Lorenda Starfelt(1955-2011)
- Producer
- Camera and Electrical Department
- Casting Director
Lorenda Starfelt, who died of cancer at the age of 56 in 2011, was a
producer and political activist whose efforts in theatre and film add
up to a fascinating body of work. Stage productions such as the
acclaimed and internationally recognized 1997 LA presentation of
Euripides' "The Bacchae" (nominated for three LA Weekly Theatre
Awards), a 2003 staging of "The Trojan Women" (also by Euripides),
Theatre of NOTE's critically acclaimed presentation of "The Persecution
and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the
Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis De Sade," and a
controversial multi-media production of Anthony Burgess' "A Clockwork
Orange" (nominated for three LA Weekly Theatre Awards and winner of
one), are all testament to her intelligence, drive and sense of
cultural necessity.
Lorenda Starfelt's film work is also noteworthy, with three
feature-length documentaries, "SING*ularity," a film about the
internationally recognized OperaWorks training program; "The Audacity
of Democracy," which covered the PUMA movement's advocacy of Hillary
Clinton during the 2008 Presidential Primary, and the
posthumously-released meditation on the late sixties, "I Grew Up in
Princeton". Dramatic feature films include a film adaptation of "The
Bacchae," the award-winning oddball romantic comedy "The Watermelon,"
the indie feature dramas "Schooled" and "Shakespeare's Merchant," and
"The Donut Shop," a multiple award-winning short she co-produced right
before her death.
producer and political activist whose efforts in theatre and film add
up to a fascinating body of work. Stage productions such as the
acclaimed and internationally recognized 1997 LA presentation of
Euripides' "The Bacchae" (nominated for three LA Weekly Theatre
Awards), a 2003 staging of "The Trojan Women" (also by Euripides),
Theatre of NOTE's critically acclaimed presentation of "The Persecution
and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the
Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis De Sade," and a
controversial multi-media production of Anthony Burgess' "A Clockwork
Orange" (nominated for three LA Weekly Theatre Awards and winner of
one), are all testament to her intelligence, drive and sense of
cultural necessity.
Lorenda Starfelt's film work is also noteworthy, with three
feature-length documentaries, "SING*ularity," a film about the
internationally recognized OperaWorks training program; "The Audacity
of Democracy," which covered the PUMA movement's advocacy of Hillary
Clinton during the 2008 Presidential Primary, and the
posthumously-released meditation on the late sixties, "I Grew Up in
Princeton". Dramatic feature films include a film adaptation of "The
Bacchae," the award-winning oddball romantic comedy "The Watermelon,"
the indie feature dramas "Schooled" and "Shakespeare's Merchant," and
"The Donut Shop," a multiple award-winning short she co-produced right
before her death.