Larsen began his career performing stand-up and creating YouTube videos with Henry Stone and Sam Campbell as the sketch group Skills in Time.[1]
He is known for many years of stand-up comedy performances, notably at the Melbourne International Comedy Festival (MICF).[2] In 2014, along with Henry Stone, Stuart Daulman, and John Campbell, Larsen was awarded the Golden Gibbo award at the Melbourne International Comedy Festival for the Fancy Boy Variety Show.[3] In 2016, along with Anne Edmonds and Damien Power, Larsen was awarded the Director's Choice Award for their show True Australian Patriots.[4][5]
Larsen was a cast member and correspondent in the ABC news comedy show Tonightly with Tom Ballard (in which he created the recurring character "Mr. Oily").[6][7]
In 2021 Larsen was again an MICF award recipient with his one-man play This Might Not Be Hell, receiving the Piece of Wood Award.[11]
During the 2022 MICF Larsen was nominated for the Most Outstanding Show award for the acclaimed We All Have Bloody Thoughts[12][13]
In 2023, Larsen received further acclaim for his new comedy special Slurp's Up!![14]
Acting
Larsen is best known for his performance portraying Ethan Krum in the BBC One series The Tourist,[15] alongside Jamie Dornan and Danielle Macdonald. He returned to the role in Season 2, which premiered on 1 January 2024.[16] His performance in Season 2 drew praise from reviews including Digital Spy[17] as well as fellow cast members including Conor MacNeill, saying "For me, I really love Greg Larsen [who plays Ethan Krum]. I think he's phenomenal and even just how he uses his hands is hilarious. He's a very clever comedic actor."[18]
In 2017, Larsen was the focus of an Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) investigation based on his on-air conduct in which he called a conservative politician named Kevin Bailey a "cunt" on air during a sketch on the ABC show Tonightly With Tom Ballard. Larsen and the ABC were ultimately cleared of any wrongdoing, as the investigation found that Larsen was playing the character of an "unreasonably angry man" and that the attack would have been considered "comedic" by any reasonable viewer.[21][22]