| Above
• The real Bobby Kelske, circa 1967, on the
Amityville High football team. Katco almost passed
|
Surprisingly,
Moretti, a Cranston, Rhode Island native and USC grad,
who migrated to California at the young age of 18 wasn't
producer/director Ryan Katzenbach's first choice for the
project.
"Dave
submitted for the part, and at the time we were casting,
I was going on a description of Bobby Kelske given to
me by Geraldine DeFeo-Gates, Butch's ex-wife. And when
she had described Kelske, the one thing she had mentioned
was that Kelske was called, locally, in Amityville, "The
Brick" because of his physical stature," says
Ryan Katzenbach. "In my mind's eye, I was picturing
this big, tall, broad guy. So when Dave's headshot and
resume came across my desk, he wasn't the very first choice
because Dave was shorter than what I envisioned...he wasn't
this great big, tall, broad guy. Later, when I talked
to Gerri at great length, she told me I was wrong, and
that Kelske was actually not that large...that he was
just very ripped because of the athletics. So, we called
Dave in for an audition before myself and the co-producers,
and it was an instant fit for the part. Dave was very
capable of being this guy...this serious guy who, when
he barked at you, you knew he meant business and this
was no guy to f*** around with."
Ironically,
later on when Katzenbach retrieved photos of Kelske, he
was astonished at just how similiar some of the physical
features were between Moretti and Kelske. "It was
just confirmation we made the right decision," says
Kat.

| Above
• SH Executive Producer Diana Maiocco and Moretti
at a meeting with fellow actors after being cast to
the part of Bobby Kelske. |
Moretti
has participated in several re-enactment sequences for
the documentary to date. His portion of the DeFeo trial
was filmed in the summer of 2006 wherein he delivered,
verbatim, Bobby Kelske's lines from the 1975 murder trial
taken right from the transcript. The actor, today, says
he is most looking forward to the forthcoming shoot which
depicts the actual murders.
"We
strongly believe, based on forensics, that there were
accomplices that helped Butch DeFeo murder the family
that night, and I personally believe that Butch wasn't
necessarily the one who instigated the crime," says
Kat. "We believe very strongly that Bob Kelske was
there and he pulled the trigger on at least one of the
DeFeos."
Moretti,
since signing on to the project, has become a successful
actor in his own right. In his most recent gig he plays
Thom, a lead reporter for a newspaper that stumbles onto
a series of bizarre vampire-esque murders in here! TV's
The Lair. here, a subscription
based cable network caters to the gay/lesbian community,
and the success of the show's first season has brought
about a publicity tour that has taken Moretti all over
the country promoting the show. The second season of Lair
starts filming in February.
"Dave
is but one stellar example of our four leads in this project.
Dave's devotion, like his three co-stars, is quite unusual
to find because Dave, like his three co-stars, really
went the extra mile to research the story, and they really
delved into their characters, really explored them, their
dark sides, and what really made them tick," says
Kat. "That's just so damn cool to find that kind
of devotion to the project."

| Above
• David Moretti, center, meets one of the real-life
DeFeo jurors [front left corner] during a reception
for another Katco event. Moretti and the juror got
an opportunity to chat about Kelske's testimony on
the stand during the actual 1975 trial. |
Moretti's
most intrigued by how Kelske managed to escape the fate
of conviction. "He was very sly," says Moretti,
"He was willing to let his friend take the fall while
he ran away scott-free. He's a very smart character though,
and he knew just who to play and how to get what he wanted.
I find this very intuitive for the golden boy jock of
the town, who is too often typically stereotyped as an
idiot."
"Even
though the cast has been hired to portray the story based
on our findings and our conclusions, I definitely encouraged
them to explore the Amityville story for themselves and
draw their own conclusions as to whether the house was
haunted or not," says Kat. The actors were provided
with whatever books were available on the subject, and
encouraged to check out all the available movies and documentaries.
"Dave and our other leads all jumped all over this,
and I think they've all really come to view the story
as an elaborate hoax."
"It's
amazing how over-hyped the whole lore of Amityville is
in reality," says Dave Moretti. "It's really
nothing more than an unfortunate story of murders within
an exceedingly dysfunctional family. Those murders became
a tool of propoganda for the Lutzes in their effort to
make a fortune from a faux ghost story. It really was
a brilliant business move on their part," he added.
"The contrived story is really all anyone knows who
doesn't look beyond the hype and further into the facts."
Moretti,
in October, brought his role as Bobby Kelske to life on
the stage when he starred in Katco's reading of the feature
film script "The Amityville Murders" at the
Whitmore-Lindley Theatre in North Hollywood.