A civil introduction
June Casagrande
It was in the Lido Theater that Gregg Williams first knew he wanted
to be an actor. Dennis Quaid’s performance in “The Right Stuff” spoke
to the young Dover Shores resident in a way no other actor had.
“I didn’t understand it at the time, but what a great actor does
is make you not want to take your eyes off the screen, and that’s
what Dennis Quaid did in that movie and that’s what I wanted to do,”
Williams said.
But ambition has a way of taking people on strange journeys,
Williams has learned, and sometimes the detours on the way to a
specific goal can sometimes be the most important journeys of all.
Williams created the short film “Slainesville Boys” as a vehicle
to showcase his acting ability. Now that it’s part of the Newport
Beach Film Festival, Williams hopes it just might launch him into a
career as a writer and producer as well.
“Slainesville Boys” is the story of two brothers on the verge of
the Civil War whose conflicting loyalties threaten to tear them
apart. Williams, who acts under the name Grey Williams because his
name was already taken within the Screen Actors Guild, stars as one
of the brothers.
“He’s always loved the Civil War, he eats it up,” said Tom
Williams, Gregg’s father, whose infectious passion for Civil War
history inspired him to tour most of the major battle sites with his
son at his side. “Most families go to Disneyland, we went to
Gettysburg and every other sizable battle site you can imagine.”
Williams, son of deceased Conference and Visitors Bureau director
Rosalind Williams, financed the $18,000 himself, scrambling to
resolve issues like location, hiring camera operators and winning
over director Jonathan Brandis.
In a tragic twist, the former child star of “Seaquest” and other
programs finished directing “Slainesville Boys” just two months
before he committed suicide.
“It’s so tragic,” said Williams, who said Brandis had shown no
signs he might take his life. “This was going to be his calling card
for a new career. And he was so good.”
The Newport Beach Film Festival is the first venue to show the
14-minute short. Williams said he plans to apply to about 25 other
film festivals. It shows as part of a series of shorts at 6:30 p.m.
today and again at 4 p.m. Thursday at Edwards Island Cinema, theater
No. 4.
“The hope is that, through a festival, I’ll be able to make the
connections I need to make this into a feature film or expand my
acting opportunities,” Williams said.
But though he hopes to become a successful producer and writer,
acting will continue to be his first priority and his first love.
“That’s really what’s most important to me,” he said.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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