Paranoia Agent Voice Actors



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Other namesWilliam Knight, William Frederick, Frederick Knight
OccupationVoice actor, character actor
Years active1966-present

William Frederick Knight, sometimes credited as William Knight, William Frederick, or Frederick Knight, is a voice actor who has lent his voice to the English dubs of anime and video games. He is a character actor of sorts, often cast in the role of a wise old man, such as in Ghost in the Shell (as Daisuke Aramaki), The Big O (as Gordon Rosewater), Paranoia Agent (as the old man), and Eureka Seven (as Kuzemi, one of the three Sages).[1]

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Voice roles[edit]

Voice

Anime[edit]

  • Amazing Nurse Nanako – General, Griffith
  • Carried by the Wind: Tsukikage Ran – Denkichi's Master
  • Cowboy Bebop – Old Man (Session 2: 'Stray Dog Strut')
  • Dangaizer 3 – Professor Tachibana
  • DearS – Grandfather
  • El Hazard – The Magnificent World – Dr. Schtalubaugh
  • El Hazard 2 – The Magnificent World – Dr. Schtalubaugh
  • El Hazard: The Alternative World – Dr. Schtalubaugh
  • El Hazard: The Wanderers – Dr. Schtalubaugh, Captain of the Guard
  • Ergo Proxy – J.J. (Ep. 11)
  • Eureka Seven – Kuzemi
  • Fake – Leonard Henry
  • Fist of the North Star – Village Chief
  • Freedom Project – Alan
  • Gad Guard – Gary
  • Gankutsuou: The Count of Monte Cristo – Luigi Vampa
  • Ghost in the Shell: SAC 2045 – Daisuke Aramaki[2]
  • Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex – Daisuke Aramaki
  • Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex 2nd GIG – Daisuke Aramaki
  • Gungrave – Dr. Tokioka, Butler Tokioka
  • GUNxSWORD – Carlos (Eps. 3, 26)
  • Haibane Renmei – Watchmaker
  • Heat Guy J – Grandpa
  • Hellsing – Father Rinaldo
  • Hellsing Ultimate – Father (Ep. 3)[3]
  • Hibakusha – Colonel Paul Tibbets
  • Ikki Tousen – Choko
  • Immortal Grand Prix – Ichi
  • Kamichu! – Chairman of God Association (Ep. 7)
  • Kurokami – Keita's grandfather
  • L/R: Licensed by Royalty – Lord Miralio, Professor Freud
  • Mahoromatic: Something More Beautiful – Jils
  • Mars Daybreak – Doze
  • Mermaid Forest – Toba Islander
  • Mezzo Forte – Emoto
  • Naruto – Hyuga Elder Sukeza (Ep. 153)
  • Naruto Shippuden – Danzō Shimura
  • New Getter Robo – Bonze
  • NieA 7 – Butcher, Newscaster, Newspaper Man, Old Alien
  • Nura: Rise of the Yokai Clan – Nurarihyon[2][4]
  • Outlaw Star – Ctarl-Ctarl Governor
  • Overman King Gainer – Gach
  • Paranoia Agent – Old Man
  • Planetes – Father-In-Law
  • R.O.D -The TV- – Irving (Ep. 5), Shop Owner A, Teacher (Ep. 6)[2]
  • Rumic Theater – Old Man, Pops
  • Samurai Champloo – Daigoro
  • Spirit of Wonder – Cooper
  • Spirit of Wonder Scientific Boys Club – Cooper
  • Starship Girl Yamamoto Yohko II – Swift
  • Strawberry Eggs – Tofu Kuji
  • Street Fighter II V – Master Yo Sen-ko (Animaze dub)
  • Texhnolyze – Old Man 1, Tsujinaka
  • The Adventures of Mini-Goddess – Crawl Space Boss, Narrator
  • The Big O – Gordon Rosewater
  • The Melody of Oblivion – Old Man Tsunagi
  • The Third: The Girl with the Blue Eye – Dr. Nor
  • The Twelve Kingdoms – Genkai
  • Tokko – Taishi
  • Trigun – Old Man (Ep. 5)
  • Wolf's Rain – Old Wolf (Ep. 5)

Films[edit]

Voice

List Of Paranoia Agent Episodes

  • Akira – Miyako (Pioneer/Animaze dub)
  • Appleseed – Elder
  • Cowboy Bebop: The Movie – Van Dann
  • Ghost in the Shell – Section 9 Department Chief Aramaki
  • Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex: Solid State Society – Daisuke Aramaki
  • Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence – Daisuke Aramaki
  • Metropolis – Notarlin
  • Street Fighter Alpha – Monk
  • Mega Monster Battle: Ultra Galaxy – Shin Hayata/Ultraman
  • Ultraman Zero: The Revenge of Belial – Ultraman
  • Ultraman Saga – Shin Hayata/Ultraman

Paranoia Agent Episodes

Voice

Video games[edit]

Characters
  • The Darkness – Frank Rottenberg
  • Defiance – Varus Soleptor
  • Final Fantasy IV DS – Mysidian Elder (uncredited)
  • Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles: Echoes of Time – Larkeicus (uncredited)
  • Ghost in the Shell – Daisuke Aramaki
  • Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex – Daisuke Aramaki
  • League of Legends – Lyte (Purple Side Vendor: Howling Abyss)
  • Naruto series – Danzo Shimura[2]
  • Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time - Sultan of Azad[2]
  • Sengoku Basara: Samurai Heroes – Hojo Ujimasa (uncredited)
  • WildStar – Dorian Walker, Pell, Torax[5]
  • World of Final Fantasy – Adamantoise[2]

References[edit]

  1. ^IMDB page on William Frederick Knight. Accessed September 5, 2007.
  2. ^ abcdef'Behind the Voice Actors – William Frederick Knight'. Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved February 2, 2020.
  3. ^'Hellsing Ultimate III'. Hellsing Ultimate. Episode 3. October 4, 2014. Adult Swim.
  4. ^Ressler, Karen (April 4, 2013). 'Neon Alley Reveals Nura: Rise of the Yokai Clan: Demon Capital Dub Cast'. Anime News Network. Retrieved November 16, 2015.
  5. ^Carbine Studios. WildStar. NCSOFT. Scene: Credits, 2:45 in, Cast.

Paranoia Agent Behind The Voice Actors

External links[edit]

List
  • William Frederick Knight on IMDb
  • William Frederick Knight at Anime News Network's encyclopedia

Paranoia Agent Wiki

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=William_Frederick_Knight&oldid=991183507'

Paranoia Agent Mal

Tsukiko Sagi, a shy character designer who created the immensely popular pink dog Maromi, finds herself under pressure to repeat her success. As she walks home that night, she is attacked by an elementary school boy on inline skates. Two police detectives, Keiichi Ikari and Mitsuhiro Maniwa, are assigned to the case. They suspect that Tsukiko is lying about the attack, until they receive word of a second victim.
Soon the attacker, dubbed Lil' Slugger (Shōnen Bat in Japanese, meaning 'Bat Boy') is blamed for a series of street assaults in Tokyo. None of the victims can recall the boy's face and only three distinct details are left in their memories: golden inline skates, a baseball cap, and the weapon: a bent golden baseball bat. Ikari and Maniwa set out to track down the perpetrator and put an end to his crimes. Their hunt is unsuccessful, however, and the investigation eventually leads to both men losing their positions as police detectives.
As the attacks continue, it is revealed that they are not random. Instead, Lil' Slugger seems to target people in crisis, and the attacks, though violent, lead to some improvement in the life of the victim. Maniwa becomes convinced that Lil' Slugger is a supernatural force, driven to rescue the desperate from their tragedies through violence. He becomes obsessive, broadcasting his warning about Lil' Slugger via shortwave radio and seeking a way to kill the supernatural assailant.
As public fear of Lil' Slugger intensifies, so do his (supposed) attacks, and the line between truth and fiction become blurred. At the same time, public anticipation for the launch of the Maromi television series reaches a fanatical high, almost as if the fear of one is feeding (and feeding off) the anticipation for the other.
Things come to an end on the night that the Maromi show is set to air. Ikari, now a private security guard, and Maniwa, now a wandering 'knight,' attempt to battle Lil' Slugger, now an incredibly powerful force. They confront Tsukiko, and she confesses that Maromi was based on a real puppy that Tsukiko had in childhood, whose leash she had one day accidentally dropped, allowing the puppy to run into traffic where it was killed. Instead of taking responsibility for the puppy's death, young Tsukiko invented a story about a bat-wielding, skate-wearing puppy killer—Lil' Slugger's first 'attack.'
Ultimately, Lil' Slugger is a paranormal figment of Tsukiko's guilt and fear, brought inexplicably to life when the adult Tsukiko desperately needed to escape her responsibilities and then fed and nurtured by the fear of the populace. In a way, Tsukiko does fulfill her job by creating a character (Lil' Slugger) that becomes just as big a sensation as Maromi. When Tsukiko finally confesses the truth, and in doing so accepts the guilt for the death of Maromi, Lil' Slugger is defeated.