Brad Griffith(II)
- Actor
- Writer
- Director
Brad Griffith holds a Masters in Theater from Stony Brook University and an MFA in Acting from the University of Washington. He made his off Broadway debut in Anouilh's Antigone with Ubu Rep. After taking a fifteen year break from acting, he began professionally again in 2015.
As a writer, his first short, Under Construction, premiered at festivals nationally and streamed on Amazon. Other scripts have placed in various television and screenplay competitions. He is developing several scripted projects and has pitched to networks and major production companies.
He has appeared in many Los Angeles stage productions of plays and musicals, including conceiving and creating a completely improvised one man version of War and Peace. He is an award-winning voiceover actor.
He has recorded two audio books, "'Til Niagara Falls" by Katerie Morin, and "We Must Not Think of Ourselves" by Lauren Grodstein, which won the Golden Earbud Award from Audiophile Magazine.
For his work in the cast of The Skies Are Watching, a BBC 4 Radio podcast, he won an Ambie award for best cast, and the podcast itself won the audio award at Tribeca Film Festival and the BBC Audio Drama Award for Best Podcast Audio Drama.
As a writer, his first short, Under Construction, premiered at festivals nationally and streamed on Amazon. Other scripts have placed in various television and screenplay competitions. He is developing several scripted projects and has pitched to networks and major production companies.
He has appeared in many Los Angeles stage productions of plays and musicals, including conceiving and creating a completely improvised one man version of War and Peace. He is an award-winning voiceover actor.
He has recorded two audio books, "'Til Niagara Falls" by Katerie Morin, and "We Must Not Think of Ourselves" by Lauren Grodstein, which won the Golden Earbud Award from Audiophile Magazine.
For his work in the cast of The Skies Are Watching, a BBC 4 Radio podcast, he won an Ambie award for best cast, and the podcast itself won the audio award at Tribeca Film Festival and the BBC Audio Drama Award for Best Podcast Audio Drama.
Learn more at IMDbPro