Randall Kim

Producer

Birthday November 28, 1959

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Honolulu, Hawaii, U.S.

DEATH DATE 11 August, 1996, Oahu, Hawaii, USA (36 years old)

Nationality United States

#24418 Most Popular

1943

Randall Duk Kim (born September 24, 1943) is an American actor.

On stage, he is known both for his extensive classical repertoire and as an interpreter of the works of playwright Frank Chin.

He is the co-founder of the American Players Theatre.

To film audiences, he is best known for his portrayal of the Keymaker in The Matrix franchise, and as the voice of Master Oogway in the Kung Fu Panda franchise.

He is an Obie Award winner and an Outer Critics Circle Award nominee.

Kim was born to a fundamentalist Baptist family of Chinese and Korean descent in Hawaii.

He grew up on a farm near the Koko Head Crater.

He developed an interest in acting as a child after seeing the musical Oklahoma! at the Honolulu Community Theatre.

In high school, he often watched plays at the University of Hawaii.

After graduating high school, while visiting family in San Diego, he visited the Old Globe Theatre where he saw The Merchant of Venice, Twelfth Night, and Richard III.

He credited Morris Carnovsky for inspiring him to become an actor.

1964

In 1964, Kim and his friend Charles Bright moved to New York City to pursue acting careers.

1966

Kim spent time in London between 1966 and 1967 where he acquired a part time job and watched shows from the Royal Shakespeare Company.

Kim began doing theater when he was 18 years old.

He has portrayed a wide variety of roles on the stage, focusing upon Western classical works, including Shakespeare, Chekhov, Ibsen and Molière.

He has spent most of his career in theater.

1972

Kim starred in the first play written by an Asian American to be produced professionally in New York, The Chickencoop Chinaman by Frank Chin, which was mounted by The American Place Theatre in 1972.

1974

Bright became an apprentice with the Association of Producing on the Phoenix at 74th Street.

Kim and Bright befriended the house manager and the house manager gave Kim unsold seats at shows.

In 1974, Kim starred in Chin's second play, The Year of the Dragon.

Also that year, he became one of the first Asian-American actors to play a leading role in an American production of a Shakespeare play when he played the title role in The New York Public Theater's 1974 production of Pericles, Prince of Tyre.

1977

Kim co-founded the American Players Theatre in Spring Green, Wisconsin with Anne Occhiogrosso and Charles Bright in 1977.

He was the theater's artistic director.

1978

Kim played the title role in Hamlet at the Guthrie Theatre in 1978–79.

1996

He played Kralahome in the 1996 revival of The King and I on Broadway, later succeeding to the leading role.

Other Broadway credits include Golden Child and the revised version of Flower Drum Song, both written by David Henry Hwang.

2003

Kim portrayed the Keymaker in the film The Matrix Reloaded (2003).

He was originally asked by casting director Mali Finn for the role.

2008

In 2008, he played mathematician Dashiell Kim In the episode "The Equation" of the television series Fringe. He played Grandpa Gohan in the live action Dragonball Evolution (2009). Kim voiced Po's and Shifu’s teacher, Grand Master Oogway, in Kung Fu Panda (2008) and Kung Fu Panda 3 (2016).

He is married to actress and fellow American Players Theatre co-founder, Anne Occhiogrosso.