Paul Griggs is an actor and producer, known for Blank Verse (2013), The Romeo Section (2015) and The Flash (2014).
Paul Grondy is known for Paper Girls (2022), Chicago P.D. (2014) and Chicago Fire (2012).
Paul Gross is the elder of two brothers. He was an Army brat; his father, Bob Gross, was a Tank Commander in the Canadian Army. As a consequence Paul and his family moved around a lot: he has lived in Canada, the U.S, England and Germany. Paul was introduced to acting in his early teens, while the Gross family was in Washington. He performed in stage plays such as Canterbury Tales and Faustus. From the age of 14, he appeared in television commercials, which enabled him to pay for his degree in Drama at the University of Alberta in Edmonton. In 2011, Paul Gross appeared at the Royal Alexandra Theatre in Toronto playing Elyot opposite Kim Cattrall's Amanda in the celebrated comedy by Noel Coward, Private Lives.
Paul Guay is a writer, actor, director, teacher, script consultant, speaker, and workshop leader whose movies have grossed over half a billion dollars. He conceived and co-wrote Liar Liar (1997), at the time of its release the sixth-highest-grossing comedy in history, the fourth-highest-grossing film of the year, the second-highest-grossing film of Jim Carrey's career, and Imagine's highest-grossing film ever. The screenplay received an Honorable Mention (along with Fargo (1996), Million Dollar Baby (2004), The Full Monty (1997) and Catch Me If You Can (2002)) in Scr(i)pt magazine's list of the Best Scripts of the Past 10 Years. William C. Martell published Secrets of Story: Liar, Liar, a step-by-step guide to solving screenwriting problems using Liar, Liar as a model. Paul co-wrote The Little Rascals (1994), Universal's second-highest-grossing film of the year. He co-wrote Heartbreakers (2001), starring Sigourney Weaver, Jennifer Love Hewitt, Gene Hackman and Jason Lee, which opened #1 at the box office, and the rights to which he co-licensed to MGM for production as a stage musical. Paul polished The NeverEnding Story (1984), the beloved children's fantasy which spawned two sequels, two TV series, three computer games, a stage play, a ballet, and an opera, and co-polished Mouse Hunt (1997), the highest-grossing of DreamWorks' first five films, nominated for a Saturn Award. He began his career in the entertainment industry in marketing, advertising and publicity, where his clients included Buena Vista, Carolco, Columbia, Daily Variety, Fox Broadcasting Company, Morgan Creek, William Morris, NBC, New Line, Playboy, TriStar, Twentieth Century Fox, United Artists, Warner Bros., Michael Jackson and Madonna. Paul graduated from Pomona College with a double major in English and philosophy, figuring if the career in writing didn't work out, he always had philosophy to fall back on. Current/Upcoming Projects: Paul co-wrote Rory Storm and the Hurricanes, a rock 'n' roll comedy-drama based on a remarkable true story, which has been bought for production in 2022. He is attached as Executive Producer. Paul is co-writing "The [Redacted] [Redacted]," a crime comedy inspired by an outrageous true story that fascinated and entertained people around the world. After directing the most successful comedy (or for that matter, drama) in the 75-year history of Santa Monica's Morgan-Wixson Theatre, Paul made his movie-directing debut with three short comedy films he wrote: The Godfather (2023), The Vampyre (2023), and Who Guardeth the Guards? (2023). The films will be released in 2023. Paul's Script Consultant website: ScreenMasterBooks.com/Analysis/PaulGuay.html.
Paul Gude was born on May 15, 1973 in Berwyn, Illinois, USA. He is an actor and writer, known for Cherub, the Vampire with Bunny Slippers (2006), The Coffee Table (2013) and The Epiphany (2011). He has been married to Jennifer Pratt since October 9, 2005. They have one child.
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American character actor. Upon his entry into films in 1930, he was typecast as a weakling or criminal type. He received great acclaim for his role as Garth Esdras, the haunted and hunted accessory to murder in Winterset (1936). Memorable as the weaselly convict who tries to kill James Cagney at Steve Cochran's behest, but gets his just deserts in the trunk of a car, in White Heat (1949). After two decades as a film actor, he made a small foray into film directing. He died at 58.
Paul Guilfoyle, the actor best known for playing Capt. Jim Brass on CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (2000), was born on April 28, 1949 in Boston, Massachusetts. After graduating from Boston College High School in 1968, he attended Lehigh University. He studied acting as a member of the Actor's Studio in New York, and then for 12 years was a member of the Theatre Company of Boston, where Al Pacino also honed his craft. Guilfoyle made his Broadway debut in 1977, appearing in David Rabe's "The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel" in support of Pacino; the two would later star in the 1990 film adaptation of Heathcote Williams's The Local Stigmatic (1990), with Guilfoyle appearing in a part originated by John Cazale. He made his feature film debut in the Howard the Duck (1986) and his series TV debut in Crime Story (1986), both in 1986. Since then, Guilfoyle has fashioned a career as a leading character actor in TV and in films. He has been a member of the "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation" cast since the pilot that aired in the year 2000.
Paul is a Chicago-born multimedia artist whose eclectic career includes stints as a storyboard artist, cinematographer, ad-agency illustrator, kinetic sculptor, mural painter, production designer, radio DJ, model maker, silkscreener, and even wax-figure restorer for a Ripley's Museum. He is most well known as a comic book artist for numerous companies and titles and as the co-creator, along with his wife Anina Bennett, of comic's first female action hero in the science-fiction series Heartbreakers. He was lead background artist on the animated series Stripperella, produced and hosted the award-winning cable TV variety show The Friday Club, and is the world's foremost authority on 19th-century robots. His Victorian robots web site has garnered international acclaim, enough so that Boilerplate has been published as a large coffee book.
Paul Gunawan is known for Logan (2017), Battleship (2012) and Flying Monkeys (2013).