Gregg Bishop started making movies with his father's Super 8mm and 16mm film cameras when he was 7 years old and wrote & directed his first full-length feature, a spy thriller, at 17 years of age. He attended the Production Program at USC filmschool where his student film Voodoo (1999) won over twenty film festivals world-wide including the Slamdance Film Festival. The short film is now screened for incoming USC film students, along with the short films Electronic Labyrinth THX 1138 4EB (1967) by George Lucas and The Lift (1972) by Robert Zemeckis. After graduation, Bishop wrote & directed the $15,000 film festival smash The Other Side (2006) which premiered at the Slamdance Film Festival where it was snapped up for a theatrical release. Variety called the movie "a lean, propulsively paced supernatural thriller, packed with pulse pounding excitement". Bishop is currently developing the movie as a TV series. Bishop directed & produced Dance of the Dead (2008) starring Lucas Till from MacGyver (2016), which had its World Premiere at the SXSW Film Festival and was hand-picked by director Sam Raimi for distribution through Lionsgate and Ghost House Pictures. Rob Tapert says "This was a movie that Sam Raimi and myself watched on a Sunday afternoon, we howled and we howled till Sam's wife and kids started banging on his office door wondering if we were alright. I think I've watched it about five times so far." Ain't It Cool News hailed Dance of the Dead (2008) as "a cult classic" and Bloody-Disgusting called it "one of the best horror comedies ever made that will be remembered for years to come". In 2010, Gregg sold a TV series to Fox Studios. Bishop wrote and directed the Webby nominated The Birds of Anger (2011) for NBC/Universal G4Films starring Jaimie Alexander from Thor (2011) and Blindspot (2015). The film was selected by Robert Rodriguez to be featured on his El Rey Network. Bishop wrote and directed a segment called "Dante the Great" for the third installment of the highly acclaimed V/H/S franchise V/H/S Viral (2014) which was released theatrically by Magnet Releasing. In 2016, Bishop directed the feature film Siren (2016), which was released in theaters by Universal Pictures and is an adaptation of the popular short V/H/S (2012) segment "Amateur Night". Ain't It Cool News called it a "rock solid monster movie with a strong ensemble cast" and Los Angeles Times hailed it a "clever and confident expansion of a terrific short." Bishop recently sold his spec script Lockdown at Franklin High that he wrote with Joe Ballarini to Sony Pictures with Michael Bay and Platinum Dunes attached to produce.
Gregg Blake is an actor and director, known for Eskimo (2012), Two Chairs Two Beers (2014) and Fay (2013).
Gregg Braden is a five-time New York Times best-selling author, scientist, international educator and renowned as a pioneer in the emerging paradigm based in science, social policy and human potential. From 1979 to 1991 Gregg worked as a problem solver during times of crisis for Fortune 500 companies, including Cisco Systems, where he became the first Technical Operations Manager in 1991. He continues problem-solving today as his work reveals deep insights into our origin, our potential, and how these understandings inform the policies underlying everyday life and the emerging world. To date his research has led to 15 film credits and 12 award-winning books now published in over 40 languages The United Kingdom's Watkins Journal lists Gregg among the top 100 of "the world's most spiritually influential living people" for the 11th consecutive year, and he is a 2020 nominee for the prestigious Templeton Award, established to honor "outstanding individuals who have devoted their talents to expanding our vision of human purpose and ultimate reality." Gregg is a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and is active with visionary organizations including the HeartMath Global Coherence Initiative and The Arlington Institute. He has presented his discoveries in over 30 countries on six continents and has been invited to speak to The United Nations, Fortune 500 companies and the U. S. military.
Gregg Brazzel is known for American Heist (2014), Road Trip (2000) and Evan Almighty (2007).
Gregg Brown was born on May 6, 1979 in Winston Salem, North Carolina, USA. He is known for My Cousin Vinny (1992), Words (2004) and Shrinks (2007).
Gregg grew up in Levittown, Long Island. At age 13, he started making super 8 films and won a Humanities Grant as well as a Sofia and William Casey Grant. He majored in Communication Arts at New York Institute of Technology. Gregg was Senior Vice President of Operations at Rainbow Programming. Channel launches include: American Movie Classics, Bravo, Sportschannel and Independent Film Channel. He has consulted on media projects around the world, including a channel for women in China. He has taught workshops on storytelling to dozens of groups and Universities. Gregg Burton is a model and recently turned actor. He has partnered with Bart Gavigan in the UK. They have just completed a feature film: The Film-Makers Son. They have four upcoming feature films: Roadrunners, Women, Lighting in a Bottle and a Welsh Comedy. Gavigan will direct and Gregg will produce.
Gregg Casarona is known for Catch of the Day (2014), Bite School (2015) and Sex Sent Me to the ER (2013).
After attending the USC School of Cinema, Gregg Champion apprenticed with several directors including Blake Edwards, Nicholas Roeg, and John Badham, with whom he shared an eight-year association. Champion's feature producing credits include "Blue Thunder"(Columbia) "Short Circuit"(Tri-Star) and "Stakeout"(Touchstone). Champion also served as the Action-Director on those films as well as the Warner Bros. bicycle racing movie "American Flyers" starring Kevin Costner. Champion's feature directing credits include the fish out of water action-comedy "The Cowboy Way" starring Woody Harrelson and Kiefer Sutherland (Universal), and the action-comedy "Short Time" starring Dabney Coleman and Teri Garr (Fox). Television Producing and Directing credits include the award-winning and Emmy-nominated "The Simple Life of Noah Dearborn" starring Sidney Poitier, Dianne Wiest and Mary-Louise Parker as well as CBS Special Movie Presentations "Dodson's Journey" with Ellen Burstyn and Penelope Ann Miller and "The Last Brickmaker in America" again starring Sidney Poitier. Television Series include multiples of "The Magnificent Seven" for CBS/MGM and "Walker Texas Ranger" with Chuck Norris also for CBS. Other long-form movies Champion directed are the Emmy nominated drama "Miracle Run" starring Mary-Louise Parker, Aidan Quinn and Zac Efron, "Stealing Christmas" a romantic comedy starring Tony Danza, Lea Thompson, and Betty White for the USA Network, and the action-drama "14 Hours" for TNT for which Champion received the Christopher Award for best director. Champion received his second Christopher Award for directing "Amish Grace" starring Kimberly Williams-Paisley and Tammy Blanchard which became Lifetime Movie Network's highest rated original movie ever. Most recently, Champion choreographed some bullet-ridden action sequences with Emile Hirsch in the A&E 4hr. mini-series "Bonnie & Clyde" in which he served as the 2nd Unit Director and was Director of the gymnastics bio-pic "The Gabby Douglas Story"...a 2hr. Special Event Movie for Sony and Lifetime that was nominated for 4 NAACP Awards including best director as well as winning the 2015 Christopher Award for best movie.
Gregg Chilingirian was born in 1988 in the UK. He is an actor and producer, known for The Wheel of Time (2021), A Discovery of Witches (2018) and The One (2021).
Gregg Christie is an American born actor from North Hollywood, California. Having been raised in the back yard of the "Entertainment Capital of the World," he started out in commercials as a child. From there, he opted to play professional baseball having been drafted out of high school. Due to injuries, he left the game early and attended the University of Southern California, where he studied business management. That to came to an end when he was called to assist in the running of his family business. However, as Al Pacino said in Godfather III, "Just when I thought I was out, I get pulled back in." Entertainment has always lived in his blood, so he came back to Hollywood and has sworn that his passion be his way of life. You can find him working in various art forms (as well as on the golf course; he's an avid golfer). Whether it's performing in (or producing) film, TV, voice over or theater, Gregg is always striving to fulfill his passion.