Gregory Jensen is SAG-AFTRA actor raised in Falmouth, Maine. Now based in New York City, Gregory Jensen holds an MFA in acting from the Actors Studio Drama School. He has been the lead in three original off Broadway shows, appeared on both Netflix and CBS and has been featured in national commercials for Buick and Men's Wearhouse.
Gregory is an actor and writer raised in Albuquerque, New Mexico, the son of doctors. He learned how to act at Tisch School of the Arts, with graduate work at Nikitsky Vorot in Moscow as well as Shakespeare & Company. He learned how to make a living at acting from Wynn Handman, Kristin Linklater, Tina Packer, and Dennis Krausnick.
Gregory Kelly is known for Queen of the South (2016), The Devil All the Time (2020) and Sin City: A Dame to Kill For (2014).
Gregory Kent Smith is an actor, known for Dirty O'Neil (1974) and Cannon (1971).
Gregory Kershaw is a cinematographer and director, known for The Truffle Hunters (2020), The Last Race (2018) and Boreal (2009).
Gregory King is an actor, known for Housos (2011), Housos vs. Authority (2012) and Dumb Criminals: The Movie (2015).
Gregory Klino is known for No Tomorrow (2019), Street Meets Pavement (2013) and Dear George (2017).
Gregory Korostishevsky is an actor, known for Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close (2011), Can You Ever Forgive Me? (2018) and Grand Theft Auto IV (2008).
Gregory Kuznetsov is known for City 40 (2016).
A former cartoonist, Gregory La Cava entered films during WWI as an animator for Walter Lantz on such animated films as "The Katzenjammer Kids" series. Hired by the Hearst Corp. as the editor-in-chief for its International Comic Films division, La Cava switched to live-action films in the 1920s and began directing two-reel shorts. Graduating to features, La Cava gained a reputation as a surefooted comedy director, responsible for such classics as My Man Godfrey (1936) and She Married Her Boss (1935). La Cava was equally proficient in other genres as well, turning out the dramatic Stage Door (1937) and the bizarre political fantasy Gabriel Over the White House (1933). He is also supposed to have directed some scenes in several of the films of his close friend W.C. Fields when Fields couldn't get along with the directors assigned to him, although there is no official record of this ever happening.