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  1. Kevin J. Wilson is a New Zealand actor. He is best known for his performance as Sam Murphy on the satirical Frontline and his role as Senator Albinus on STARZ TV series Spartacus. He has also portrayed Sir Malcolm in the erotic soap opera Chances.

  2. Kevin J. Wilson. Actor: Spartacus. New Zealand born actor. Has been nominated for best actor and best supporting actor in NZ and Australia 15 times. Trained as a classical actor and has appeared in stage plays. His television roles include Legend Of The Seeker and Spartacus series one and two.

  3. Kevin J. Wilson. Kevin J. Wilson is a New Zealand actor. He is best known for his performance as Sam Murphy on the satirical Frontline and his role as Senator Albinus on STARZ TV series Spartacus. He has also portrayed Sir Malcolm in the erotic soap opera Chances. Community content is available under CC-BY-SA unless otherwise noted.

  4. Kevin focuses on ensuring Procopio’s clients receive a first-class legal service experience. He engages with general counsel and executives in a range of industries, including life sciences, technology, hospitality, finance, real estate and construction, in both privately and publicly traded companies as well as public agencies.

  5. Kevin J. Wilson is known as an Actor. Some of his work includes An Angel at My Table, Ike: Countdown to D-Day, Spartacus, Xena: Warrior Princess, The Shannara Chronicles, Pictures, Chunuk Bair, and Frontline.

  6. Kevin J Wilson specialises in playing no-nonsense Kiwi blokes. Brought up partly in a house in the bush, Wilson began his long acting career at Auckland University. Since his TV debut in Pukemanu he has acted in almost every genre, and starred in movies Chunuk Bair and Pictures (as photographer Alfred Burton), and police series Shark in the Park.

  7. 1 Introduction. Bayesian optimisation is a sample-efficient optimisation algorithm for the optimisation of expensive-to-evaluate functions that do not possess a mathematical expression or where the expression is too complex to be solved analytically [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]. Examples of these functions are physical experiments and computer simulations.