Rekha Shankar

Rekha Shankar

Known For:Acting
Gender:Female
Birthday:
Place of Birth:
Also Known As:
Known For: Acting Gender: Female Birthday: More

Biography

Rekha Shankar is an executive story editor for Grand Crew (NBC) and for Andy Samberg and Neil Campbell's Digman! (Comedy Central). She was also a staff writer for Animaniacs (Hulu) and Head Writer for CollegeHumor's Hardly Working series. In 2020 she was selected for Just For Laughs: New Faces - Creators. She can be seen in Between Two Ferns: The Movie, Hacks, Aunty Donna’s House of Fun, and as Cupid in a Hershey’s commercial. She is also on stage every week at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre LA. Other credits include The New Yorker, ClickHole, Reductress, Kal Penn Approves This Message, Slamdance, and being a national punner. One of her New Yorker pieces about how recipes have way too much backstory up top even went “viral.”
More »

Acting

More
Nobody Asked
Comedy Reality Documentary
Gastronauts
Comedy Reality
Dirty Laundry
Comedy Reality Talk
Hacks
Comedy Drama
Game Changer
Comedy Reality
Gods of Food
Comedy Documentary
Kingpin Katie
Crime Comedy
WTF 101
Animation Comedy Action & Adventure
Cartoon Hell
Comedy Animation
Dimension 20
Sci-Fi & Fantasy Comedy Reality Action & Adventure
  • name:Rekha Shankar
  • Known For:Acting
  • Gender:Female
  • Birthday:
  • Place of Birth:
  • Also Known As:
  • Biography:Rekha Shankar is an executive story editor for Grand Crew (NBC) and for Andy Samberg and Neil Campbell's Digman! (Comedy Central). She was also a staff writer for Animaniacs (Hulu) and Head Writer for CollegeHumor's Hardly Working series. In 2020 she was selected for Just For Laughs: New Faces - Creators. She can be seen in Between Two Ferns: The Movie, Hacks, Aunty Donna’s House of Fun, and as Cupid in a Hershey’s commercial. She is also on stage every week at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre LA. Other credits include The New Yorker, ClickHole, Reductress, Kal Penn Approves This Message, Slamdance, and being a national punner. One of her New Yorker pieces about how recipes have way too much backstory up top even went “viral.”
Search history
delete
Popular search