Drew Goddard was raised in Los Alamos, New Mexico. He attended Los Alamos High School in Los Alamos, New Mexico and graduated in 1993. He then attended the University of Colorado, and worked as a production assistant in L.A. after graduation. A spec script Drew wrote based on Six Feet Under (2001) came to the attention of both Marti Noxon at Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1997) and David Greenwalt at Angel (1999). Both wanted him but because Marti found him first, Joss Whedon determined Drew would go to "Buffy". He became a staff writer for Season 7 (2002-2003), writing five episodes. Once "Buffy" was over, Drew moved over to "Angel" and became the executive story editor for Season 5 (2003-2004), writing four episodes. Drew also found time to write the introduction for a book of essays about Buffy, "Seven Seasons of Buffy", and to contribute two stories to the "Tales of the Vampires" comic series. In the summer of 2003, Drew received his first screenwriting award, along with co-writer Jane Espenson, when the Hugos honored "Conversations with Dead People" from "Buffy" with an award for Best Dramatic Presentation/Short Form. That episode was also honored with a SyFy Portal Genre Award for Best Episode/Television; another of Drew's "Buffy" episodes, "Lies My Parents Told Me" (co-written with David Fury), was nominated for the same award.
Drew Grey is known for The Hunger Games (2012), Iron Man Three (2013) and Star Trek Into Darkness (2013).
Drew Hale is an actor and writer, known for Cut and Chop (2020), The Mandalorian (2019) and Clown (2019).
Drew Hall is known for Convergence (2017), Sons of Liberty (2013) and Subliminal.
Drew Harwood is an actor and director, known for Rebel//Rebel, The One You Feed (2020) and Drifter (2016).
Drew Hashley is known for Bodysnatch (2017).
Drew Haytaoglu is known for Defiance (2013), Odd Squad (2014) and Wonder (2022).
Drew Hellenthal is an actor and writer, known for Twenties (2020), Sweet/Vicious (2016) and The Bell Witch Haunting (2013).
Drew Henderson is an actor and writer, known for Advice to Love By (2021), Time for Them to Come Home for Christmas (2021) and The Murders (2019).