Ian Scott McGregor
Jasper
Ian grew up near San Francisco, and now lives in New York City, alternately loving and despising it. He happens to be the guy who gets frisked by his girlfriend’s ex-cop dad and thrown into the house in that T-Mobile commercial. Credits include: NYC: Brokenbrow (Dramatist’s Guild), Gingerbread House (NAMCO), His Greatness (Urban Stages). Regional: Endgame, Playboy of The Western World (Shakespeare Santa Cruz), The Opposite of Sex: A New Musical (Williamstown Theatre Festival, Magic Theater and NYC Workshop), Anything Goes (Williamstown Theatre Festival), In On It (Encore Theatre), Family Butchers (Magic Theatre), 3F,4F (Magic Theatre), Anything (ACT), The New Americans (ACT), See Saw (Berkeley Repertory Theatre), The Trestle At Pope Lick Creek (Aurora Theatre Company). Film/TV: Valley Of The Heart's Delight, The Zodiac.
Lucas Alifano
Mark
Lucas was born in San Francisco and has extensive theater training. After earning his B.A. at UC Santa Cruz, he applied to the American Conservatory Theater, where he earned his M.F.A. In 2007. His theater credits include: Batboy: The Musical as “Batboy”; Glengarry Glen Ross, Company, The Cider House Rules, an As You Like It. He also spent two summers and winters performing with Shakespeare Santa Cruz and toured with Hamlet.

Two weeks after graduating A.C.T. Lucas was cast in a role opposite Joan Rivers in The Joan Rivers Theater Project, which was performed in New York and San Francisco. Lucas can currently be seen playing “BJ” in the award-winning CBS web series Ghost Whisperer: The Other Side 2.

Lindsay Benner
Lily
Lindsay lives in Los Angeles and has studied at the Groundlings, played a supporting role in The Darwin Awards and appeared on TV’s It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia. She will be staring in the world premiere play Hard Laughter in San Rafael, California in April of 2008. A few of her regional theater credits include the Theatreworks production of The Sisters Rosensweig (“Tess”), Marin Theater Company’s Bus Stop (“Elma”), Aurora Theater Company’s Emma (“Elizabeth”), and California Shakespeare Theater's Henry IV (parts one and two) (“Lady Mortimer”). Lindsay is also a variety artist and has a one woman juggling show that she performs around the world, including San Francisco’s Pier 39, The World Buskers Festival in Christchurch, New Zealand, and The Street Performance World Championship in Dublin, Ireland.
Chris Yule
Caleb
With a BFA in performance from VCU in Richmond, VA, Chris has been acting in the Bay Area for three years in theater and film. He has performed at the Magic Theatre, SF Playhouse and the Exit Theatre. He's also been in commercials for Nascar, Tostitos, and Benjamin Franklin Plumbing. He writes, performs, and edits sketch and improv with his comedy troupe “SPF 7”.
Gabriel Fleming
Writer/Director
A San Francisco native, Gabriel Fleming studied at the Department of Film and Digital Media of UC Santa Cruz. His short films and videos from this period screened at festivals internationally, and his first feature, One Thousand Years, premiered at the South by Southwest Film Festival in 2002. Since then Gabriel has split his time between the indie film worlds of San Francisco and Los Angeles. He produced and co-directed the upcoming film My Movie Girl, and produced and edited the improvisational feature A+D, currently in post-production. Gabriel has also worked with filmmaker Kelly Reichardt, as the location sound recordist for the film Old Joy (2006), and as assistant director of Wendy and Lucy, which stars Michelle Williams, and premiered in the Cannes Film Festival in 2008.
Visit www.gabrielfleming.com.
Nils Kenaston
Director of Photography
A New York based cinematographer, Kenaston has shot more than twenty feature films, including Michael Gitlin's Bernice (part of the Whitney Biennial), Yale Strom's On the QT (starring James Earl Jones), as well as Mr. Strom's L'Chaim Comrade Stalin (which premiered at the Berlin film festival), Eitan Gorlin's The Holy Land (winner of Slamdance and the Avignon film festivals), and My Movie Girl (with Gabriel Fleming). Visit www.nilskenaston.com.
Patrick Nelson Barnes
Editor
Patrick Barnes is an alumnus of the film and video program at the California College of the Arts, where he studied with artists/filmmakers Barney Haynes, David Sherman, and Richard Beggs (Apocalypse Now, Lost in Translation). His thesis film, Civil, featuring graffiti artist Emuse, was a finalist at the National Student Film and Video Festival at Hunter College in New York, and before he graduated, Barnes's video installation Dialog for Near Misses was acquired by a world-renowned artist.

As an editor, Barnes has worked on a variety of features and shorts. Most recently he edited and co-produced the 2007 feature-length documentary Punk's Not Dead, produced by Susan Dynner (Brick) and Todd Traina (Grace is Gone), which premiered at the Silverdocs Film Festival, went on to screen at the San Francisco International Film Festival and the Melbourne International Film Festival, and was theatrically released in the U.S., Japan, Europe and Australia. Visit www.pnbarnes.com.
Nathan Matthew David
Original Score
Nathan's music speaks for him. Visit his website: www.nathanmatthewdavid.com.