Greg Segal is a writer/director and producer, based out of New York and Asia. He has also worked frequently as an independent
producer, legal counsel to production companies (he is also a practicing attorney), writers, directors and
actors.
Greg's next film is a remake of the award winning Italian film, Perfect Strangers, to be produced entirely in the Philippines. It is Greg's third production in the Philippines and while his other films as a director were partially in Tagolog, this is the first one entirely in Tagolog.
Greg wrote and directed the feature film, The Expat, starring Lev Gorn, Mon Confiado, Lovely Abella and
Leo J. Martinez, which was filmed entirely in the Philippines. The film is as of September 2019 in post-production.
Greg additionally co-wrote and directed Chasing Lights, a short film also shot entirely in the Philippines. It is also in post-production as of September 2019 i. It stars Alexis Navarro and Matthias Rhoads, and co-stars frequent collaborators,
Andrew Gan and moto-cross guru Chris Leonardo.
Both Chasing Lights and The Expat were produced in conjunction with Spring Fairy
Entertainment overseen by Charlotte Dianco.
Greg formerly maintained a consulting position with Entertainment 7, a
sales agent, and its sister production entity, A Plus Productions. He
continues to consult with sales companies and distributors with respect
to the sale and licensing of international rights of feature motion
pictures and television shows.
In 2010, Greg wrapped production on Should've Been Romeo, a family
comedy directed by Marc Bennett, and starring Ed Asner, Paul Ben
Victor, Carol Kane, Michael Rappaport, Evan Handler, Mary McCormack,
Nichole Hiltz and Costas Mandylor.
Greg co-produced Sinners & Saints, Will Kaufman's hard-driven action
pic, which stars Johnny Strong, Tom Berenger, Method Man, Sean Patrick
Flannery, Kevin Phillips, Costas Mandylor, UFC Champ Bas Rutten and
Jurgen Prochnow.
Greg is the producer of HBO American Black Film Festival Grand Jury
Prize winner, Acadamy Award nominee Anthony Lover's My Brother
(Codeblack/Universal), starring Vanessa Williams, Nashawn Kearse, Tatum
O'Neal, Christopher Scott and Fredro Starr. A winner of 26 awards and
honors to date, My Brother is one of the most honored films targeting
African American audiences since The Color Purple.
Additionally, he served as a production executive on David Wain's The
Ten, which stars Jessica Alba, Paul Rudd, Winona Ryder, Famke Jansen,
Gretchen Mol, Oliver Platt, Ron Silver, Liev Schrieber, Rob Corddry,
Justin Theroux and Adam Brody, released theatrically by ThinkFilm in
Summer, 2007.
Other productions include writer-director Jeff Roenning's horror-comedy
Hot Baby, a co-production with Apple,which stars Adam Scarimbolo (Guide
to Recognizing Your Saints), Emily Grace (What Alice Found), and Noah
Fleiss (Brick). Greg also co-executive produced Harold, directed by T.
Sean Shannon and starring Cuba Gooding, Jr., Nicki Blonski, Ally
Sheedy, Rachel Dratch and Spencer Breslin in the title role.
His fifth feature, Scott Dacko's The Insurgents (Peace Arch), stars
John Shea, Henry Simmons, Michael Mosley, Juliette Marquis and Mary
Stuart Masterson premiered at the Oldenburg Film Festival Germany's
answer to Sundance, in September, 2006, and took home the Audience
Award for Best Picture in its festival premiere. The Insurgents had its
tour through the U.S. festival circuit,beginning with its win for Best
Screenplay at the Palm Beach Int't Film Festival.
Some other previously produced films include multiple fest (including
Outfest and the Woodstock Film Festival) nominee Harsh Beauty,
Alessandra Zeka's documentary about the eunuchs of India, which
received funding from the NYFA, Sundance/Soros-Open Society, and the
New York State Center for the Arts, available on DVD from Frameline;
and Take the Bridge, a dramatic feature directed by Sundance veteran
Sergio Castilla, which debuted at the Tribeca Film Festival in April
2007.
Greg founded the Slamdance Horror Script Competition Film Slate, which,
beginning in 2007, to take the winning horror script from Slamdance's
wildly popular script competition and make a movie from it each year,
to premiere at the Slamdance Film Festival.
In addition, Greg founded and ran for eight years the New York City
short film festival,the NYC PictureStart Film Festival.
Greg has lectured on the topics of film production and entertainment
law at the New York Film Academy, and at New York's School For Visual
Arts. Until late 2003, and his entry into the entertainment business,
Greg practiced law with firms such as Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft,
Ernst & Young and Deloitte & Touche. In addition to entertainment law,
Greg is an expert in the law of taxation and holds an MBA and CPA.