PATRICK STEWART is a veteran stage and screen actor whose incredible career spans nearly six decades and has earned him multiple Emmy,
Golden Globe, SAG Award nominations, and a Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Album for Children.
Stewart memorably portrayed “Picard” for seven seasons on the groundbreaking drama series, Star Trek : The Next Generation, as well as in the film installments
of the franchise, beginning with Star Trek Generations.
Stewart can be seen reprising the iconic role of “Jean-Luc Picard” in Star Trek: Picard, which debuted to record-breaking numbers worldwide on Amazon Prime.
He also co-starred in Sony Pictures’ feature film, Charlie's Angels, the latest installment in the worldwide franchise, portraying the legendary character
“Bosley.”
photo Par Gage Skidmore, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=80998601
PATRICK STEWART received rave reviews and a Critics Choice Award nomination for his performance in the worldwide hit
feature film, Logan, with Stewart starring as “Charles Xavier/Professor X” opposite Hugh Jackman's “Logan/Wolverine.”
He received both Golden Globe and Critics Choice Award nominations for his lead role on the Starz comedy Blunt Talk, which he produced and starred in as “Walter Blunt,” a
British import intent on conquering the world of American cable news.
Patrick Stewart is a veteran stage and screen actor whose incredible career spans nearly six decades. He is a three-time Olivier Award winner and a Tony Award nominee for his distinguished stage
work and has received multiple Emmy, Golden Globe, and SAG Award nominations for his work across television and film.
Stewart can be seen reprising the iconic role of “Jean-Luc Picard” in Star Trek: Picard, which debuted to record-breaking numbers on CBS All Access in the United States and worldwide on Amazon
Prime. Stewart memorably portrayed “Picard” for seven seasons on the groundbreaking drama series, Star Trek: The Next Generation, as well as in the film installments of the franchise, beginning
with Star Trek Generations in 1994 and its sequels. The new series, which Stewart also executive produces, follows the character into the next chapter of his life.
PATRICK STEWART will pen a memoir detailing his life, from his earliest days in Yorkshire, England through the present, in what promises to
be a fascinating look at his life and legendary career. The memoir will be published by Gallery Books, a division of Simon & Schuster.
Stewart recently starred in the independent feature, Coda, opposite Katie Holmes and Giancarlo Esposito, a drama centering around a famous pianist (Stewart) struggling with stage fright, who must
overcome his fear to honor a promise to a deceased friend. The film, directed by Claude Lalonde, was released by Gravitas. He also co-starred in Sony Pictures’ feature film, Charlie's Angels, the
latest installment in the worldwide franchise, directed by Elizabeth Banks and starring Kristen Stewart, Naomi Scott, and Ella Balinska, with Stewart portraying the legendary character
“Bosley.”
Among his film roles, Stewart received rave reviews and a Critics Choice Award nomination for his performance in the worldwide hit feature film, Logan, a thrilling reinvention of the superhero
genre with Stewart starring as “Charles Xavier/Professor X” opposite Hugh Jackman's “Logan/Wolverine.” The film, based on characters made famous in the X-Men Saga film franchise, premiered
at the Berlin Film Festival and later opened in theaters nationwide. Logan marked Stewart’s seventh time portraying the “Charles Xavier/Professor X” character, beginning with the original X-Men
film and its many hit sequels.
For television, he most recently received both Golden Globe and Critics Choice Award nominations for his lead role on the Starz comedy Blunt Talk, which he produced and starred in as “Walter
Blunt,” a British import intent on conquering the world of American cable news. The half-hour dark comedy was executive produced by Seth MacFarlane and Jonathan Ames.
His many, diverse screen credits include Jeremy Saulnier’s Green Room; Damian Harris’ Wilde Wedding; the narrator in Seth MacFarlane’s Ted and Ted 2; Merlin in Joe Cornish’s The King Who Would Be
King; Match; The King of Texas; Jeffrey; Dune; Excalibur; Steve Martin’s L.A. Story; Robin Hood: Men in Tights; Conspiracy Theory; “The Lion in Winter” (Emmy and Golden Globe nominations); I,
Claudius; “Moby Dick” (Emmy and Golden Globe nominations); “Hamlet” (Golden Globe nomination); Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy; Ricky Gervais’ “Extras” (Emmy nomination); and inspired voice work on
Seth MacFarlane’s animated hits “Family Guy” and “American Dad,” plus films such as The Prince of Egypt, Chicken Little, and Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius, among countless others.
Notably, his voice work also includes a Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Album for Children for the English-language recording of Sergei Prokofiev’s “Peter and the Wolf.”
For his legendary stage work, Stewart has been honored with three Olivier Awards, the first of which came in 1979 for his performance in Peter Brook's production of Antony and Cleopatra, which
also marked the start of his unprecedented run with the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC), where he’d go on to appear in over 60 productions, including his Olivier-winning performance as ‘Claudius’
in Hamlet opposite David Tenant. He now serves as an Honorary Associate Artist of the RSC in recognition of his indelible contributions to the theater stalwart.
PATRICK STEWART remounted his Olivier Award-winning solo stage show, A Christmas Carol, which he adapted himself and in which he portrays
over 40 characters. He has performed the piece frequently since its debut in 1991, including on Broadway and in London; with the 2019 installment serving as his first time performing the piece in
seventeen years, this time as a benefit production for City Harvest and Ars Nova.
Stewart’s other countless Broadway and West End appearances include his Tony-nominated and Evening Standard Award-winning performance as the title character in Macbeth, directed by Rupert Goold
in a production that played London’s West End, at the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM), and on Broadway; his work opposite Ian McKellen in repertory productions of Harold Pinter’s No Man’s Land
and Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot; plus The Caretaker; A Life in the Theatre; The Master Builder; The Ride Down Mt. Morgan; A Midsummer Night’s Dream; The Merchant in Venice (Olivier
nomination); Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?; Twelfth Night; Bingo: Scenes of Money and Death; and The Tempest.
In the New Years' Honours list, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth conferred on Patrick the order of the Officer of the British Empire (O.B.E.), and in 2010 Patrick received a knighthood for his
services to Drama. In March of 2017, Stewart was honored with the Empire Legend Award for his outstanding career achievements at the Empire Awards in London.