Patrick Stewart

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I am bald, yes. I also am awesome.

"What's wrong, Captain Picard?"
"What's wrong? I'm a serious Shakespearian Actor, and I'm talking to the ambassador of the FUCKING WORM PEOPLE!"

Sir Patrick Stewart, OBE, is a British actor best known for playing Captain Jean-Luc Picard in Star Trek: The Next Generation and Professor X in the X-Men movies.

Stewart was born in Mirfield, West Yorkshire, studying drama at the Bristol Old Vic theatre school before moving on to the Royal Shakespeare Company. He had lost most of his hair by the age of 19, and impressed during his audition for the Old Vic by performing both with and without a wig and proclaiming himself to be "two actors for the price of one".

While at the RSC, Stewart had small parts in several movies (including Dune and Excalibur), before being cast as a relative unknown in Star Trek.

Stewart has always laughed off those who suggest that, as a classically-trained actor, he was "slumming it" in things like Star Trek -- he suggested that in fact, all the kings and emperors that he had played with the RSC were merely preparation for the iconic role of captaining the new Starship Enterprise.

Similarly, Stewart has always tried to remain in touch with his theatrical roots -- spending a season at the West Yorkshire Playhouse in his native Leeds, he had little time for critics who suggested that this was all the work he could find - he was doing it because he wanted to do it. His various theatre roles include playing Othello among an otherwise entirely black cast. Amusingly, at first he was one of the few TNG castmembers who took their job fully seriously and didn't mess around on-set, until he loosened up and, according to co-star LeVar Burton, would mess around and wreak havoc with the best of them.

Stewart has been most recently seen as Claudius (and King Hamlet) opposite David Tennant in Hamlet as well as becoming a regular special guest star on Seth MacFarlane's American Dad, as the amoral, James Bond-esque CIA Director Avery Bullock.

Was knighted in the 2010 New Year Honours List for services to drama. He still contributes to his local community, having being the chancellor of the nearby University of Huddersfield and president of the local football (soccer) academy since his return to the UK in 2004.

Patrick Stewart's life and career provide examples of:
  • Abusive Parents: As a child he witnessed his father's regular abuse of his mother.
  • Acting for Two: More like Acting for Fifty. He put on a one-man stage production of Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol, in which he played every character.
  • Adam Westing: His role on American Dad is essentially the writers trying to cram everything that would sound ridiculous coming out of Picard's mouth into the script.
  • Bald of Awesome: Along with most of his roles, notably Captain Jean-Luc Picard and Professior Xavier. A reporter questioned his casting in Star Trek, saying "By the 24th century, wouldn't they have cured baldness?" Roddenberry's response: "In the 24th century, they wouldn't care."
  • Classically-Trained Extra: Inverted: Once a member of the Royal Shakespeare Company, he said it was good practice for playing Picard, and has never tried to distance himself from the role. He's still a highly respected Shakespearian actor, though he reportedly refuses to say any of Picard's trademark lines during his other roles - though there are exceptions:
    • Occasionally on American Dad, but then that's one of the jokes of his character in that show.
    • His appearance as himself in Extras, in keeping with the persona he played.
    • This brief appearance with The Count on Sesame Street.
    • He also likes to avoid typecasting by intentionally taking humorous and silly roles to contrast with his normally serious and stoic screen persona.
  • Cloudcuckoolander- Apparently he is quite eccentric in real life
  • Cool Old Guy: Definitely one of the coolest around.
    • And he will treat individual fans that make a special effort to see him in theatre like kings. Truly a class act.
  • Face Palm: The patron saint of facepalms - for a long time, facepalming reaction images on the internet were more likely to be Picard than anyone else.
  • Hey, It's That Voice!: His voice is instantly recognisable anywhere you go. Just for fun, read this entire article with his voice. Go ahead. You know you want to.
  • Ink Suit Actor: Stewart does this in American Dad. The character he plays, Bullock, is designed to resemble Stewart. This is particularly noticeable in Family Guy gags involving Patrick Stewart, in which they use the exact same character model as they do for Bullock.
    • A weird, partial example in X-Men: Evolution. While he didn't do the voice acting for that show, the creators designed Professor X to look like Stewart, having been inspired by his performance in the X-Men films.
  • Large Ham: When he's having fun, Stewart can carve off slices of pork with the best of them.
  • Not Even Bothering with the Accent: The only man who can pull off a French Captain with Yorkshire inflections... and its all the more awesome for it.
  • Older Than They Look: He doesn't seem to have aged at all in twenty-five years and could easily pass for ten to fifteen years younger (He's 71 as of this posting). This is perhaps a reward for his early career when he looked quite a bit older than He was ( He was forty-seven when he started playing Picard and looked in his mid fifties).
  • Old Friend: Of BRIAN BLESSED! no less.
  • One-Scene Wonder: The scene in Extras when he pitches a script that is essentially "Charles Xavier as a pervert" steals the entire series.

"They try to cover up, but it's too late. I've seen it all."

    • He was briefly King Richard the Lionheart in Robin Hood: Men in Tights.
      • As far as I know, he and Sean Connery are the only two actors to have played both "King Richard" and "Robin Hood", but not in the same productions though. Sean Connery was "Robin" in "Robin & Marion" and "King Richard" in "Prince of Thieves". Patrick Stewart's role as King Richard is already mentioned above. He played "Picard as Robin" for "ST:TNG". ("Q-pid")
    • "It's good to be the king!"
    • Find him, and close shut the jaws of Oblivion! The most memorable performance in the game, even if everyone else is waffling about mudcrabs.
    • As the Maitre'D of l'Idiot in L.A. Story.
  • One of Us: He is a classically trained Shakespearean actor who is also a big fan of Beavis and Butthead, Red Dwarf, and Transmetropolitan.
  • Patrick Stewart Speech: The Trope Namer, with good reason too. Who wouldn't want to listen to him?
  • Playing Against Type: His flaming Camp Gay turn as an interior decorator in Jeffrey
    • As well as his role as Bullock on American Dad, the writers even specifically said they try to make Patrick do as much silly things as then can with him in the show.
  • Prematurely Bald: As mentioned above, which made him more recognisable and more awesome.
  • Sesame Street Cred: Appeared in a short on the show, parodying the "to be or not to be" monologue from Hamlet.
  • Shakespearian Actors: His classical training has allowed him to dodge being typecast by either Star Trek or X-Men, and he's returned to the Royal Shakespeare Company after his roles in those franchises - including playing Claudius to David Tennant's Hamlet.
  • Shout-Out: In the aforementioned brief appearance on Sesame Street, he uses his classic order of "Make it so, Number One." to get the literal number 1 to get back in line.
    • During his appearance on Extras, Gervais asks him to give his script to someone he knows, and he says he will "make it so" (and then seems baffled that the man has never seen Star Trek: The Next Generation).
  • Sophisticated As Hell: He's a Shakespearean actor who admittedly loves cartoons. In one David Letterman interview he said the two things he'd miss most if he went back to England would be valet parking and... Beavis and Butthead.
  • The West Country: He learned his art at the Bristol Old Vic theatre.
  • What Could Have Been: He's a big fan of Warren Ellis' Transmetropolitan (he even wrote an introduction for volume 5) and at one point was being considered for the role of Spider Jerusalem in a movie adaptation.
    • Also, his personal interference prevented Star Trek: First Contact from being a Time Travel farce about Captain Picard impersonating the injured inventor of the warp drive.
    • He also auditioned as Data on Star Trek: The Next Generation which is Hilarious in Hindsight as Brent Spiner eventually wanted out of playing Data because he didn't think he could pull off an ageless android.
    • He was up for the role of Jafar in Disney's Aladdin, but couldn't fit it into his schedule (since he was filming TNG at the time). He considers not voicing Jafar one of his biggest career regrets.
    • He was a candidate for Mr. Freeze in Batman and Robin.
    • His role as Jean-Luc Picard was originally offered to Edward James Olmos. Maybe then we would have seen Patrick Stewart fighting Cylons. Alas such awesomeness did not come to pass.