Leon De Costa
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Leon De Costa (died May 10, 1951 aged 68) was a composer and playwright from Barcelona, Spain who emigrated to the United States. His father was a minister of the Spanish Regency. Leon De Costa served in the U.S. Army during World War I.[1]

Performers recorded his songs "I'm Neutral" and "Kosher Kitty Kelly".[2] He was a deponent in a court case over rights to the Kitty Kelly play.[3]
In 1925 he was recovering from cuts and other injuries sustained in a taxicab accident.[4]

He was buried at Long Island National Cemetery.
Songs
- "To the Skies" (1917), dedicated to Frederick Handley Page[5]
- "One Happy Day" (1917), words and music, sheet music
- "Honey Bunch" (1919), words and music
- "I'm Neutral"[2]
- "Kosher Kitty Kelly"[2]
- "Beautiful World"[6]
- "Circus Days" (1923)[7][8]
- "Come Along Mandy" (1924)[9]
- "Life's Sea and You"(1934)
- "The Life Time Prisoner" (1934)
- "Lifeless Life" (1934)
- "A Little Farm in Old Vermont" (1934)
- "Lilac Time Lullaby" (1934)[10]
Theater
Filmography
- Kosher Kitty Kelly (1926), based on his play of the same name
- San Francisco Nights (1928), adapted from De Costa's play The Fruits of Divorce