Alfred Sole was born on July 2, 1943, in Paterson, NJ. He
grew up avidly watching the movies of
Alfred Hitchcock, who later was
an acknowledged influence on Sole's best known and most well-regarded
feature,
Alice, Sweet Alice (1976), better known
as "Alice, Sweet Alice."
Sole graduated from the University of Florence in Italy with a degree
in architecture and spent his young adulthood working as an architect.
He made his directorial debut with the tongue-in-cheek
hardcore parody
Deep Sleep (1972),
which starred 1970s porno superstars
Harry Reems and
Georgina Spelvin.
It won first prize at the New York Erotic Film Festival and was made in
Sole's hometown of Paterson on a paltry $25,000 budget. Alas, the
movie was pulled from theaters on charges that it was obscene, and all
prints were confiscated.
Sole's superbly atmospheric and vehemently
anti-Catholic horror winner "Alice, Sweet Alice" fared much better with
critics and audiences alike. It won first prize at the Chicago Film
Festival and garnered highly positive reviews from critics, among them
Roger Ebert. The film also boasted a
then-unknown
Brooke Shields in her film
debut and was also shot on location in Paterson. Alas, it, too, did poorly at
the box office due to spotty distribution.
Sole next made the quirky and kinky soft-core fantasy outing
Tanya's Island (1980), which
starred future
Prince protégé
Vanity acting under the pseudonym
D.D. Winters and showcased a remarkably convincing ape costume designed
by
Rob Bottin. Unfortunately, this film likewise suffered
from virtually nonexistent theatrical distribution. Sole's final film
as director was the silly slasher-movie spoof
Pandemonium (1982), which offered an
amazing all-star cast that included
Tom Smothers,
Phil Hartman,
Tab Hunter,
Eileen Brennan,
Carol Kane,
Eve Arden,
Judge Reinhold,
Kaye Ballard,
Paul Reubens, and
David L. Lander all doing their best
with a dopey script. Sole also wrote stories for episodes of the TV
shows
Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1985),
Friday the 13th: The Series (1987), and
Hotel (1983).
Fed up with studio politics and the Hollywood rat race, Sole called it a
day as a director in 1982 and went on to become a successful production
designer. Among the movies he has worked on in this capacity are
Halloweentown High (2004),
These Old Broads (2001),
Clubland (1999),
Wishmaster 2: Evil Never Dies (1999),
Glory Daze (1995),
Bodily Harm (1995), and
Night of the Running Man (1995).
More recently, Sole handled production-designer chores on the TV series
Veronica Mars (2004).