Staff


Ggreg Snyder
(Artistic Director)
Ggreg is a native of San José, CA. He attended Los Gatos High School and graduated with a BA in Drama from San Francisco State. He has worked with the Idaho Shakespeare Festival, the Western Stage, Knightsbridge Theatre Company (Pasadena, CA) and the Actor's Shakespeare in L.A., where he played Iago in Othello and Toby Belch in Twelfth Night. He directed the Rustix' productions of Romeo and Juliet: The Last Battlefield, Merchant of Venice and Taming of the Shrew and played Falstaff in Merry Wives of Windsor. He has written for National Lampoon magazine and recently appeared on Beat the Geeks (as the Saturday Morning Geek), The Man Show and a Stamps.com commercial with Bob Newhart. He lives in Sherman Oaks, CA, and you can visit his personal website below.
http://ggregsnyder.com
Contact: snyderola@aol.com
Aaron Michael Lodge
(Assistant Artistic Director)
SWM, twentysomething, enjoys rock climbing, mountain biking, is seeking SF for adventure, passion, long walks on the beach..... whoops, wrong ad. Aaron is excited his weekend pass was pushed forward so he could perform on Thursdays, and for once would like to be called 'sir' without the following words being 'you're making a scene.' Aaron was previously seen as Tranio in the Rustix (and Knightsbridge) productions of Taming of the Shrew and in the merged characters of the Duke and Arragon in the Rustix production of the Merchant of Venice.
Charles C. Nickerson
(Assistant Managing Director)
When not working with the San Fernando Vallery Board of Realtors, SoCal native Chuck Nickerson enjoys acting the bard. He has performed in every production by the late Shakespeare-on-the-Green, including Midsummer Night's Dream, Julius Ceasar, As You Like It and Taming of the Shrew (which he also produced.) He appeared in the first Rustix production, The Merchant of Venice, as Launcelet Gobbo, and worked as Assistant Director for Ggreg Snyder's production of A Christmas Carol at the Knightsbridge Theatre. He played Lord Capulet in the Rustix' Romeo and Juliet: The Last Battlefield, Baptista in Taming of the Shrew and directed Merry Wives of Windsor.