Gregory Russell Cook was born on January 14, 1978 in the USA. He is an actor, known for Cold in July (2014), The American Astronaut (2001) and Freedom (2014).
Gregory S. Csiszar is known for Arrow (2012), How She Caught a Killer (2023) and Yellowjackets (2021).
Gregory Sagryan is known for How to Get Away with Murder (2014) and Goliath (2016).
Gregory Schell is a director and actor, known for Chasing the Lotus (2006) and Mayberry Man (2021).
Gregory Scott Schwabe, was born on 26 June, to Kathleen and Paul Schwabe. Greg has two siblings are Ken and Mollie. The Schwabe's grew up in Brockton, Ma "the City of Champions", where Greg competed in Baseball and Ice hockey. Graduated from Brockton High School in 1988. Greg joined the US Army and was stationed around the globe. One of Greg's highlights was the Chief of Counterintelligence Analysis Section for US Forces Korea. Greg then spent several years in some special programs within the US Government fighting terrorism. After Government service Greg has also worked at Middlesex Sheriff's Office as a Deputy Sheriff, and Mass General Hospital helped create a proprietary information protection program. Each February, Greg works as the senior security advisor, at the Munich Security Conference where world leaders come together to discuss global threats. In January 2015, Greg's first break in the film industry came after a bad year in his life after back surgery, Oliver Stone hired him to act and help train over 50 international extras to be American Soldiers for the movie Snowden. Greg credits his rebirth to Oliver and Jaymes, since Snowden, Greg has been hired in several roles in film, TV and commercials. Greg continues to focus on acting but is enjoying working behind the camera as well and in 2018 will work as a military and national security technical advisor on several projects.
Gregory Scott is an actor and producer, known for White Space in a Painting (2013), A Guide to Second Date Sex (2019) and Café, Croissant, French? (2014).
Greg grew up in Orinda, CA (East Bay Area in Northern CA) and graduated from Miramonte High School in 1974. In 1985, after receiving his M.F.A. in Acting from U.C.L.A., and many years performing in theatre, Greg began his Television and Film career. He has performed lead, supporting lead, and supporting roles in many feature films and lead and guest starring roles in even more T.V. episodics, sitcoms, & network and cable movies. He is best known for playing heavies but he has performed in many comedic and dramatic roles. Greg took drama classes as an undergrad while attending Cal-Berkeley (where he eventually received his B.A. in Theatre Arts) and the University of Hawaii. At both Universities Greg was also on a football scholarship as the starting punter for California (U.C. Berkeley, (1974 & 1975 seasons) and the University of Hawaii, (1977 & 1978 seasons) leading the nation in multiple punting categories in his final two years at U. of Hawaii. Greg then turned down a contract to play for the NFL'S Green Bay Packers and signed the following year with The San Diego Chargers where he was released due to injury. He was also going to be drafted by the Oakland A's as a shortstop in the 10th round of the 1974 baseball draft out of high school, but told them on the phone prior to being drafted that he wanted to get a college degree first and hopefully move on to professional baseball later. Greg also teaches acting when his schedule permits. Greg is in his 36th year as a professional actor in the Entertainment industry. on screen.
Gregory Shar is an actor, known for The Furnace (2020).
Gregory Shelby is an actor and San Diego native. Well-traveled and a lifelong athlete, he also earned a degree in political science from UC Santa Barbara. He has lived in Ireland, published poems, and traveled over the world for film. His unusual background has lent itself to a wide range of roles, including priests, mixed martial artists, baseball players, and swashbuckling sword fighters. In addition to his continuous acting work, Gregory has stepped into producing, continuing his goal to tell great stories.
Lanky, balding, intense American character actor of Puerto Rican ancestry, born in New York's Spanish Harlem. Deserted by his parents, Sierra was brought up by an aunt in a rough, predominantly Irish neighbourhood from the age of six. Though briefly tempted by gang life as a teenager, he took up acting classes after accompanying a friend to an audition and ended up playing Shakespearean roles with the National Shakespeare Company and in the New York Shakespeare Festival (playing, among many other parts, Macbeth and Romeo), as well as appearing off-Broadway. He later said "I would have been happy if I continued to do that for the rest of my life". However, in 1969, Sierra decided to move to Hollywood and began acting in episodic television where he was initially typecast as Latino heavies or cops. Sierra made his breakthrough in the role of Julio Fuentes on NBC's Sanford and Son (1972), his character the perennial butt of bigoted jokes from the show's cantankerous lead, played by Redd Foxx. He then appeared in the original cast of the police sitcom Barney Miller (1975) as the passionate, proudly Puerto Rican Detective Sergeant Chano Amenguale. Written out of the show at the end of season two, he had further recurring roles in serial television, frequently alternating between comedy and drama. These included the short-lived hospital sitcom A.E.S. Hudson Street (1977), the controversial but hugely popular parody Soap (1977) (as South American counter-revolutionary "El Puerco"), Hill Street Blues (1981) (as Assistant District Attorney Alvarez), Zorro and Son (1983) (as garrison commander Paco Pico, one of the hero's chief antagonists), Miami Vice (1984) (as Don Johnson's erstwhile boss Lou Rodriguez, killed off by a hitman in episode four -- in fact, Sierra opted to leave the show because he disliked Miami) and the science fiction series Something Is Out There (1988) (as Captain Victor Maldonado). His numerous, varied and often highly entertaining guest appearances have included supporting roles as a Native American renegade on Gunsmoke (1955), a mutated religious leader living underneath irradiated New York in Beneath the Planet of the Apes (1970), a professor of anthropology helping Mulder and Scully track down the Jersey Devil in The X Files (1993), a Cardassian member of the sinister Obsidian Order on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993), an Italian priest in John Carpenter's Vampires (1998) and an Iraqi gunboat captain in the Rambo spoof Hot Shots! Part Deux (1993). Sierra made his home in Laguna Beach, California, where he died of cancer on January 4 2021 at the age of 83.