Peter Kastner

Peter Kastner

Kastner in 1969.
Born 1 October 1943
Canada
Died 18 September 2008 (aged 64)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Spouse(s) Jenny (Pirie) Kastner (second wife; married 1981)

Peter Kastner (1 October 1943 – 18 September 2008) was a Canadian-born actor who achieved prominence as a disaffected youth in movies of the 1960s.

Kastner's first leading role was in the 1964 Canadian film Nobody Waved Goodbye, which was a semi-improvised, documentary-style look at middle-class teenagers. He played an alienated young man, the son of a prosperous automobile dealer, who drifts into petty thievery.

His breakthrough role was in the title role in Francis Ford Coppola's 1966 comedy You're a Big Boy Now, also starring Karen Black, Rip Torn, Geraldine Page, Julie Harris and Elizabeth Hartman. Kastner played an earnest young man who travels to New York City and meets eccentrics. He played a similar role as a young, earnest advertising man swept up in the era in 1971's B.S. I Love You.

Kastner also starred in the 1968–1969 ABC sitcom The Ugliest Girl in Town, where he played Timothy Blair, a man who dressed in drag as a favour to his photographer brother. It was following Ugliest Girl that Kastner's fortunes declined.[1] Unable to gain leading roles, he took supporting roles in movies and television series.[2] He did star though in the 1977 CBC Television sitcom Custard Pie as Leo Strauss, the manager of a musical group of that name,[3] but the series was not popular or critically well received. His last film role was in Unfinished Business (1984), a sequel to Nobody Waved Goodbye.

Kastner died from a heart attack in Toronto on 18 September 2008, two weeks before his 65th birthday. He was survived by his second wife, Jenny, and is the brother of filmmaker and former child actor John Kastner.[2]

References

  1. Rick Salutin "Peter Kastner, Canadian artist", Globe and Mail (Toronto), 21 November 2008
  2. 2.0 2.1 Martin Knelman "Peter Kastner, 64: Actor recalled for role as rebel", Toronto Star, 20 September 2008. The Rick Salutin article in the Globe and Mail takes issue with this obituary.
  3. Peter Kenter TV North, Whitecap Books, 2001, p.35

External links