Gregory Orr
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (June 2006) |
Gregory Orr (born 1954, Los Angeles) is an American writer/director of documentary and fiction films. He is the son of the late actress Joy Page and the late TV producer William T. Orr. He attended Boston University and the California Institute of the Arts, where he studied under film director Alexander Mackendrick (The Man in the White Suit, Sweet Smell of Success).
He began his career sweeping the floor of a special effects company that made Pillsbury Doughboy commercials and moved on to become a production manager and cinematographer. In 1993 he produced his first documentary, a feature-length biography of his grandfather, movie pioneer Jack Warner.
He is an Emmy Award nominee whose films have investigated the New York State parole system -- Parole: Prison Without Bars-- the life of a legendary Hollywood producer -- Jack L. Warner: The Last Mogul -- and the manners in which certain famous people in history met their end -- The Day They Died.
In 2004, he wrote and directed the critically acclaimed short film Alone which film reviewer Richard Schickel called "a deft, cinematic short story, handsomely staged and acted by a new writer/director of great and singular talent".
He currently lives in New York City.