Raúl Castillo Explained

Raúl Castillo
Birth Name:Raúl Castillo Jr.
Birth Date:30 August 1977[1]
Birth Place:McAllen, Texas, U.S.[2]
Alma Mater:Boston University College of Fine Arts (CFA)[3]
Years Active:2000–present

Raúl Castillo Jr. (born August 30, 1977) is an American actor and playwright. He is known for his acting roles in Amexicano and Cold Weather and his role as Richie Donado Ventura in the HBO series Looking and its subsequent series finale television film, . He received a nomination for the Independent Spirit Award for Best Supporting Male for his performance in the film We the Animals.

His notable written plays include Border Stories and Between Me, You, and the Lampshade. His works are associated with the LAByrinth Theater Company and the Atlantic Theater Company.

Early life

Raúl Castillo Jr. was born to Raúl H. Castillo Sr. and Adela "Adelita" Rodríguez de Castillo.[3] [4] He has an older brother, Tony, and a younger sister.[2] [5] His parents are Mexican emigrants from Reynosa, Tamaulipas, Mexico,[2] [6] [7] who later moved to McAllen, Texas, where he and his siblings were raised.[4] His hometown of McAllen was 90 percent Mexican-American.[8] Living so close to the Mexico–United States border, Castillo's family would often visit family members who still lived in Reynosa, affording him an upbringing that he describes as "very much bicultural."[6] Castillo states that growing up in a border town made him feel American when he visited Mexico, but Mexican when he traveled around the United States. He explains he was "too American for Mexico, but too Mexican for the U.S."[9] He was raised Catholic.[10] His childhood nickname was "Gordo" ("fat", in Spanish), due to his weight.[11]

Castillo first became interested in acting in the third grade, after seeing his older brother in a school production of The Wizard of Oz as the Tin Woodman. His brother also was a musician who played guitar,[12] his dedication having been seen by Castillo as he would sit and play scales for hours, which inspired Castillo to use the same technique later for his own performances. He auditioned the next year for a school play, reportedly "about a mouse and a clock", but could not stop giggling during his audition and was cast instead in a non-speaking role as a guard.[5] While in sixth grade at Our Lady of Sorrows Catholic School, Castillo met and befriended future Mutemath bass guitarist Roy Mitchell-Cárdenas.[7] [13] Later, in high school, they started an underground punk-rock band called IPM (short for "Influential Phecal Material") together with their friends Nick Trevino and Robert Vleck.[7] [13] [14] [15] Mitchell-Cárdenas played drums while Castillo played bass guitar.[7] [14] [15] Before he began acting, Castillo considered pursuing a serious career as a rock musician.[16]

Castillo states that he started acting when he was 14.[15] Seeking an elective class option when entering McAllen High School, and a way to make friends, he turned to theater, which was popular at his high school.[16] He became deeply involved in the high school drama department, which he says looked "fun".[3] [15] His background playing music since age 11 made performing on stage feel natural for him.[3] [15] His first acting role was in a high school production of Paul Zindel's play The Secret Affairs of Mildred Wild.[17] Castillo also performed in his school’s production of I Remember Mama.[18] It was then, at age 14, that he met and became friends with future staff writer for Devious Maids, Girls and Looking, Tanya Saracho, who also attended McAllen High School.[7] [15] Saracho influenced Castillo greatly, introducing him to playwrights and encouraging to develop his own tastes in drama.[16] Castillo cites the 1993 film Carlito's Way as the film that "changed everything" for him.[16] He was inspired by the performances of John Leguizamo, John Ortiz, Viggo Mortensen, and Luis Guzmán in particular.[16] He even memorized some of Leguizamo's phrases and dialogue, such as "Spic-O-Rama", "Mambo Mouth", and "Freak". Castillo also found inspiration from several Hispanic artists in the media, including Miguel Piñero, and an anthology of works from the Nuyorican Poets Cafe. He looked up to several actors, such as Al Pacino and Anthony Quinn, as icons, and spent much of his time watching the film The Outsiders.

After graduating high school, Castillo went on to study playwriting as an undergraduate at Boston University College of Fine Arts, though he continued to act, and majored in theater. During his studies, Castillo felt that the most important skill he developed there was learning how to produce his own work. He would regularly put on plays during the school's student-run playwright's festival. This university offered festival gave Castillo a platform for his original work. Most of his early plays were heavy and serious, dealing with the sociopolitical and racial tensions on the border of Mexico and the United States, including a trio of one-act plays called Border Stories, about life on the Mexico–United States border in Reynosa.[19] He graduated from Boston University in 1999.[20]

Castillo viewed himself as more of a writer, despite his performing abilities. It was not until after college, while performing the lead role in a 2000 production of Santos & Santos at the Nushank Theater Collective in Austin, Texas,[21] that he felt encouraged in identifying as an actor as well. He eventually moved to New York City in 2002, which he describes as the smartest decision he made for his career.[22]

Acting career

Stage

Castillo has an extensive off-Broadway theater career.[15] Right after college, Castillo performed in Austin, Texas in a 2000 production of "Santos & Santos", loosely based on Jamiel Chagra and his brothers.[21] It was during that production that Castillo solidified his confidence in being a professional actor.[21] Castillo joined the LAByrinth Theater Company as a writer shortly after moving to New York.[15] His on-stage acting debut was with the LAByrinth Theater Company's production of José Rivera's play School of the Americas at New York's Public Theater in 2006.[15] [23] There he met actress and later co-star Sandra Oh while she was performing in the Public Theater's production of Satellites.[15] His performance as Beto in the Ensemble Studio Theatre's 2008 production of José Rivera's Flowers was described as "flawlessly nuanced" by Laura Collins-Hughes of The New York Sun.[24] In 2009, he performed in the Off-Broadway premier of Cusi Cram's A Lifetime Burning at Premiere Stages.[25] In 2012, he was cast in Goodman Theater's production of the Cándido Tirado's play Fish Men, about the Guatemalan genocide, in the lead role of Rey Reyes.[15] [26] Castillo also appeared in the 2012 BareBones production of Jesus Hopped the 'A' Train in Pittsburgh, the inaugural performance of which was directed by Philip Seymour Hoffman for the LAByrinth Theater Company.[27] He later was cast in the BareBones reading of The Way West at the Lark Theater.[28] Castillo worked with INTAR Theater, cast in the role of Ismael in the theater's 2014 production of Adoration of the Old Woman to positive reviews.[29] [30] He starred alongside Sandra Oh in the role of Gerardo in the 2014 Victory Gardens Theater production of Death and the Maiden,[15] which was well received by critics.[31] Death and the Maiden deals with the lives of a couple, a woman who has dealt with some of the atrocities that have occurred under a dictatorship.[32] Castillo describes his heavy role as a "character dealing with the bureaucracy of government, trying to look into the crimes that were committed, specifically the deaths that were committed during the dictatorship". Death and the Maiden was originally produced on Broadway with Glenn Close, Richard Dreyfuss, and Gene Hackman, but Latino actors such as Castillo felt undervalued when ethnic characters were not cast in a play by a Chilean playwright.

Film

Castillo first appeared in the 2005 short film Immaculate Perception. He acted in several other short films until his feature film debut role as Ignacio in the 2007 independent film, Amexicano. The film was screened at the 2007 Tribeca Film Festival and won the Jury Award for producer/director Matthew Bonifacio in the category of Narrative Film at the 2007 Sonoma Valley Film Festival.[33] The film was released theatrically in 2008. He continued to appear in short films and independent films, such as My Best Day, and Bless Me, Ultima. His role in the 2011 independent film Cold Weather garnered favorable reviews and praise from critic Roger Ebert.[34] His performance as Hector in the 2012 Student Academy Award-winning short film Narcocorrido earned him an Honorable Mention for Performance at AFI Fest 2012. His performance was praised as a "penetrating lead performance that conveys a sense of loss that leaves a lasting mark on the audience.”[35] In 2019, Castillo starred in the independent film El Chicano, drawing praise from The Hollywood Reporter, which noted that his "charismatic performance in the lead role carries much of the film's weight".[36]

Television

During his acting career, Castillo has appeared in various TV roles, including shows such as Nurse Jackie, Blue Bloods,[10] and Law & Order. He was cast in the lead role of the action-comedy web series The Trainee and also appeared in the web series East WillyB in a recurring role as Edgar.

In 2014, Castillo was cast in the HBO series Looking as Ricardo "Richie" Donado Ventura,[17] [37] the love interest of main character Patrick, played by Jonathan Groff. HBO describes Looking as a "look as the unfiltered experiences of close friends searching for happiness and intimacy in an age of unparalleled choice".[38] Castillo had previously worked with series creator Michael Lannan as the character Richie in the 2011 short film "Lorimer", upon which Lannan based the pilot episode of Looking.[2] [15] Lannan initially reached out to Castillo to participate in Lorimer after seeing his performance in Cold Weather.[15] He contacted Castillo again in 2012 to audition for the Looking pilot.[17] Castillo went through several auditions for both the part of Agustín and Richie, initially being passed on, before being offered the recurring role on the show.[15] To research his role as Richie, Castillo watched Looking executive producer Andrew Haigh's 2011 film Weekend.[39] His performance as Richie Donado was universally hailed as a break out role in the series.[39] [40] Critics particularly noted Castillo's portrayal of an openly gay Mexican-American man as a rare representation of the Latino-American community on television.[2] [40]

Castillo describes his role in Looking as important to the LGBTQ and Latino community. In an interview with Backstage, Castillo states "Especially being a straight guy, I wanted to honor this character. And even though it wasn't representing the entire community—this was one story—I knew there would be a lot of expectations. I know, having done projects around the Latino community, that there were going to be a lot of people paying attention." He told Out magazine that he hopes that his character on the show will both enlighten and educate straight audiences, as well as shed light on some of the experiences of the gay Latino community. Castillo and his character Richie gained a large social media following, using the hashtag #TeamRichie.[41] In the show's second season, Castillo was added as a regular cast member alongside co-stars Groff, Frankie J. Álvarez, Murray Bartlett, Lauren Weedman, and Russell Tovey.[42] Due to poor ratings, however, HBO decided to cancel Looking after its second season. HBO decided in lieu of a third season, Looking would end with a final full-length movie.

In 2015, Castillo appeared as Eduardo Flamingo, the emotionless, unfeeling villain on Fox Broadcasting Company's drama series Gotham.[43]

Playwriting

Castillo has long been interested in playwriting, studying it in college and initially viewing himself as more of a playwright than an actor.[7] [17] During college, Castillo regularly wrote plays for student-run playwright's festivals.[5] One of his college plays to be produced at the student festival was a trio of one-act plays called Border Stories, about life on the U.S.-Mexican border in Reynosa.[19] After moving to New York, he initially joined the LAByrinth Theater Company as a writer before also becoming an actor, and he remains a resident writer for LAByrinth.[39] Castillo's play, Knives and Other Sharp Objects, about class, race, and assimilation in South Texas, debuted at the Public Theater as part of LAByrinth's works in development in 2009.[39] The play received moderate reviews.[44] [45] [46] [47] His play Between You, Me, and the Lampshade was developed at the Atlantic Theater Company and is set to premiere in 2015 with the Chicago-based Teatro Vista, the largest Latino Equity theater company in Illinois, at the Richard Christiansen Theater at the Victory Gardens Biograph Theatre.[5] [42] [48] Raul Castillo's dark comedy Between You, Me and the Lampshade explores a family's life on the U.S.-Mexico border.

Accolades

In 2012, Castillo was awarded an AFI Honorable Mention in Performance for his lead role in Narcocorrido.[35] Raul Castillo won a special mention at the Ashland Independent Film Festival in 2012 for his role in My Best Day.[49] In 2014, the National Association of Latino Independent Producers presented Castillo with the Lupe Award – named after the late, pioneering Latina actress Lupe Ontiveros – in recognition of his breakout performance in Looking.[15] His is the second actor to be awarded the Lupe Award since its creation.[15] He also won Best Performance - Comedy at the NAMIC Vision Awards for his performance in Looking. He has been nominated several times for his supporting role as Richie in Looking, including at the 2016 NAMIC Vision Awards and the 2015 and 2016 Imagen Foundation Awards. In November 2016 he received a Film Independent Spirit Awards nomination for Best Supporting Actor for his role in We the Animals.

Personal life

Despite having a bicultural upbringing, Castillo stated that he always felt American growing up, and that he and his siblings were considered "gringos" when they visited Mexico.[2] He identifies as Mexican-American.[39] Castillo describes his childhood as sheltered from racism and racial dynamics in the US due to McAllen's high Hispanic and Latino population. When Castillo moved to Boston to study acting, it was his first time experiencing life as an ethnic minority.[2] [17]

Castillo is very close with his family.[7] Though he was raised Catholic, he describes himself currently as "not as religiously involved."[10] He describes his parents as "old school and traditional, [but] very open-minded."[2] Before shooting the pilot for Looking, Castillo wrote a letter to his family to explain the part and make them aware of the more explicit aspects of the show. His family was supportive of his role.[2] [15]

His sister is an accountant and is married to chef and restaurateur Omar Rodriguez.[2] [11]

Although his role as Richie Ventura in Looking has garnered Castillo popularity among gay viewers, he is heterosexual. As of 2016, he was in a relationship. He resides in Hell's Kitchen, Manhattan.

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
2005Immaculate PerceptionJoséShort film
TadpolesThe ManShort film
2007Rick Del ValleShort film
AmexicanoIgnacio
2008Paraíso TravelCarlos
Arroyo SecoVideo short
2009Don't Let Me DrownAlex
2010Cold WeatherCarlos
Gareeb Narwaz's TaxiMannyShort film
2011LorimerRichieShort film
NarcocorridoHéctor / Lázaro De YumaShort film
2012HatedTrain passenger
My Best DayNeil
Local TouristsSalShort film
Kiss MeKid VargasShort film
  1. ImHere – THE CALL
RafShort film
2013Bless Me, UltimaAndrew
2015SweetsLincoln
Staring in the SunSonny
2016Special CorrespondentsDomingo
2017PermissionHeron
2018We the AnimalsPaps
UnsaneJacob
2019El ChicanoDiego / Pedro
Knives OutCop
2021Little FishBen
Wrath of ManSam
Army of the DeadMikey Guzman
The Same StormNurse Joey
Night TeethJay Perez
Mother/AndroidArthur
2022Cha Cha Real SmoothJoseph
HustleOscar
The InspectionRosales
2023CassandroGerardo
2024BreatheMicah
Smile 2Filming

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
2009Nurse JackieJosephEpisode: "Nose Bleed"
Law & OrderEddy BlancoEpisode: "Boy Gone Astray"
All My ChildrenCarlos1 episode
DamagesCopEpisode: "Drive It Through Hardcore"
2011The TraineeHenry Howell / The Trainee3 episodes
2011–2013East WillyBEdgar3 episodes
2012Border AgentTV film
2013Murder in ManhattanNelsonTV film
Blue BloodsRaulEpisode: "No Regrets"
2014–2015LookingRichie Donado Ventura14 episodes
2015GothamEduardo Flamingo / The FlamingoEpisode: "Rise of the Villains: A Bitter Pill to Swallow"
2016Richie Donado VenturaTV film
EasyBernardo "Bernie"Episode: "Controlada"
2017RiverdaleOscar Castillo Episode: "Chapter Five: Heart of Darkness"
2017–2018AtypicalNickRecurring; 10 episodes
2018Seven SecondsFelix OsorioRegular; 10 episodes
2019VidaBacoRecurring; 4 episodes
2023Class of '09AmosMain cast[50]
American Horror StoriesTobyEpisode: "Organ"
Untitled task force projectCliffUpcoming miniseries[51]

Stage

YearTitleRoleNotes
2000Santos & SantosTomásNushank Theater Collective
2006School of the AmericasFirst Army RangerThe Public Theater with LAByrinth Theater Company
2008FlowersBetoEnsemble Studio Theatre
2009A Lifetime BurningAlejandroPrimary Stages Theater[52]
References to Salvador Dalí Make Me HotBenitoNew School for Drama Theater with ABroad Studio Company[53]
2012Fish MenRey ReyesGoodman Theater
Jesus Hopped the 'A' TrainAngel CruzNew Hazlett Theater
The Way WestLark Theater
2013ContigoTigoThe Pershing Square Signature Center[54] [55]
2014Adoration of the Old WomanIsmaelINTAR Theater
Death and the MaidenGerardo EscobarVictory Gardens Theater

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hometown Hollywood Update: Raúl Castillo. Smith. Amy Nichol. January 3, 2014. The Monitor. January 21, 2015.
  2. Web site: Catching Up With Raúl Castillo, Looking's Richie. Steinbach. Jesse. January 27, 2014. Out. January 21, 2015.
  3. Web site: McHi grad studies with Philip Seymour Hoffman. Gonzalez. Sandra. October 20, 2008. The Monitor. January 25, 2015.
  4. Web site: Raul Castillo Eats Out. More!. Juanita. January 7, 2015. JuanitaMore.Wordpress. January 23, 2015.
  5. Web site: 'Act where you can, when you can' – A Conversation with HBO's Raúl Castillo. Peterpaul. Robert. January 14, 2015. NYCasting.com. January 24, 2015. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20150217045542/http://www.nycastings.com/dmxreadyv2/blogmanager/v3_blogmanager.asp?post=actwhereyoucan. February 17, 2015.
  6. Web site: 'Looking's' Raul Castillo talks season finale: 'I was proud of Richie'. Villarreal. Yvonne. March 10, 2014. Los Angeles Times. January 23, 2015.
  7. Web site: Interview: Raul Castillo, Fish Men at the Goodman Theater. April 27, 2012. Gozamos.com. January 25, 2015. February 19, 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190219130106/https://gozamos.com/2012/04/interview-raul-castillo-fish-men-at-the-goodman-theater/. dead.
  8. News: Straight Actor Raúl Castillo Plays Richie on Looking: He Talks About the New HBO Series. January 27, 2014. May 1, 2017. en.
  9. News: Raúl Castillo, Star of 'Looking,' Settles In to His New Role: Heartthrob. Schulman. Michael. July 15, 2016. The New York Times. May 1, 2017. 0362-4331.
  10. Web site: Interview: Raul Castillo of Bless Me, Ultima. Rodriguez. Madeline. March 28, 2013. Gozamos.com. January 25, 2015.
  11. Web site: 'Looking' Star Raul Castillo Eats Out SF Drag Icon Juanita More. Preston. Dominic. January 7, 2015. Frontiers Media. January 23, 2015. June 24, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160624014804/https://www.frontiersmedia.com/frontiers-blog/2015/01/07/looking-star-raul-castillo-eats-sf-drag-icon-juanita/. dead.
  12. News: Stop 'Looking'—Raúl Castillo Is Your New Breakout Star. Backstage.com. May 1, 2017.
  13. Web site: Update: Watch McAllen rocker on David Letterman. Gonzalez. Sandra. August 27, 2009. The Monitor. January 28, 2015.
  14. Web site: View Photos: Valley's brightest rock star returns home to help young musicians. Garcia. Brandon R.. July 12, 2013. The Monitor. January 25, 2015.
  15. Web site: Raul Castillo's 'Maiden' voyage. Nunn. Jerry. August 7, 2014. Windy City Times. January 25, 2015.
  16. Web site: Raul Castillo on Diversity in New HBO Series: 'Looking' Holds It Down For People of Color. Erazo. Vanessa. January 29, 2014. Remezcla.com. January 25, 2015.
  17. A look at HBO's 'Looking' with Raúl Castillo. Castillo. Raúl. Raúl Castillo. Janet Mock. So Popular!. msnbc. New York. January 30, 2015.
  18. News: Looking Star Raul Castillo: 5 Things You Should Know. March 22, 2015. PEOPLE.com. May 1, 2017. en-US.
  19. Web site: BU students compete for a chance at national theater festival. January 29, 1999. Boston University Bridge. January 25, 2015.
  20. Web site: BU Howard Thurman Center for Common Ground Speakers. Boston University. January 25, 2015. March 12, 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190312043415/http://www.bu.edu/thurman/programs/events/speakers/. dead.
  21. Web site: Exhibitionism – Local Arts Review – Santos & Santos: Crime Family. Garza. Mary Jane. December 1, 2000. The Austin Chronicle. January 26, 2015.
  22. Web site: Raúl Castillo Q&A: On Looking For and Finding Love. Bellman. Sarah. January 18, 2014. WhoSay.com. January 23, 2015.
  23. Web site: Review: 'School of the Americas'. Rooney. David. July 6, 2006. Variety. January 25, 2015.
  24. Web site: A Dazzling Finish to EST's Marathon. Collins-Hughes. Laura. June 10, 2008. The New York Sun. January 26, 2015.
  25. Web site: Westfeldt, Kirk, Keating, Castillo to Star in Premiere of Cram's A Lifetime Burning in NYC. Jones. Kenneth. June 22, 2009. Playbill. January 25, 2015.
  26. Web site: Playing the Part of a Survivor: Raúl Castillo. Knight. Andrew. April 27, 2012. GoodmanTheater.org. January 21, 2015.
  27. Web site: barebones productions launches 2012 with prison drama 'Jesus Hopped the A Train'. Eberson. Sharon. January 5, 2012. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. January 25, 2015.
  28. Web site: Reading of Mona Mansour's The Way West to Feature Gayle Rankin and Deirdre O'Connell. Hetrick. Adam. October 18, 2012. Playbill. January 25, 2015.
  29. Web site: Torn Between Two Lands, and Two Suitors. La Rocco. Claudia. March 24, 2014. The New York Times. January 25, 2015.
  30. Web site: First Look: Looking's Raúl Castillo in Adoration of the Old Woman. Voss. Brandon. March 19, 2014. The Advocate. January 25, 2015.
  31. Death and the Maiden (2014). Clark. Jason. June 23, 2014. Entertainment Weekly. January 25, 2015.
  32. Web site: Raul Castillo's 'Maiden' voyage - Gay Lesbian Bi Trans News Archive - Windy City Times. Windy City Times. 8 July 2014 . May 1, 2017.
  33. Web site: Independent Film Showing – "Amexicano". CountryLineMagazine.com. January 25, 2015.
  34. Web site: Cold Weather (2011). Ebert. Roger. March 10, 2011. RogerEbert.com. January 25, 2015.
  35. Web site: Denmark's 'A Royal Affair' Takes Audience Prize at AFI Fest. November 8, 2012. The Hollywood Reporter. February 2, 2015.
  36. News: 'El Chicano': Film Review. The Hollywood Reporter. Frank. Scheck. May 1, 2019. May 2, 2019.
  37. Web site: Q&A with Raúl Castillo. Answers.com. February 18, 2015. March 4, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304032903/http://www.answers.com/raulcastillo. dead.
  38. Web site: HBO: Looking: Raúl Castillo: Bio. HBO. en. May 1, 2017.
  39. Web site: Sex, Race and Class: Actor Raul Castillo from HBO's 'Looking'. Rivero. Tanya. January 14, 2015. The Wall Street Journal. January 23, 2015.
  40. Web site: 'Looking's' Raul Castillo Talks Sex Scenes, Richie and Patrick's Future. Goldberg. Lesley. January 9, 2015. The Hollywood Reporter. January 23, 2015.
  41. News: Raúl Castillo Doesn't Let Being Gay, Latino Define His Character on HBO's 'Looking'. Fusion. May 1, 2017. en-US.
  42. Web site: Raul Castillo Teases What's to Come for Patrick & Richie on "Looking," Talks Sex Scenes. Johnson. John P.. January 19, 2015. TooFab.com. January 23, 2015.
  43. Web site: McMillan . Graeme . November 16, 2015 . 'Gotham' Actor Breaks Down Flamingo's Introduction: "There's No Fear Inside Him" . September 9, 2022 . The Hollywood Reporter . en-US.
  44. Web site: Theater Review - 'Knives And Other Sharp Objects': Be Kind to That Stranger and Lend Him Your Dress. Zinoman. Jason. April 16, 2009. The New York Times. January 25, 2015.
  45. Web site: Review: 'Knives and Other Sharp Objects'. Thielman. Sam. April 13, 2009. Variety. January 25, 2015.
  46. Web site: Knives and Other Sharp Objects. Murray. Matthew. April 12, 2009. TalkinBroadway.com. January 25, 2015.
  47. Web site: Knives and Other Sharp Objects. Sommer. Elyse. April 10, 2009. CurtainsUp.com. January 25, 2015.
  48. Web site: Atlantic Theater Company's Latino Mixfest, with Works by Raul Castillo & More, to Run 6/12-27. May 16, 2014. BroadwayWorld.com. January 24, 2015.
  49. Web site: Raúl Castillo. IMDb. May 1, 2017.
  50. Web site: 'Class of '09': Raúl Castillo, Jake McDorman, Sepideh Moafi, Brian J. Smith Among 7 Cast In FX Limited Series. Deadline Hollywood. Rosy. Cordero. Denise. Petski. November 10, 2021. February 9, 2022.
  51. Web site: Raúl Castillo, Jamie McShane & Sam Keeley Join HBO’s Brad Ingelsby Series. Deadline Hollywood. Rosy. Cordero. December 18, 2023. March 12, 2024.
  52. Web site: A Memoir So Compelling It Just Has to Be Phony. Isherwood. Charles. August 12, 2009. The New York Times. January 25, 2015.
  53. Web site: References to Salvador Dalí Make Me Hot Heats Up Stag at New School for Drama, July 10–19. June 25, 2009. NewSchool.edu. January 25, 2015.
  54. Web site: INTAR Extends Adoration Of The Old Woman with Looking's Raul Castillo Through 4/27. April 10, 2014. BroadwayWorld.com. January 25, 2015.
  55. Web site: Contigo Copy. Bennet. Ali Skye. AliSkyeBennet.com. January 25, 2015.