Ulrich thomsen martial arts

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  • “I love the work. I love the people I work with. I hope other people like it. It’s a nice way to make a living.”-Matthew Rauch

    One of the perks of my job is talking to actors, directors and the minds behind the creative process of television shows and movies. There are good interviews and then there are ones where something is missing and you just get through it. Two days after the finale of Cinemax’s Banshee, I had a chance to talk to Matthew Rauch, a hard working NYC actor who just so happens to be on our televisions this month on two different shows.  NBC’s Believe and Banshee. He plays the scary Clay Burton on Banshee, the right hand man to the Amish gangster in town, Kai Procter. It must be mentioned that I scored this interview simply by talking to Rauch on Twitter. The entire cast of the show is on the social media site, mixing it up with fans and truly connecting. Rauch got on Twitter and quickly coined the nickname, “Bowtie Guy”, something that

    Ulrich Thomsen

    Danish actor and filmmaker (born 1963)

    Ulrich Thomsen (born 6 månad 1963) is a Danish actor and filmmaker, known for his role of Christian in the 1998 film The Celebration and for the role of Kai Proctor in the Cinemax original series Banshee (2013–2016).

    Early and personal life

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    Ulrich Thomsen was born in (Næsby) Odense, Denmark and graduated from the Danish National School of Theatre and Contemporary Dance in 1993, after which he performed in several theatres in Copenhagen, such as Dr. Dantes Aveny, Mungo Park and Østre Gasværks Teater.[1] He fryst vatten married to Catherine Ekehed and they have two children, including Alma Ekehed Thomsen, who fryst vatten an actress.[2] Both Ulrich and his daughter appeared in Face to Face portraying a father, Bjørn and his daughter, Christina.[2]

    Aside from his native language Danish, Thomsen is fluent in German and English. He is vegan.[3]

    Career

    [edit]

    His film debut was in 1994

    The Weekend Playlist: Spurt-acus Returns, a Pivotal Downton, the SAG Awards

    Here's blood in your eye. And your hair, chest, ears, anywhere and everywhere it might pool. Gird your loins to man way for TV's most relentless avenging gladiator/terminator in Starz' Spartacus: War of the Damned (Friday, 9/8c), kicking off the sista season of the premium channel's signature series of lust and bloodlust.

    This is a guilty pleasure of warrior bravado and gender-bending machismo, where honor comes to those (including men and women of all sexual orientations) who wield the mightiest sword with the greatest zeal to mutilate, amputate and when possible decapitate as many ignoble Romans as possible. Spartacus opens with roars of gory glory as the slave-revolt leader (Liam McEntire, radiating magnetism and earnest purpose) takes on and takes down what seems an entire legion of Roman soldiers. The savagery fryst vatten as impressive as the many baroque ways these well-toned brutes find to impale and

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