Kirk Bowman is known for Curse of the Pink Panties (2007), Revenge of Mr. Willie (1999) and People Glue (2012).
Kirk C. Johnson is known for Richard Cocksmith and the Above-Ground Pool (2008), Manbabies (2009) and 30 for 30 (2009).
Kirk Thomas Cameron was born in Panorama City, California, to Barbara Cameron (née Barbara Jeanne Bausmith), a homemaker, and Robert Cameron, a teacher. Though his parents initially did not project show business aspirations onto their children, a family friend in the business noted to Barbara that both Kirk and his sister, Candace Cameron Bure, were cute enough that they could easily pick up lucrative work in commercials. After Cameron began appearing in TV ads for "Polaroid", "McDonald's" and "Count Chocula" cereal, he found himself wound up in Hollywood's notorious child-star mill, netting minor cute-kid parts in a handful of TV movies, including a couple of Disney projects and two ABC Afterschool Specials (1972) (1972-95). In 1983, he landed a regular gig, as a precocious kid, in ABC's Two Marriages (1983), a show that remained on the air less than a month. He found a more winning formula in 1985 with Growing Pains (1985), playing the oldest son of a family headed by a psychiatrist (Alan Thicke) and a journalist (Joanna Kerns), one in a sequence of family network sitcoms characterized by with-it parents and mischievous-but-squeaky-clean kids. On the show, Cameron played the incorrigible but dumb "Mike Seaver" and his winning portrayal won over a large number of teen fans. In spite of scathing critical notices, "Growing Pains" ranked among Nielsen's top 20 network shows for its first four seasons, rising to No. 5 in its 1987-88 year. On the heels of his sitcom success, Cameron appeared in his first feature film in 1986, the Robin Williams/Kurt Russell glory-days comedy, The Best of Times (1986). ABC would pump up Cameron as its "It" boy, and his trademark smirk in coming years would grace covers of a raft of teen magazines. Meanwhile, job offers cropped up to exploit his proverbial 15 minutes; he played the son/father of Dudley Moore in Like Father Like Son (1987), one of Hollywood's periodic flavor-du-jour retreads of the mystical parent/sibling body-switch comedies; netted the starring role in a high-profile Pepsi Super Bowl XXIV commercial; rated top-billing in Listen to Me (1989), an overwrought, widely-panned college drama about debate team wonks arguing against Roe v. Wade; and did a guest-shot, alongside sister Candace, on her ABC sister sitcom, Full House (1987) (1987-1995). Firmly established as the resident star of "Growing Pains", Cameron saw his pay jump to $50,000 a week and his fans sending him some 10,000 letters a week. But his coming-of-age took an unexpected turn, at least for everyone who worked with him. As he would later recall it in his autobiography, "Still Growing", the family of his first girlfriend initially exposed the 17-year-old to evangelical Christianity. Cameron experienced what he would later describe as a "life-changing encounter with Jesus" and declared himself "born again".
Kirk Caouette is a 25 year veteran of the film industry, best known for his work as a Stunt Performer/Stunt Co-coordinator/Fight Choreographer/ and Main unit Director. in 2017 UBCP/ACTRA presented him with the 'SAM PAYNE HUMANITY and INTEGRITY AWARD' for his relentless efforts to improve the skills of his fellow stunt performers while raising tens of thousands of dollars for humanitarian projects around the world. Trivia: Often considered to be the most broadly talented member of UBCP/ACTRA, Kirk is the only person to ever be nominated by UBCP/ACTRA for both, Best Actor and Best Stunt in a Feature Film -- and what is even more unique is that he was nominated for both at the same time. UBCP/ACTRA has 8000 working members.
Kirk Chittick is known for The Dark When Nobody Watches, Glasstone 64 and Terminazi.
In the 2013 offseason, published his first book, "Game Changer: Faith, Football, & Finding Your Way". Attended Holland (Mich.) Christian H.S., where he lettered in football, baseball and basketball. Earned All-Ottawa-Kent Conference honors as a quarterback for the football team, as a pitcher for the baseball squad and as a shooting guard for basketball. Was a three-star prospect by Rivals.com, which rated him Michigan's 27thbest overall prospect. Finished prep career completing 198-of- 366 passes for 3,204 yards, 40 touchdowns and 18 interceptions in 16 games, with at least three touchdown passes in nine of those contests. In 2006, was an all-state and academic all-state honorable mention choice by the Michigan High School Football Coaches Association, as he went on to set 35 school game-, season- and career-records en route to garnering Area Player of the Year accolades. That season, he completed 130-of-231 throws (.563) for 2,088 yards, 28 touchdowns and 10 interceptions as a senior, leading the Maroons to a program-best 7-3 record while qualifying for the playoffs for the first time in school history. Graduated from Michigan State in December 2011 with a 3.68 grade point average, majoring in kinesiology. Participated in the Spartan Buddies program, volunteering in the pediatric ward at Sparrow Hospital in Lansing and in the Athletes in Action sports ministry. Served as the color analyst on the Big Ten Network broadcast of Michigan State's Green-White Spring Game from 2013-15. Son of MaryAnn and Don Cousins. Father is a minister and mother is a flight attendant. Brother, Kyle, lettered four times as a pitcher at Calvin College (Grand Rapids, Mich.) Married his wife, Julie, in the 2014 offseason. Born Aug. 19, 1988.
Kirk Cousins is known for Cyber Bride (2019), Transference: A Love Story (2020) and Waste (2019).
Kirk D'Amico is the President of Myriad Pictures, an international production and global licensing company that develops feature films and television content such as KINSEY, THE GOOD GIRL, MARGIN CALL, and THE DISAPPEARANCE OF ELEANOR RIGBY. In addition to producing and executive producing over 60 films, D'Amico is one of the industry's leading experts on international film distribution and is the co-founder of Photon Films. Photon is a thriving independent film distributor in Canada, currently releasing the Academy Award©-nominated SOUND OF METAL, starring Riz Ahmed. Kirk D'Amico also directed HOLIDAY JOY (2016), written by Holly Goldberg Sloan and starring Bailee Madison, French Stewart, and Jennifer Robertson, for Freeform in the U.S. D'Amico's additional experience includes positions such as Executive Vice President, Village Roadshow Pictures (1996-1998), and Vice President International, The Samuel Goldwyn Company (1994-1996). He received a B.A in Political Science and Philosophy from College of the Holy Cross, and a J.D. from the University of the District of Columbia. Kirk D'Amico is an active BAFTA member. He also was previously Vice Chairman of the Board for the International Film and Television Alliance (IFTA). He is also a Lifetime Member of the Sierra Club.
Kirk was born in New York City and and raised in Wyckoff, New Jersey. He attended the University of Southern California where he graduated in 1991 with a degree in economics and political science. He then spent three years in Italy as a journalist for an Italian film-business magazine before moving back to the United States to work for the William Morris Agency in New York City and Los Angeles. He sold his first spec script called "Day in November" to Arnold Kopelson in 1995. Since then, Kirk has been fortunate enough to adapt the work of many of his writing heroes such as: Roald Dahl, Jack Kirby and Elmore Leonard, and had the great opportunity to co-write two scripts with comedy legend John Cleese. He wrote and co-directed DreamWorks Animation's "The Croods," which was nominated for the 2013 Academy Award for Best Animated Feature.
Kirk DeWindt is known for The Bachelorette (2003), Bachelor in Paradise (2014) and Bachelor Pad (2010).