Greg Morris(XV)
- Production Manager
- Camera and Electrical Department
- Producer
Actor and filmmaker Greg Morris began his artistic career as a fine art and documentary photographer. Primarily self-taught, he cites the social histories Let Us Now Praise Famous Men (James Agee and Walker Evans) and How the Other Half Lives (Jacob Riis) as childhood influences that have continued to impact how he sees the world, with his photography described by one reviewer as "portraits of places that have lost their function: For all their air of abandonment, the sites retain their life."
Greg's photography has been exhibited in group shows in New York, Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., and throughout the United States. His work also has appeared in Hayden's Ferry Review. In 2002, he received the Golden Bear Juror's Award and Blue Ribbon for photography at the California State Fair.
More recently, Greg has turned his attention to film and is a member of San Francisco's Scary Cow film co-op. The documentary short subject The Mah Jongg Game, which incorporates actress-writer Alison Lustbader's one-woman one-act play of the same name, is his directorial debut and is the basis for a forthcoming feature-length documentary.
Greg's photography has been exhibited in group shows in New York, Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., and throughout the United States. His work also has appeared in Hayden's Ferry Review. In 2002, he received the Golden Bear Juror's Award and Blue Ribbon for photography at the California State Fair.
More recently, Greg has turned his attention to film and is a member of San Francisco's Scary Cow film co-op. The documentary short subject The Mah Jongg Game, which incorporates actress-writer Alison Lustbader's one-woman one-act play of the same name, is his directorial debut and is the basis for a forthcoming feature-length documentary.