Damiano Damiani's A Bullet for the General (1967), Salvatore Samperi's Come Play with Me (1968) and Umberto Lenzi's Orgasmo (1969). He later played Jeff, the temperamental bisexual film director in the German production Beware of a Holy Whore (1971), directed by Rainer Werner Fassbinder.

While living in Italy, Castel became involved in a maoist organization, the Union of Italian Communists (Marxist–Leninist). As Italy was going through the Years of Lead period, he was eventually considered an undesirable alien. In 1972, he was deported to Sweden where he no longer had any acquaintances. For a time, he had to rely on subsidies sent to him from Italy by his organization. However, he quickly bounced back and appeared, mostly as a character actor, in various European films, directed by filmmakers such as Wim Wenders and Claude Chabrol.[1]

Castel settled in France in the early 1990s.[1] Though the quality of the films he acted in were quite disparate, ranging from arthouse films to cheap exploitation, Castel had a preference for roles that reflected his extreme leftist beliefs. He portrayed left-wing terrorists in Nada (1974), The Cassandra Crossing (1976), Could It Happen Here? (1977) and Year of the Gun (1991).

He has a son from the actress Marcella Michelangeli.[1]

A polyglot, Castel speaks a number of languages but jokes that he has no real natural mother tongue and speaks every language with an accent, except for Swedish which he no longer has opportunities to use.[1]

Selected filmography

YearTitleRoleDirectorNotes
1963Il GattopardoParty GuestLuchino ViscontiUncredited
1965Fists in the PocketAlessandroMarco Bellocchio
1966Francesco di AssisiFrancis of AssisiLiliana CavaniTV film
1967A Bullet for the GeneralBill 'Niño' TateDamiano Damiani
RequiescantRequiescantCarlo Lizzani
1968The ProtagonistsTaddeuMarcello Fondato
Come Play with MeAlviseSalvatore Samperi
GalileoFriar, Young monk of the VaticanLiliana Cavani
Cesare BorgiaOsvaldo Civirani
La prova generaleRomano Scavolini
1969OrgasmoPeter DonovanUmberto Lenzi
1970ErnestoPasquale Festa Campanile
Bocche cuciteCarmelo La MannaPino Tosini
Matalo!RayCesare Canevari
1971Beware of a Holy WhoreJeff, the directorRainer Werner Fassbinder
1972SalvatoreMarco Bellocchio
Who Killed the Prosecutor and Why?CarloGiuseppe Vari
1973The Scarlet LetterRev. DimmesdaleWim Wenders
1974NadaD'AreyClaude Chabrol
GangsterfilmenSimonLars G. Thelestam
OutputGorskiMichael Fengler
1975Faccia di spiaThe torturerGiuseppe Ferrara
1976Pure as a LilyLucianoFranco Rossi
The Cassandra CrossingSwedish terroristGeorge P. Cosmatos
Caro MicheleOsvaldoMario Monicelli
1977Change of SexDuránVicente Aranda
Pigs Have WingsMarcelloPaolo Pietrangeli
The American FriendRodolpheWim Wenders
Les Enfants du placardNicolaBenoît Jacquot
MarcoMassimo Pirri
Mr. MeanHuberto Fred Williamson
1978ViolantaSilverDaniel Schmid
Flesh ColorPsychiatristFrançois Weyergans
Killer NunPeterGiulio Berruti
1980OmbreRenatoGiorgio Cavedon
1982Gli occhi, la boccaGiovanni Pallidissimi / Pippo PallidissimiMarco Bellocchio
1984Lemaitre
Love Is the Beginning of All TerrorTraugottHelke Sander
1985Treasure IslandDoctor / FatherRaúl Ruiz
1986FrauleinAndréMichael HanekeTV film
Hôtel du ParadisTrampJana Boková
NanouItalian activistConny Templeman
1987Man on FireViolenteÉlie Chouraqui
Joseph RorretFulvio Wetzl
1989What Time Is It?FishermanEttore Scola
1991McDonaldsonFabrizio De Angelis
Year of the GunLouJohn Frankenheimer
1992Acquitted for Having Committed the DeedHartmanAlberto Sordi
1993La Naissance de l'amourPaulPhilippe Garrel
1996Irma VepJosé MiranoOlivier Assayas
1998Louise (Take 2)Louise's Father
2001ClémentFrançoisEmmanuelle Bercot
2006El CantorClovisJoseph Morder
2007Heartbeat DetectorArie NeumannNicolas Klotz
2008The End of the Light AgeJames June Schneider
2012La Lapidation de Saint EtienneÉtienne
2013Gare du NordAliClaire Simon
The NunBaron de LassonGuillaume Nicloux

References

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Télérama. Lou Castel, le comédien banni par l'Italie. 13 July 2016.