Hiram Keller


Hiram Keller, born Hiram Keller Undercofler Jr., was an American stage and film actor who starred in European films. He is best known for his role as Ascyltus in Federico Fellini's 1969 film Satyricon.

Broadway

Keller was the son of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the State of Georgia. He received his dramatic training at Lee Strasberg's Actors Studio in New York. His first stage engagement took him to Broadway. Keller was a close friend of actress Monique Van Vooren. When she invested in the original production of Hair, she asked producer Michael Butler to put Keller in the cast. From 1968 until his departure to appear in Satyricon, he was a member of "the tribe" in the original line-up stage production of Hair, directed by Tom O'Horgan, written by Gerome Ragni and James Rado, music by Galt MacDermot. In addition, Keller worked as a runway and print model for 14 years and acted in the New York underground scene with Andy Warhol.

Film

Two years later, Keller was in Satyricon, his feature film debut. The Italian director Federico Fellini hired him for the leading role in his gloomy-looking adaptation of the surviving portions of Gaius Petronius's work of fiction Satyricon, when Pierre Clémenti, his preferred candidate for the role of Ascyltus, was no longer available. This role boosted Keller's career internationally. Fellini's long-time employee and screenwriter Bernardino Zapponi wrote of Keller's representation:
" has a very photogenic smile and is full of knowledge as required by his role."
After this success, Keller received major roles in European productions. He had the leading role in the Greek motion picture Orestis, in 1970 he appeared with John Phillip Law in Strogoff, an Italian-French-German-Bulgarian co-production based on Jules Verne's Michel Strogoff; two years later he starred with Giancarlo Giannini in Alberto Lattuada's comedy Sono stato io! and had the male lead role opposite Jane Birkin in the Antonio Margheriti-directed horror movie Seven Deaths in the Cat's Eye; in 1975 he had the main role in the science fiction thriller Lifespan, with Tina Aumont and Klaus Kinski, followed by Catherine Breillat's A Real Young Girl. He appeared in 1974 in two productions for Italian television, Miklós Jancsó's historical drama Roma rivoule Cesare and in the series Orlando furioso, based on Ludovico Ariosto's epic poem.
In 1982 Keller starred with his wife Kristina St. Clair in the cult Jamaican production Countryman, which was his last film.

Personal life and death

Keller was married to actress Kristina St. Clair from 1981 to 1987 and had a daughter named Serena Keller Undercofler, who also works in the film industry as music supervisor. His last years were spent with his family in his native homeland in Atlanta, Georgia. He died there on January 20, 1997 of liver cancer at age 52. Keller was exposed to hepatitis C during the production of Hair, which is linked to liver cancer.

Filmography