Greg Stuhr
(MARCUS, he/him) credits include premiere productions of Bruce Norris’ The Qualms at Steppenwolf (directed by Pam MacKinnon), Rolin Jones’ These Paper Bullets! at Yale Rep (directed by Jackson Gay), Keith Reddin’s But Not For Me (South Coast Rep), and Ethan Coen’s Offices (Atlantic Theater Company). He performed on Broadway in Larry David’s Fish In the Dark, directed by Anna Shapiro, Elaine May’s Taller Than a Dwarf, directed by Alan Arkin, David Mamet’s November, directed by Joe Mantello, and The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, directed by James Lapine. Along with director Jenna Ricker, Greg conveniently co-wrote a starring role for himself in the acclaimed indie film, The American Side, which the San Francisco Chronicle hailed as a ‘stylish, tense, witty, imponderable and exhilarating tribute to film noir classics’ (take THAT, Bergman!). He produced the award-winning ESPN 30 for 30 documentary, Qualified, also directed by Ms. Ricker, which premiered at SXSW in 2019. And with fellow- New Neighborhood members, Adam O’Byrne and Rolin Jones, Greg created the comedy series Luba’s Lot for Fox Television Studios. The pilot script is rumored to exist in a hermetically sealed crate at a Disney-owned warehouse somewhere in North Hollywood.
Headshot Credit: Jenna Ricker