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"This show depicts a world that I loved as a kid," says Gregg, whose comic-book faves were Iron Fist, a Kung Fu superhero, and Adam Warlock, an artificial human built by scientists. "This show has given me a great chance to take my 13-year-old self to work with me every day." Gregg has covered a great distance to get there. He studied drama at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts, where playwright David Mamet and actor William H. Macy were his teachers. He later joined them to form New York's respected Atlantic Theater Company. He has written screenplays, including the 2000 Harrison Ford fright drama "What Lies Beneath." He has directed two films from his own screenplays, with his dark comedy "Trust Me" set for release next year. Along the way, Gregg met actress Jennifer Grey. "The universe threw us at each other a number of times," he says with a laugh, "but all our attempts at flirting nearly ended up in fistfights. Then, after four years of that, finally something clicked." They wed in 2001. When he first took on the role of Coulson, Gregg saw comics-bred cinema as a breed apart from the dramatic work he had done. "I had worked with Mamet, Macy, ('West Wing' mastermind Aaron) Sorkin! I thought this would be different, that it would be slumming in a pop-culture world." He now eschews such snobbery. "When I see the connection that this kind of project has made with people on a global level, I realize that's what I got into acting for," he says. "I don't think there's a higher, more highbrow goal to hope for. After all, Shakespeare wasn't doing work for the queen, he was writing for a bunch of people chewing on disgusting sausages and talking back to the stage." Gregg laughs and effects an apologetic air. "I don't mean to retroactively trash the sausage vendors of Elizabethan England!" he says. "I just destroyed their Yelp rating." ___ Online:
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