British actor (born 1940)
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He gave a starship captain the gravity of Shakespeare, then spent decades proving the reverse works too — a classically trained stage actor who made science fiction serious and never quite left either world behind.
Born 13 July 1940, Stewart joined the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1966 and spent over a decade on stage before television found him in small roles like Coronation Street in 1967 and prestige drama I, Claudius in 1976. He won his first Olivier Award in 1979 for Antony and Cleopatra, then took a gamble in 1987: Captain Jean-Luc Picard in Star Trek: The Next Generation, a role that ran seven seasons and made him a global figure. The franchise carried into films and a final return in Star Trek: Picard from 2020 to 2023, but so did the stage work — he won a second Olivier in 2008 reprising Hamlet'…
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