Early career Kevorkian began his career on
Star Trek: Voyager, as a visual effects associate. He was with the series until its conclusion in 2001. He then merged to
Star Trek: Enterprise, where he worked in effects for 70 episodes. He was then hired to coordinate visual effects for the two-part
pilot of
J. J. Abrams Lost. He went on to work for Abrams again on the
final season of
Alias. His first job as a supervisor came with
ABCs new fall 2005 series
Invasion. He worked in that capacity until the series was cancelled after its second season. He would go on to work as a supervisor on such series as
Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip,
Brothers & Sisters,
Ghost Whisperer,
Weeds,
GCB,
Castle,
Unforgettable,
Political Animals,
The Newsroom,
Ray Donovan,
Homeland,
Hawaii Five-0,
The Tomorrow People and
Lab Rats, As well as the pilots for
Reckless,
The Lottery, and
The Mysteries of Laura. He won a
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Special Visual Effects in a Supporting Role for his work on the
Cinemax series
Banshee.
Arrowverse Having worked for prolific producer
Greg Berlanti on
Brothers & Sisters,
The Tomorrow People, and
Political Animals, Kevorkian joined him yet again for his new
Arrow spin-off
The Flash. Working on the series, he gained fame and recognition for his visual achievements. In 2015, Kevorkian boarded
Supergirl, which was initially broadcast on
CBS and not a part of
The CWs
Arrowverse. However, after the conclusion of the first season, the series moved to the sibling network. In 2016, Kevorkian began work on Berlanti's next addition to the universe
Legends of Tomorrow. The same year, he made his directorial debut, helming
The Flashs second-season episode, "Rupture". He most recently directed the third episode of the third season, "Magenta". He was nominated for a
Primetime Emmy Award in 2015 for his work on the episode "Grodd Lives" of the series. == Awards and nominations ==