Kenny Kramer (born May 1943) is an American former stand-up comedy, who was the inspiration for the character of Cosmo Kramer from the television sitcom Seinfeld.
Seinfeld co-creator Larry David lived across the hall from Kenny for six years, just as the character of Jerry Seinfeld did from Cosmo Kramer in the show. The two lived in Manhattan Plaza, a federally assisted apartment complex for performing artists in Hell's Kitchen, New York City. David said that Kramer was a little bit eccentric and would be a good character to have on the show. Many of the traits of Kenny Kramer, such as the obsessions with golf, fruit, hot tubs, taking things out of the refrigerator and coming up with strange ideas and inventions, were featured in the show.
Kenny Kramer has been the host of Kramer's Reality Tour and Kramer's Reality Road Show since Seinfeld was on the air. He tells behind-the-scenes stories to his audience and gives a bus tour of sites made famous by the show. A DVD version of his reality tour has also been produced. The "Reality Tours" were later parodied on Seinfeld in the episode "The Muffin Tops", when catalog sales company owner Jacopo Peterman uses Kramer's various stories in Peterman's autobiography. Kramer develops a reality bus tour and touts himself as "The Real J. Peterman." The relationship between Cosmo Kramer and Kenny Kramer is explored in the featurette Kramer vs. Kramer: Kenny to Cosmo, on the 3rd season Seinfeld DVD.
In 1997, Kramer attempted to gain the Democratic Party nomination for New York mayor; he claimed that his candidacy was "quite serious," saying that he wanted to represent "a lot of disfranchised Democrats out there." NO JOKE! REAL-LIFE KRAMER'S RUNNING , New York Daily News, David L. Lewis, April 23, 1997 He did not get the nomination. In 2001, Kramer was asked by a television reporter about running again, and he replied that "if Jesse Ventura can be governor, why can't I be mayor?" The next day, the Libertarian Party contacted him to run on its ticket, and he accepted. He cited his agreement with the Libertarian Party on, among other issues, the decriminalization of marijuana. Kramer for mayor! , Gersh Kuntzman, Salon.com, June 4, 2001 During his run, he claimed that the previous run was "a publicity stunt"; his campaign slogan was "Kramer for mayor... this time I'm not kidding!" He finished seventh out of nine candidates in the election, with 1,408 votes.
On June 6, 2013, Kramer became an ordained non-denominational minister with the Universal Life Church World Headquarters and was registered with the City Clerk in New York City. While officiating at weddings, he prefers to be called the "Irreverent Kramer" rather than Rev. Kramer, and offers a "customized lifetime warranty" of providing pro bono weddings if the couple .
| + !Year !Title !Role !Notes | |||
| 2004 | Saturday Night Darren and Brose | Self | |
| 2004 | Kramer vs. Kramer: Kenny to Cosmo | Self | Documentary short |
| 2017 | Miracle on 42nd Street | Self | Documentary |
| + !Year !Title !Role !Notes | |||
| 1995 | Seinfeld | Man #2 in Hockey Audience | Episode: "The Face Painter" |
| 1995 | Night Man at the Sardi Building | Parole Board | Video |
| 2004 | Seinfeld: How It Began | Self | Television film |
| 2005 | Dokument: Humor | Television documentary | |
| 2005–2007 | Seinfeld: Inside Look | Television documentary | |
| 2011 | All Night with Joey Reynolds | Episode #1.28 | |
| 2016 | Hayom BaLayla | Episode #1.38 |
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