Ted Gorodetzky enjoys a diverse career as a performer, with roles ranging from musical comedy to Shakespeare to independent film. He has performed on stages across the United States and overseas, onscreen, and has been featured on German, Swiss, Scandinavian and domestic television.
Full Bio ↓
Performance Bio
Ted Gorodetzky enjoys a diverse career in the performing arts, with roles ranging from musical comedy to Shakespeare to independent film. He has performed on stages across the United States and overseas, onscreen, and has been featured on German, Swiss, Scandinavian and domestic television.
In New York, Ted has originated roles Off-Broadway at The Atlantic Theater Company, Soho Repertory and Wings Theater, amongst others. Notable premieres also include The Book of Candy, originating the role of Shaul, at both the Playwrights Theater of New Jersey and The Passage Theater, and starring as Count Ut-Vega in Immortal Interlude with New Jersey Repertory Company, of which he is a member.
“Ted Gorodetzky’s deceptively smooth portrayal of the Count makes the play work; he is charming, spooky, naive and wise all at once. And he has a terrific voice… Mr. Gorodetzky’s performance will linger for a long while.” –The New York Times
Internationally, he toured Europe starring as Elvis Presley in the critically acclaimed rock-n-roll biography Elvis, the Musical. On the Regional stage, some favorite roles over the years have included Adam/Noah in Children of Eden, Garry/Roger in Noises Off, Danny Zuko in Grease, Pasha Selim in Mozart’s Abduction, Jack Chesney in Charley’s Aunt and Edward Middleton in The Drunkard. Onscreen, Ted can be seen in starring and featured roles in independent features and shorts, the tv & web serial NY, NY: The Sitcom, and he happily joins his fellow NYC actors with appearances in Law & Order, Sex and the City, The Good Wife and Saturday Night Live, as well as several commercials.
Ted earned his B.F.A in Drama from New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts, and is a proud member of Actor’s Equity Association and the Screen Actor’s Guild.

