Ken Kirzinger was born on November 4, 1959 in Saskatchewan, Canada. He is known for Freddy vs. Jason (2003), Watchmen (2009) and The Incredible Hulk (2008).
It looks like we don't have any Biography for Ken Klonsky yet.
Ken Knight is known for Zoo (2015), The Astronaut Wives Club (2015) and SEAL Team (2017).
Ken Kolb is an actor, known for Take Out (2022), Invasion (1997) and Timemaster (1995).
Ken Kramer was born in 1940 in Canada, and was studying theatre in England when he met and married Sue Richmond (Sue Kramer) where they both graduated from the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art. They formed the Globe Theatre in Regina, Saskatchwan in 1966 as a children's touring company. By 1970, the Globe was adding adult productions, and in 1974 mounted a full adult season, including at least one new Canadian play in the lineup. Ken acted in or directed many of the Globe's ambitious productions, including Macbeth (1985), Cyrano de Bergerac (1986), and King Lear (1986). In 1988, he was named to the Order of Canada. In 1990, he was awarded a Lifetime Award for Excellence in the Arts by the Saskatchewan Arts Board. After enormous success with the Globe Theater Ken left the theater for green pastures in Vancouver BC where he has worked steadily in movies, television and doing voice work. As a movie actor he has been in The Fantastic Four (2005), played a doctor in a hilarious scene that found him going toe to toe with Marlon Wayans in Little Man (2006) and played Gordon Trescott in No Men Beyond This Point (2015). As a television actor he was a series regular on A Nero Wolfe Mystery (2001-2002), played Fritz Sauckel alongside Alec Baldwin in the TV Series Nuremberg (2000). He's fought in court with MacGyver (1990), worked a case with Fox Mulder (1996) and brought Joan Rivers to tears in Tears and Laughter: The Joan and Melissa Rivers Story (1994). Also known in the industry for his impeccable voice work - Ken brought his Shakespearean gravitas to animated features like Ghost in the Shell: S.A.C. 2nd GIG - Individual Eleven (2005) and as Master Bai-Luan in Sword of the Stranger (2007) and recently did the lead voice of Asterix in Asterix and Obelix: Mansion of the Gods (2014).
Kenneth R. Kratz, also known as Ken Kratz, is a lawyer. He gained prominence for trying a highly publicized homicide case, State of Wisconsin v. Steven Avery (2007), in which Avery and his nephew Brendan Dassey were both convicted. This was the subject of Making a Murderer (2015), a Netflix 10-episode documentary series. Kratz resigned from his office in October 2010 after a sexting scandal; he had written to a 26-year-old domestic violence victim whose ex-boyfriend he was prosecuting. Several other women also complained about him to state authorities. In 2013 he settled a civil suit by the first woman who had brought the complaint against him. After graduating from the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater in 1983 and Marquette Law School in 1985, Kratz was admitted to the bar and licensed to practice law in Wisconsin. He worked in the La Crosse, Wisconsin City Attorney's Office from 1985 to 1987. He served as an assistant district attorney in La Crosse County, Wisconsin from 1987 to 1992. Kratz was appointed district attorney of Calumet County by Governor Tommy Thompson. He served as president of the Wisconsin District Attorneys Association in 1996. Kratz chaired the Wisconsin Victim Rights Council in 1993 as well as its successor, the Wisconsin Crime Victims Rights Board, from 1998 to 2010. In 1997, Kratz prosecuted a prominent child abuse case, in which parents allegedly locked their daughter in a cage. The mother pleaded guilty. In 2008, Kratz explored a run for the Republican nomination in Wisconsin's 6th congressional district. Kratz was appointed special prosecutor and headed the investigation and prosecution of Steven Avery and Brendan Dassey in neighboring Manitowoc County for the murder of Teresa Halbach on October 31, 2005. Manitowoc County officials had recused their Sheriff's department because it was being sued by Avery for wrongful conviction, following his exoneration in 2003 of a 1985 conviction. Kratz gained convictions of both defendants in trials in 2007. Avery was sentenced to life without parole. Dassey, then 17-years-old, was sentenced to life, with no parole before he reached the age of 56. In October 2009, Kratz was prosecuting a domestic violence case against the boyfriend of a 26-year-old domestic violence victim. She filed a police report in Kaukauna, Wisconsin, alleging that Kratz had sent her 30 sexually coercive text messages over the span of three days. She said that she felt that he was trying to coerce her into a sexual relationship at the risk of dismissing the case against her boyfriend. The report was referred to the state's Division of Criminal Investigation. During the DCI investigation, two more women came forward accusing Kratz of harassing and intimidating them. At the time, Kratz was serving as chairman of the Wisconsin Crime Victims' Rights Board. Kratz resigned in October 2010 after governor Jim Doyle sought his removal. After his accuser filed a federal civil suit against him, Kratz settled out of court in 2013. In June 2014, Kratz's law license was suspended for four months by the Wisconsin Supreme Court. During the disciplinary hearing, Kratz admitted abusing prescription drugs and being treated for sexual addiction and narcissistic personality disorder. Kratz's role in the Steven Avery case was documented in the Netflix documentary series Making a Murderer (2015). Kratz did not cooperate with the producers or interview in the series. He later criticized them, saying they had left out key pieces of evidence. After the release of the series, Kratz began receiving death threats. His Yelp page was flooded with negative comments criticizing his tactics during the case.
Ken Kurahara was born on 6 May 1977 in Kumamoto, Japan. He is an actor, known for Daman akeseo guhasoseo (2020), MIU404 (2020) and Zenra kantoku (2019).
Ken Kuroda is an actor, known for Ninja Assassins (1985) and Tough Ninja the Shadow Warrior (1986).
Ken's first acting endeavor was in 6th grade when he was cast as President of the Moon for a production at Ocean View Elementary School in Whittier. He went on to win numerous talent contests and when he entered high school got involved in the drama club. That led him to choose Northwestern University (Evanton, Illinois) for college where he got involved in the Radio/TV/Film Department, specifically spending 4 years hosting various programs on WNUR-FM. From there, it was off to a career as a Top 40 afternoon-drive disc jockey (always #1-rated) in various markets. When Ken was in Richmond, Virginia, he segued into television when he was tapped as a last-minute replacement to host the Pledge Drive on the local PBS station. That got him hooked on doing TV and he continued in the Richmond market for a few years. Ken came to Los Angeles in 1981 and immediately starting working for KCET (LA's PBS station) hosting . . . what else?? . . . the Pledge Drives and for 20 years was their mainstay host. Along the way he became a NAUI scuba instructor and currently mixes hosting/acting with diving and bad golf.
Ken Kushner was born on 17 February 1965 in Flushing, Queens, New York City, New York, USA. He is a producer and writer, known for Roe vs Wade (2019), The Brawler (2019) and Vengeance (2016).