Kojak
0 sources
Kojak
Summary
Kojak is a television series[1]. Kojak ranks in the top 5% of television_series entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,032 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Kojak's image is recorded as Telly Savalas as Kojak 1973.JPG[3].
- Kojak's instance of is recorded as television series[4].
- Kojak's composer is recorded as Billy Goldenberg[5].
- Kojak's genre is recorded as crime television series[6].
- Kojak's genre is recorded as drama television series[7].
- Kojak's genre is recorded as police television drama[8].
- Kojak's cast member is recorded as Telly Savalas[9].
- Kojak's cast member is recorded as Dan Frazer[10].
- Kojak's cast member is recorded as Kevin Dobson[11].
- Kojak's cast member is recorded as George Savalas[12].
- Kojak's cast member is recorded as Andre Braugher[13].
- Kojak's cast member is recorded as Sylvester Stallone[14].
- Kojak's cast member is recorded as Roger E. Mosley[15].
- Kojak's cast member is recorded as Ken Foree[16].
- Kojak's cast member is recorded as Robert Alda[17].
- Kojak's cast member is recorded as Louise Sorel[18].
- Kojak's cast member is recorded as Sally Kirkland[19].
- Kojak's cast member is recorded as Victor Argo[20].
- Kojak's cast member is recorded as Ken Kercheval[21].
- Kojak's cast member is recorded as Stephen McHattie[22].
- Kojak's cast member is recorded as Héctor Elizondo[23].
- Kojak's cast member is recorded as Alex Rocco[24].
- Kojak's cast member is recorded as Andrea Marcovicci[25].
- Kojak's cast member is recorded as Michael Constantine[26].
- Kojak's cast member is recorded as Andrew Robinson[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Cast members include Telly Savalas[9], Dan Frazer[10], Kevin Dobson[11], George Savalas[12], Andre Braugher[13], and Sylvester Stallone[14].
Publication
Genres include crime television series[6], drama television series[7], and police television drama[8].
Why It Matters
Kojak ranks in the top 5% of television_series entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,032 views/month).[2] Kojak has Wikipedia articles in 21 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] Kojak is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]