The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Life according to...

- MURRAY SCOUGALL

Screen icon Patrick Stewart

How alike are Jean-Luc Picard and Patrick Stewart?

Picard and Patrick became very close friends. There was a point, certainly I think by halfway through the second season of Next Generation, that I began to realise I didn’t quite know where Patrick left off and Jean-Luc began, that we had merged. And I was comfortabl­e with that, because I didn’t have to sit and brood who the man was and what he’d had for breakfast, to play a scene on the Enterprise.

What made you return to the character after 18 years?

For many years, any suggestion I might revive it in different formats and contexts, I passed on immediatel­y, straight away, without hesitation. Not because I wasn’t proud of what we did on Next Generation - I was, and I loved all the people I worked with very much. But I thought I’d said and done everything that could be said and done about Jean-Luc and the Enterprise and his relationsh­ip with the crew. But when I found myself sitting in front of the new show’s writers and producers, they at once began to talk about the new series in a way that was unexpected.

What appealed to you about this new series?

What I liked about the proposal that (executive producer) Alex (Kurtzman) and the team made was the world of the federation had changed, and was no longer the secure, trustworth­y, reliable place it had been, that there were other interests and so forth. And that was one of the major things that convinced me I should look seriously at reviving this.

One of the themes of the series is trust. Who do you trust?

There are individual­s I believe in. For instance, I believe in David Miliband, who is now running the Internatio­nal Rescue Committee from New York – and ought really to be running the UK. But you know what happened there... There are some of the contenders for the American presidency whom I have great respect for, though I also have profound anxiety that it’s not going to turn out the way I would like it to turn out.

Do people tell you what Picard and Star Trek mean to them?

The most affecting communicat­ion I ever had was from a police sergeant in Las Vegas, who wrote me quite a long letter about his life and how much he loved the job. But, he said: “There are days when I come home when what I’ve seen and heard and witnessed is so unpleasant, I feel at times close to despair. And when I feel that I go to my shelf and I take down a tape of Next Generation and my hope returns”, which was lovely.

I have profound anxiety about the US presidency

 ??  ?? Sir Patrick Stewart explains why he has returned to his most famous character, Star Trek’s Jean-Luc Picard, after nearly 20 years
Sir Patrick Stewart explains why he has returned to his most famous character, Star Trek’s Jean-Luc Picard, after nearly 20 years

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