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Kelly Burkhardt is the son of Adalind Schade and Nick Burkhardt, named after Nick's mother. He is also the younger, half-brother of Diana Schade-Renard. As a baby he's played by Owynn & Quinn Ingersoll, Emma & Claire Dezellem, and 2+ other sets of uncredited twins. As an adult he's played by Kevin Joy.
With that, Grimm signs off for the last time." [22] Kevin Yeoman from Oregon Live, wrote, "As 'Grimm' reminded us, before Walt Disney and other family friendly folk got their hands on the Brothers Grimm stories, they were often as dark as the Black Forest, with monsters preying on innocent victims, until the happy ending -- we hoped -- restored ...
A grieving and desperate Adalind tries to recruit Nick's help to find her missing daughter, not knowing that Kelly Burkhardt (Nick's mother) has taken the baby. When Adalind then finds out that Kelly has left town, with both Nick and Juliette refusing to help, Adalind angrily leaves the house, then violently attacks Sean Renard in his garage ...
Grimm‘s series finale aired in March 2017, with a flash-forward showing that Nick’s son, Kelly, grows up to be a Grimm who fights alongside his father, mother Adalind and half-sister Diana, as ...
Homicide Detective Nick Burkhardt of the Portland Police Department learns he descended from a line of guardians known as Grimms, charged with keeping balance between humanity and the Wesen, or mythological creatures of the world (Wesen is the German word for being or creature).
The police eventually arrest Kenneth for Kelly Burkhardt's murder. Wu ( Reggie Lee ) takes Kenneth to an abandoned warehouse and drives away. Kenneth gets up off the floor and looks around into a vast empty space until Nick slowly emerges from the shadows and confronts him.
The main plot follows a descendant of the Grimm line, Nick Burkhardt, ... Kevin Joy as Adult Kelly Burkhardt; ... "The Son Also Rises" February 24, 2017:
The straw-to-gold quandary is the plot device driving the Grimms' version of the age-old fable, published by Georg Reimer in 1812. But an earlier iteration — one recorded by the Grimms just two years earlier, and sent to academic friends for comment — tells a different, more empowering story of the miller's daughter.