
Greg Sim is a New York–based performer, creative producer–manager, and teaching artist.
He is committed to storytelling that invites audiences into joyful and meaningful connection.
Originally from Singapore, he trained with the Young & Wild theatre ensemble under Life! Theatre Award-winner Edith Podesta, later performing in Caryl Churchill’s Love & Information. On the Wild Rice stage, he originated the role of Hiroto under the direction of Olivier-nominee, Glen Goei.
In the U.S., he has danced in an original piece by Emmy-nominee Spencer Liff at the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts and performed alongside American Repertory Ballet dancers as a Princeton Ballet School Merit Scholar.
He has also appeared on stages including The 5th Avenue Theatre, Bucks County Playhouse, The REV, The Lexington Theatre Company and IRT Theater.
As a growing creative voice, he has assisted and associated for Broadway directors and choreographers – including JoAnn Hunter, Stephanie Klemons, Patrick O’Neill and Karla Puno Garcia – collaborating closely on new work from the rehearsal room to pre-production, while cultivating his own emerging practice as a director-choreographer.
As a producer and manager, his credits span Broadway and regional venues, including work supporting Sweeney Todd (Broadway revival), Hamilton (Broadway), Only Gold (off-Broadway), Dead Outlaw (off-Broadway) and projects at Paper Mill Playhouse and the National Yiddish Theatre Folksbiene.
He has also managed live events beyond theatre, including the sold-out Punch Brothers’ Energy Curfew Music Hour series featuring artists from James Taylor and Kacey Musgraves to Lake Street Dive and Jon Batiste.
As a teaching artist, he has led weekly curriculum-based classes at Centre Stage School of the Arts and Sing’theatre Academy, coached competition dancers at Sissone Dance Arts, and taught masterclasses at EvolveArts and Western Washington University.