Greg Miller (animator)

American animator From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Greg Miller is an American animator, cartoonist, writer, storyboard artist, and composer. His art style is based on the animation style of Schoolhouse Rock!, which was used in his own television series, Whatever Happened to... Robot Jones?, airing on Cartoon Network from 2002 to 2003[2] and his short film, The Wizzard of Krudd, a canceled Nickelodeon short featuring the voice of Devon Werkheiser as the protagonist.[3] He worked on the production of Shrek the Third and Monsters vs. Aliens as the additional storyboard artist. His recent credits include being a storyboard artist, writer, animator and character designer on Secret Mountain Fort Awesome, Gravity Falls and Uncle Grandpa.

Quick Facts Born, Nationality ...
Greg Miller
Born
NationalityAmerican
Occupation(s)Storyboard artist, animator, director, writer, composer
Years active1997–present
Known forWhatever Happened to... Robot Jones?
WebsiteOfficial blog
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Early life and education

Miller grew up in Upper St. Clair, Pennsylvania, near Pittsburgh. He graduated from Upper St. Clair High School in 1992 and went on to attend the University of the Arts in Philadelphia. While there, he earned an internship at Hanna-Barbera that would eventually lead him to drop out of college after receiving a job offer to work on Dexter's Laboratory.[1]

Career

Miller began his career at Hanna-Barbera as a writer and storyboard artist for Dexter's Laboratory which aired on Cartoon Network.[1] He also later worked on Cow and Chicken[2] and The Powerpuff Girls as a member of the production company. In between stints at Hanna-Barbera, he worked for Nickelodeon (on CatDog and The Angry Beavers) and at Disney (on Nightmare Ned).[1]

While working at Hanna-Barbera, he pitched the company a new show called Whatever Happened to... Robot Jones?. Hanna-Barbera declined, prompting Miller to take the pitch directly to Cartoon Network. Cartoon Network purchased the pilot along with the pilots of 9 other shows with the intent of trying them all out over one summer. Cartoon Network executives chose 3 (including Robot Jones) to be voted on by viewers in August 2000[1] in an event known as The Big Pick or Big Pick Weekend. Robot Jones received 23% of the vote, finishing second and losing out to The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy created by Maxwell Atoms.[4]

Filmography

Film

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Notes
2000 The Tangerine Bear Character clean-up
2007 Shrek the Third Additional story artist
2007 The Wizzard of Krudd Creator, writer, art director, voice director, co-executive producer, director
2009 Monsters vs. Aliens Additional story artist
2010 Shrek Forever After Additional story artist
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Television

More information Project, Show run ...
ProjectShow runChannelCredited role# of episodes
Dexter's Laboratory1996–2003Cartoon NetworkWriter, Storyboard artist4 episodes
A Kitty Bobo Show2001Cartoon NetworkAnimation layout1 episode
The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy2001–2008Cartoon NetworkWriter, storyboard artist1 episode
Evil Con Carne2001–2004Cartoon NetworkStoryboard artist2 episodes
Whatever Happened to... Robot Jones?2002–2003Cartoon NetworkCreator, developer, writer, director (season 1), storyboard artist, character designer, animator, composer, executive producer13 episodes
My Life as a Teenage Robot2005–2009NickelodeonDirector, Sheet Timer3 episodes
Johnny Test2005-2006Kids' WBAnimation and Timing Director5 episodes
SpongeBob SquarePants2007NickelodeonWriter, Storyboard director1 episode, "Blackened Sponge"
MAD2010–2013Cartoon NetworkAnimator10 episodes
The Problem Solverz2011–2013Cartoon NetworkSupervising director26 episodes
Secret Mountain Fort Awesome2011–2012Cartoon NetworkWriter, storyboard artist5 episodes
The Mr. Peabody & Sherman Show2015–2017NetflixDirector15 episodes
Home: Adventures with Tip & Oh2016–2018NetflixSupervising director
The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle2018–2019Amazon VideoDirector11 episodes
The Mighty Ones2020–2022Hulu/PeacockCo-executive producer, supervising producer, storyboard artist, writer
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Accolades

More information Date, Award ...
Date Award Category Work Shared with Result Ref
2016 Daytime Emmy Awards Outstanding Directing in an Animated Program The Mr. Peabody & Sherman Show Mike Bell and John Sanford Nominated [5]
2017 Nominated [6]
2018 Mike Bell, John Sanford, and David P. Smith Nominated [7]
2019 Outstanding Directing for an Animated Program The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle Howie Perry, Kristi Reed, and Chuck Sheetz Nominated [8]
2020 Howie Perry and Chuck Sheetz Nominated [9]
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References

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