Grant McKay(II)
- Producer
- Writer
- Additional Crew
Grant McKay has served as a creative executive, overseeing entertainment companies and projects. He has also worked as a writer and producer of more than a dozen documentaries, docudramas, and feature films for television, streaming and theatrical release.
Grant was instrumental in the development, making and marketing of several high-profile documentary films and series that were hits on television and best-sellers, including the feature documentary and 13-part series, Against All Odds: Israel Survives, which is one of the most successful docudramas in television history.
Grant's career began as an assistant (later a production manager) to veteran journalist David Aikman (Former Time Magazine Bureau Chief) on two documentary mini-series for the BBC, in addition to a series of biographies investigating some of the most influential figures of the 20th Century, for PBS.
Grant has been privileged to travel the world, visiting, and working from more than 40 countries. His international travels first started in 1995 to Poland, the Ukraine and Russia, shortly after the fall of communism, where he visited Auschwitz, and met dissidents that survived Stalin's gulags. Over the years, he's traveled extensively in Europe, Asia, Africa, and Middle East, and lived in Israel and Japan.
Grant was instrumental in the development, making and marketing of several high-profile documentary films and series that were hits on television and best-sellers, including the feature documentary and 13-part series, Against All Odds: Israel Survives, which is one of the most successful docudramas in television history.
Grant's career began as an assistant (later a production manager) to veteran journalist David Aikman (Former Time Magazine Bureau Chief) on two documentary mini-series for the BBC, in addition to a series of biographies investigating some of the most influential figures of the 20th Century, for PBS.
Grant has been privileged to travel the world, visiting, and working from more than 40 countries. His international travels first started in 1995 to Poland, the Ukraine and Russia, shortly after the fall of communism, where he visited Auschwitz, and met dissidents that survived Stalin's gulags. Over the years, he's traveled extensively in Europe, Asia, Africa, and Middle East, and lived in Israel and Japan.