Actor henry kingi jr photo mexico
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Famous Faces on "Kindred:The Embraced" (1996)!
by gattonero975 • Created 8 years ago • Modified 8 years ago
Enter the dangerous and sexy world of the undead when vampires clash with mortals and each other in modern-day San Francisco. Five clans of vampires are known as the KINDRED and in their terrifying embrace, one becomes forever beautiful...forever young and forever doomed.
From the savagery in the premiere to the chilling climactic finale, the KINDRED draws you into a mysterious realm of forbidden liaisons, inhuman hunger and Mafia wars in a spellbinding saga of erotic danger and unworldly suspense!
Kindred: The Embraced is based on the Vampire: The Masquerade role-playing game which was created by Mark Rein·Hagen as the first of several Storytelling System games for its World of Darkness setting line.
Unfortunately this TV Series was canceled due to Mark Frankel's untimely death due to a motorcycle accident. He was truly one of a kind in the role of 'Julian' and was not replaceable at all.
The paintings used in the series were originals by Jeff Kober (Daedalus).
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Of Inomatas and Kingis: The Story of a Remarkable Family
If ever there was an award offered for the most remarkable Japanese American family saga, one formidable contender would be that of the Inomata clan, as revealed in the book Pure Winds, Bright Moon, by Kinji Inomata, as well as supplementary documents. Their history defies simple-minded ideas about Japanese Americans, their lives, and their interactions with other groups.
The family story starts with a Japanese boy named Kenji Inomata. He was born in 1885 in Kashiwazaki, Niigata, Japan, the son of Tuna Kuga-Inomata and Usuke Inomata. Kenji’s father died suddenly while on a trip in 1895, and the ten year-old boy was sent to work with an uncle.
Soon after, Kenji was befriended by an English ship captain. He taught the captain Japanese, in exchange for the captain’s instructing him in English. Kenji stowed away on the captain’s ship, on which he ultimately found work as a cabin boy.
After sailing to many ports, at some point in time circa 1900 Kenji’s ship sailed into New York Harbor. There Kenji jumped ship, swam to shore, and settled illegally in the United States.
Kenji apparently spent the next years in New York. In 1906, he was recorded as working as a waiter and living in Sands Street,