1. Well, there are stupid examples like the fact that P^n has Kähler structures where any rational multiple of the hyperplane class is the Kähler class which are compatible with the standard complex structure (you just rescale the symplectic structure and metric). I think you should get similar examples with multi-parameter families on things like toric varieties with higher dimensional H^2. 2. I know some non-compact examples where you can deform the complex structure without changing the symplectic one. I don't know any compact examples, but they probably exist. The thing is, the only thing you can deform about a symplectic structure on a compact thing is its cohomology class (by the Moser trick), so anything with an big enough family of Kähler metrics will work. 3. This probably follows from GAGA, but you'd have to ask someone more expert than me to be sure. <b>Edit:</b> David's answer made me realize I forgot to say projective here. That's important.