Spalding Gray

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Spalding Gray (June 5, 1941 - about January 10, 2004) was a U.S. actor, screenwriter and playwright. He was best known for his performance monologues, which deal with events from his own life in a style characterised by humour, paranoia and acute self-consciousness.

After a few minor cinema roles and appearing in a number of forgettable pornographic films with titles like The Farmer's Daughter and Little Orphan Dusty, Gray first achieved national prominence with his film Swimming to Cambodia, a filmed version of one of his monologues. He based the monologue on his experiences in Southeast Asia while filming a small part in the 1984 movie The Killing Fields.

He attracted some attention from postmodernist critics over the extent of the overlap between his off-stage self and his on-stage persona, and was sometimes criticised as exploitative for the way he appropriated the fortunes or misfortunes of others for material for his monologues. He was a founding member of the experimental theater company The Wooster Group.

In January 2004, Gray, known to suffer bouts of depression, was declared missing. On March 7, 2004, the New York City medical examiner's office reported that at 15:00 Spalding Gray's body had been pulled from the East River. In light of Gray's 2002 suicide attempt, and the fact that his mother had taken her own life in 1967, suicide was the suspected cause of death.

Below is a chronological filmography.