Brady Bryson
Doggo
Logline: After breaking out of a mental institution, Keith and Morty go out on a road trip to reunite Keith with his service dog Charlie.
Bio: After his parents brought him to see a 30 year anniversary screening of Martin Scorsese's Taxi Driver (He was six at the time) Brady decided that he was going to become a director. He promptly began creating stop-motion films and had graduated to iPad based production until, after a chance encounter with Rob Reiner, he decided to become an actor first. During their brief conversation Mr. Reiner convinced Brady that in order to better understand what he was asking the actors to do on screen it would be best if he understood what it was like to be on the other side of the lens. Brady started with roles in short films, television and off-Broadway theater. He studied Meisner with Jim Parrack at Playhouse West Brooklyn Lab and trained with James Franco, Kathleen Turner, Ally Sheedy and Leven Rambin among others. A graduate of the College of Performing Arts (COPA) at the New School (BFA in May 2022) with honors and winner of the Vinnette Justine Carroll Award, Brady is now a graduate with an MFA in Dramatic Writing at New York University (NYU/TISCH) and won the Oliver Stone Screenwriting Award. Currently Brady is working on several projects through his production company. Three of his short films, 57 Days, Spider on the Train, and Where to Now? Have been accepted into 41 festivals, winning a total of 17 awards, including Best Short Film Screenplay for the NYLIFF, and the Golden Remi Award at the Houston International Film Festival. His feature-length screenplays The Gentlemen of Princeton and The case of Amelia Price have received multiple festival awards and his feature, Sideways for Attention, which won the best screenplay award at the Big Apple Film Festival and Screenplay Competition, is now on the festival circuit, appearing in 14 film festivals and 4 wins.
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