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Sulkin recently signed management deal with Allman Rea Management in Los Angeles. {{fact|date=April 2009}}
Sulkin recently signed management deal with Allman Rea Management in Los Angeles. {{fact|date=April 2009}}

Gregg is now living in Los Angeles and is now working on a TV show, the name of which can not be publisized.


== List of credits ==
== List of credits ==

Revision as of 19:44, 17 November 2009

Gregg Sulkin
OccupationActor
Years active2002–present

Gregg Sulkin is a young British actor from Swiss Cottage, Camden, Greater London. He currently attends Highgate School.[1]

His acting debut was in the movie Sixty Six,[1] where he starred as the main character, Bernie Rubens, opposite Helena Bonham Carter, Eddie Marsan, and Catherine Tate.[2] Sulkin also played the role of JJ in the Disney Channel comedy, As the Bell Rings.[1] He also landed a role in the thriller The Heavy.[3]

He has since then worked for Channel 4 and the BBC, in which he worked alongside Simon Amstell (Never Mind the Buzzcocks).[citation needed]

In 2009, Sulkin recently worked on a CBBC children sci-fi show The Sarah Jane Adventures (spin-off of Doctor Who). He played Adam in series 3 two-episode story The Mad Woman in the Attic.

Sulkin recently signed management deal with Allman Rea Management in Los Angeles. [citation needed]

List of credits

Film

Year Film Role
2006 Sixty Six Bernie Rubens
2007 Rotten Apple Narrator (voice)
Short (15 minutes)
2009 The Heavy Teen two

Television

Year Title Role Network Notes
2002 Doctor Zhivago Seryozha ITV
2006 Man on the Moon Michael Aldrin Channel 4 Television opera
2007 As the Bell Rings JJ Disney Channel UK Series regular
2009 The Sarah Jane Adventures Adam CBBC Series 3 episodes 3-4 "The Mad Woman in the Attic"

References

  1. ^ a b c McPartland, Ben (2007-04-20). "Highgate's Sixty Six star is getting dizzy with his Disney days". Hampstead and Highgate Express. Retrieved 2009-04-20.
  2. ^ Jury, Louise (2005-10-22). ""Four goals and a Bar Mitzvah: '66 World Cup made into film"". The Independent. Retrieved 2009-04-20.
  3. ^ "Sixty Six Production Notes". pp. p.15. Retrieved 2009-04-20. {{cite web}}: |pages= has extra text (help)

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