Buy your Comedy Shows Tickets at TicketsNow.com.    
Click here to view our Site Map
San Francisco, CA | Change Location
Home > Theater Tickets > Comedy Shows Tickets > Spalding Gray Tickets  

Spalding Gray Tickets

Spalding Gray tickets are currently unavailable. Be the first to get email alerts and exclusive discounts for Spalding Gray tickets. Complete the form below and click 'Subscribe'.

First time subscribers! Get 10% off Spalding Gray tickets when you sign up for Insider Alerts.

Sign up with TicketsNow for Email Alerts of Hot events.
Name
Email
Mobile
Zip
TicketsNow Privacy Policy

You can also bookmark this page and check back often as our inventory is updated frequently.
How Buying & Selling Concert Tickets, Theater Tickets & Sporting Events Tickets works at TicketsNow
TicketsNow Guarantee: Authentic Tickets Or Your Money Back! - TicketsNow
Click here for TicketsNow Terms and Conditions.
Insider Email Alerts
Sign up for TicketsNow emails, get 10% off your first order.
Hot Events

Spalding Gray Biography

Monologuist, actor, and novelist Spalding Gray was born June 5, 1941 in Barrington, Rhode Island after co-founding the experimental theatrical company the Wooster Group in 1977, he completed his first major monologue, Sex and Death to the Age 14, performing the piece throughout the U.S. and Europe. His work off-Broadway and in films helped him land a small role in Roland Joff's 1984 feature The Killing Fields, an experience that became the basis of Gray's breakthrough piece Swimming to Cambodia originally running four hours in length, the monologue was edited to 80 minutes when in 1987 it reached theaters as a film directed by Jonathan Demme.

Monster in a Box (1991), directed by Nick Broomfield, concerned Gray's attempts to complete his epic novel Impossible Vacation, published the following year a third feature film, the Steven Soderbergh-helmed Gray's Anatomy, followed in 1996. The compact disc edition of his monologue It's a Slippery Slope appeared two years later.

Gray sustained severe injuries in a head-on car collision while on vacation in Ireland during 2001, and the collision and its aftermath exacerbated the depression he had suffered for years. In January 2004, Gray was declared missing in New York, and two months later, on March 7, 2004, his body was pulled from the East River. It was presumed that he had committed suicide by jumping off the Staten Island ferry. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi