Gregg Godfrey (born May 26, 1969) is an American writer, producer and director. He was raised in Utah and lives there with his wife and three children. He is most notable for his work Nitro Circus, a video series he created in his garage with motocross racer Travis Pastrana in 2003. The company has since grown into a multi-million dollar television, movie and live-action show franchise. Godfrey and his wife own the production company, Godfrey Entertainment. Godfrey Entertainment is committed to creating quality cinematic entertainment that tells compelling stories, including outlets for high-adventure narrative films, explosive documentaries, family-oriented reality television and other types of media production. Godfrey has worked on five continents in more than 60 countries. He views action sports as a universal language that speaks to our natural inclination to push human endurance.
Gregg Golding is an actor and director, known for Struggled Reagans (2013), Trolling (2017) and Summer Lasts All Season Long.
Gregg Goldsbury is known for The Big Frozen Gumshoe (2018), Chronological Order (2010) and Girls Gone Dead (2012).
Gregg was born in Selma, Alabama, but lived most of his childhood in Henderson, Kentucky, which he considers his hometown. While attending Henderson County High School, he wrote plays, acted in school productions, co-founded a theater company that produced plays for children, came in second in a state-wide speech and drama competition for high school students, and played a lot of Dungeons and Dragons. After many years of dreaming of attending the University of Southern California School of Cinematic Arts, financial realities set in and lead him, instead, to Western Kentucky University. In his freshman year, he participated in numerous theatre productions and won the theatre and dance department's most prestigious award. Feeling unchallenged, he changed course after just one year of college and, in 1985, joined the Army, attending the Department of Defense Defense language Institute to study Persian-Farsi and graduating from Army Survival School. He was stationed with a Special Forces group as an Intelligence specialist. After four years, he was honorably discharged with enough resources to attend film school. He moved to Orlando, Florida and went to film school at Valencia Community College and the University of Central Florida. He worked as a set dresser and prop man on features and TV shows in Orlando and Los Angeles for 10 years before producing The Blair Witch Project, which established the "found footage" or "cinema scarité" as a popular film genre. As of 2013, he lives in Portland, Oregon.
Gregg Harrington is an actor, known for Bergeron Brothers: Wedding Videographers (2021).
Excellent, prolific and versatile character actor Gregg Lee Henry was born on May 6, 1952 in Lakewood, Colorado. Henry studied acting at the University of Washington in Seattle. Right after graduating from college, Gregg moved to Los Angeles, California to pursue an acting career. He played in a band for three or four months and worked as an apprentice at the Old Globe theater in San Diego prior to getting his first television acting gig as Nick Nolte's son, Wesley Jordache, in Rich Man, Poor Man - Book II (1976). Henry's most memorable movie roles include nice guy drifter Paul Ramsey in Mean Dog Blues (1978), swaggering macho braggart Warren in the superior backwoods slasher movie Just Before Dawn (1981), rugged ex-Navy Seal Lt. Matt Ryder in The Patriot (1986); splendidly sneaky as Mel Gibson's backstabbing, duplicitous partner Val Resnick in Payback (1999) and a hilarious scene-stealing turn as pompous good old boy small town mayor Jack MacReady in the delightful horror comedy Slither (2006). Gregg has acted in several films for director Brian De Palma; he is especially fine and impressive as the smarmy Sam Bouchard in Body Double (1984). Henry has recurring parts on the television series Reasonable Doubts (1991), Gilmore Girls (2000) and The Riches (2007). Among the numerous television series he has done guest spots on are The Love Boat (1977), Simon & Simon (1981), Remington Steele (1982), Airwolf (1984), Moonlighting (1985), Designing Women (1986), Magnum, P.I. (1980), Falcon Crest (1981), Cagney & Lacey (1981), In the Heat of the Night (1988), L.A. Law (1986), Walker, Texas Ranger (1993), Matlock (1986), Chicago Hope (1994), Murder, She Wrote (1984), EZ Streets (1996), Family Law (1999), CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (2000), Boston Public (2000), Firefly (2002), Enterprise (2001), Judging Amy (1999) and 24 (2001). Moreover, Gregg has appeared in many made-for-TV movies, with his supremely chilling and convincing portrayal of the infamous Dennis Rader in The Hunt for the BTK Killer (2005) rating as a definite crowning achievement in this particular medium. Outside of his film and television work, Henry has acted on stage; he has won thirteen Drama Logue Awards, an L.A. Weekly Award, and the Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award for his stage work. Besides acting, Gregg is also a professional singer, songwriter (Dwight Yoakam recorded a single of his song "The Back of Your Hand"), and pianist who has recorded several albums. He is a good friend of fellow actor and musician Bruce Greenwood. Gregg Henry lives in Los Angeles, California with his wife Lisa James; she is a noted director for the American Theater who Gregg has collaborated with on various stage productions as both an actor and producer.
Gregg Housh spent much of his teens and early 20s evading an FBI task force while helping to operate the Internet's foremost software pirating rings and otherwise living the life of a criminal hacker. In 2000 the chase was finally over and he was arrested. The next 7 years were spent in and out of court until he plead guilty to conspiracy to violate copyright laws in 2007. He was incarcerated in a federal penitentiary, including a 27 day stay in solitary. Upon release, he worked a series of computer-related jobs while continuing to participate in various online subcultures. Soon after his key role in Anonymous's global protest campaign against the Church of Scientology was made public in 2008, Housh began serving as a media interpreter and interview subject for newspapers, websites, radio and television. He has appeared on countless news programs and been quoted in publications around the world; meanwhile, he has continued to work with Anonymous participants on various operations, offering advice and other forms of support as needed.
Gregg Hurwitz is the New York Times, #1 internationally bestselling author of 21 thrillers, including the Orphan X series, and two award-winning thriller novels for teens. His novels have won numerous literary awards, graced top ten lists, and have been published in 32 languages. Gregg has written screenplays for or sold spec scripts to many of the major studios (including The Book of Henry), and written, developed, and produced television for various networks. He is also a New York Times bestselling comic book writer, having penned stories for Marvel (Wolverine, Punisher) and DC (Batman, Penguin). He has published numerous academic articles on Shakespeare, taught fiction writing in the USC English Department, and guest lectured for UCLA, and for Harvard in the United States and internationally. In the course of researching his thrillers, he has sneaked onto demolition ranges with Navy SEALs, swum with sharks in the Galápagos, and gone undercover into mind-control cults. Gregg is actively working to end polarization in politics and on college campuses. His editorial pieces have appeared in The Wall Street Journal, The Guardian, The Huffington Post, and others. Hurwitz grew up in the Bay Area. While completing a BA from Harvard and a master's from Trinity College, Oxford in Shakespearean tragedy, he wrote his first novel. He was the undergraduate scholar-athlete of the year at Harvard for his pole-vaulting exploits, and played college soccer in England, where he was a Knox fellow. He now lives in L.A. where he continues to play soccer, frequently injuring himself.
Gregg Jakobson is an actor, known for Kayla Williams Music (2009), Full House (1987) and The Doris Day Show (1968).
Gregg Lowe is a British/Canadian Actor originally from the small town of Great Yarmouth on the East coast of England. His professional career started in the West End at the age of 8. Throughout his youth Gregg performed in theaters both locally and nation wide with the National Youth Music Theatre and other companies. He was trained at The Arts Educational School of London.