Castulo Guerra
- Actor
An actor with an international flair and a distinguished voice, Cástulo
Guerra was born in Córdoba, Argentina, August 24, 1945, to Cástulo
Guerra and María Sola, and was nicknamed Pericles by medical students
at the pension where they lived. He grew up in pre-Andean Salta in
northern Argentina. In 1961, while attending high school at the Colegio
Nacional, he became dazzled with film while watching
Taras Bulba (1962) with
Yul Brynner and
Tony Curtis being shot on the
rolling hills of Salta. He proceeded to become a pre-med student at the
Universidad Nacional de Tucumán, Argentina, but soon quit medical
school to study Drama and English. With the Teatro Universitario de
Tucumán he was cast in the role of The Player in the memorable
production of 'Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead', which traveled
to the renowned Teatro Cervantes in Buenos Aires in 1971. The same year
he was awarded a Fulbright fellowship for graduate studies in
International Theater at the University of Kansas. He again performed
The Player in 'Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead', this time in
English, with Mandy Patinkin starring as
Rosencrantz. He moved to New York City in 1972, where he devoted
himself to experimental theater. Funded by a Ford foundation grant he
created and directed the Free Theater Lab, which performed works by
Fernando Arrabal, T.S. Eliot and others at non-conventional venues such
as Theater at Saint Clement's, the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine
and Union Theological Seminary. In 1975, Guerra returned to Argentina
with his solo piece, 'Holiday for a Unicorn', which he presented under
political scrutiny during the military dictatorship. Upon his return to
New York, he performed at the New York Shakespeare Festival in Central
Park in 1979, next to Raul Julia' and
Richard Dreyfuss in
_Othello (1979)(V)_, and with
Morgan Freeman and
Denzel Washington in
Coriolanus (1979). He was the
drummer in the band Tragic Flaw along with Steve Anderson on lead
guitar and vocals and Christy Risska on bass; they often played at
their neighborhood bar, the historic CBGB's on the Bowery. His Equity
membership came along with the play 'Watch On The Rhine' at Baltimore's
Center Stage. He also performed in 'Much Ado About Nothing' in
Baltimore, and in 'Galileo,' 'The Suicide,' 'Undiscovered Country,' and
'Animal Crackers' at Washington, D.C.'s Arena Stage. His first film
Two of a Kind (1983) brought him to
Los Angeles. In 1986, he performed in the ensemble production of 'Green
Card' at the Mark Taper Forum, and in 1987, he was Prospero in 'The
Tempest' at La Jolla Playhouse. Along with film and TV work he has kept
in touch with the theater through his portrayal of The Bishop in LATC's
annual multimedia production of 'La Virgen de Guadalupe' at the
Cathedral of Nuestra Señora de Los Angeles. His polished voice has
given him a parallel career in commercials, promos, trailers, animation
and documentaries. His unique versatility has opened him to a
many-faceted path as an actor. His children Clarity and Ian crown his
many blessings.