Fred Johanson is known for Great Performances (1971), Wedding Season (2022) and Rånarna (2003).
Fred Johnson was born on August 6, 1899 in Dublin, Ireland. He was an actor, known for Scrooge (1951), The City of the Dead (1960) and Martin Luther (1953). He died on December 4, 1971 in London, England.
Fred Kanebi is an actor, known for Potomanto (2013), Cartel the Genesis (2015) and A Letter from Adam (2015).
Fred Kapambwe is known for Helping Chalo (2022) and Saving Chalo (2021).
Fred Kaplan was born in 1937 in New York City, New York, USA. He is known for Best of Enemies (2015) and Biography (1987).
Fred Keating has a long and multi-faceted career in theatre, radio, TV and film in character roles and as a host, motivational speaker and podcast producer/host. From high school productions to full scholarships in drama studies through grad school, Fred's first broadcast television appearance was in 1971 on WTOL, the CBS affiliate in Toledo, Ohio hosting holiday specials and doing commercial work. From 1971-1973, Fred was a writer and principal performer in The Goose Company, an improvisational troupe that toured and had a regular Saturday morning TV children's show commitment, again with WTOL. On a Teaching Fellowship at Eastern Michigan University, he directed the school-touring Caravan Players. Seasons of summer stock in Detroit, Boston and New York City (1969-1973) sharpened the skills that led to his live one-man show Country Cousins that toured schools, coffee houses, college campuses and folk clubs in England, Ireland, Scotland and Belgium (1975 - 1976). And a brief stint at Oakland's KTVU in the Bay Area; Editing. While on contract as a Visiting Lecturer at University of Alberta (1976-1977), he was one of the founding cast members of Edmonton's Catalyst Theatre, performing the characters he created in many of the dramatic vignettes used in the CBC Television Specials Incarceration, Rape in Reality and Dying at Home. All this structured improv work came in handy when Second City TV (1976) produced several seasons in the early 80's at ITV studios in Edmonton. From background to speaking roles, Fred got to work with John Candy, Eugene Levy and others in the troupe. Fred served as Senior Consultant in Performing Arts Education to Alberta's Ministry of Culture (1978-1982), and evolved the Provincial Summer Drama School into the ArtsTrek program now run by Theatre Alberta. He also produced and hosted a weekly province-wide radio show on CKUA called Centre Stage interviewing local and national artists. He worked as Host/Writer/Producer for Alberta's corporate production companies and broadcasters and incorporated Lindisfarne Productions Inc. (1984) with offices in Edmonton AB and Maple Ridge BC, Canada. [www.showtellmove.com] Fred's 170 nationwide episodes of Superchannel's "Mailbag" and "Movieweek" (1983-1986) introduced Canada to Pay-TV. Moving to Vancouver (1997) generated an abundance of film and television work that continues to this day. He still teaches stage combat and fight choreography at university drama departments and schools. Since 2016, Fred has also co-produced and co-hosted 125 audio podcasts of "Monetizing Your Creativity", interviews with successful media careerists with helpful information to share with emerging artists. On his new podcast, "Fred Keating & Friends", he interviews Dr. Jane Goodall, as he has hosted several of her live presentations in Canada over the years. [https://youtu.be/7dG4tHqcLbg] As corporate educator for a number of major companies, Fred is a familiar face onscreen in the internal and external A/V productions of many federal and provincial government departments as well as at various corporate and non-profit projects. And, as such, he's become a familiar "Roastmaster" at their corporate affairs and special events. Dubbed Canada's "Massacre of Ceremonies", Fred presides over a variety of annual conferences, award shows and special charity events. [www.fredkeating.ca] In October of 2018 he appeared as a special guest, headliner and sponsor of the Cosplay Competition at the Foothills FASD ComicCon. He has appeared in various capacities (VIP driver/tour guide, MC, writer, panel moderator, fellowship mentor, announcer and awards show producer) at the Banff World Media Festival for 36 years and is co-producing a full-length documentary called "Studio in the Sky".
Very few are capable of making an impact in a competitive market, but for fellow actor and Texas resident, Fred Keel, nothing is impossible. Mr. Keel had the great privilege of working on the TV drama series "Dallas," a documentary titled "Silent Cries," as well as a variety of Texas feature films including "Sacrament," "Stay At Home Dads," "A Love Story," and "Soulcatcher." He recently turned to directing and is working on the Faith-based/Christian feature film "Streets of Harvest."
Fred Kelsey was born on August 20, 1884 in Sandusky, Ohio, USA. He was an actor and director, known for On Trial (1928), The Lone Wolf Strikes (1940) and One Dangerous Night (1942). He was married to Katherine Miller. He died on September 2, 1961 in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Fred Klein is known for Rifkin on Rifkin: Private Confessions of a Serial Killer (2021) and Biography (1987).
Prolific "heavy" in American films of the silent and early talkie eras. A native of Kansas City, Missouri, Kohler left home as a teenager, working various jobs while trying to establish a career in vaudeville. During this time, according to his son, actor Fred Kohler Jr., Kohler worked in a mine and lost part of his right hand in a dynamite accident. Eventually he fell in with a touring theatrical company and worked onstage around the U.S. for several years. In his mid-twenties, he ended up in California and found roles in silent films. He quickly found a niche as a villain, by virtue of his imposing size and his fearsome features, typically and most memorably in The Iron Horse (1924). He worked primarily in Westerns, but films of all sorts benefited from his skill at screen nastiness. In a series of silent Paramount Westerns based on Zane Grey novels, Kohler not only played the heavy, but also repeated some of those roles when these films were remade as talkies a decade later. His career lasted without let-up until his sudden death due to a heart attack at 51 in 1938.