Griffin Gluck

Actor

Birthday August 24, 2000

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace Los Angeles, California, U.S.

Age 23 years old

Nationality United States

Height 171 cm

#13691 Most Popular

1933

Gluck was nominated in the "Best Performance in a Feature Film – Supporting Young Actor" category for his work in Just Go with It at the 33rd Young Artist Awards.

2000

Griffin Alexander Gluck (born August 24, 2000) is an American actor.

2011

Born in Los Angeles, Gluck began his career as a child actor in comedy films such as Just Go with It (2011) and Why Him? (2016).

His big break came in 2011, when he played Michael in the film Just Go with It, for which he received a Young Artist Award nomination.

He was later cast as Mason Warner on Private Practice, and was then upped to series regular on the show.

After the series was cancelled, he joined a TV pilot called Back in the Game from 20th Century Fox TV.

It was picked to series.

2013

The show was canceled in November 2013

2014

He had his first leading role as a comatosed teenager in the drama series Red Band Society (2014–2015) and gained acclaim for playing a young film prodigy in the Netflix mockumentary series American Vandal (2017–2018) and the main antagonist Gabe / Dodge in the Netflix horror series Locke & Key (2020–2022).

In 2014, Gluck co-starred as Charlie on the Fox series Red Band Society, in which his character, who is in a coma, is the narrator of the show.

2015

In March 2015, he was cast in an NBC pilot, Cuckoo, which was not picked for series.

2016

Gluck had his first film lead role playing Rafe Khatchadorian in the 2016 movie Middle School: The Worst Years of My Life, based on the hit novel by James Patterson.

2019

He also had further leading roles in comedy films Big Time Adolescence (2019), Tall Girl (2019) and its 2022 sequel, and North Hollywood (2021), and appeared in the second and final season of the Amazon Prime Video thriller anthology Cruel Summer (2023).

Gluck was born in Los Angeles.

His father, Cellin Gluck, is a film director and producer, and his mother, Karin Beck, was a production assistant and line producer.

Griffin's father was born in Wakayama Prefecture, Japan, to American parents, and was raised partly in Kobe, Japan.

Griffin's paternal grandparents were Sumi (Hiramoto), a Japanese American, and Jay Gluck, a Jewish American archaeologist, historian, and Japanophile.

Gluck attended Bard College in New York state for one semester before dropping out, where he studied film and photography.

Gluck started acting when he went with his older sister, Caroline, to a summer children's showcase of Guys and Dolls at the Palisades Playhouse.

His first major role was as a three-year-old in a short film, Time Out, co-produced by his father and directed by Robbie Chafitz.