How old is william shatner
Virgin Galactic founder Richard Branson is also one of the oldest men in space, after he travelled aged 71 to become the oldest man on a suborbital spaceflight during the summer.
Peggy Whitston is the oldest woman to fly aboard an orbital spaceflight, turning 57 while completing days on the International Space Station in Weather is the only gating factor for the launch window. The New Shepard rocket will carry the capsule up past the US boundary of space. Its occupants will float around in microgravity for a couple of minutes before the will head back to Earth and land under a set of parachutes.
Log In. Contact us Sign up for newsletters. On Thursday, October 7, Shatner was seen talking about his adventure at New York's Comic-Con during his panel, revealing that he's actually terrified to go into space.
Nobody cares if Captain Kirk goes to space. It was 55 years ago, man. Following Bezos' historic trip to space earlier this year, the conversation then became more real for the Star Trek star. When talking about his trip to Texas for training, he then recalled Star Trek's Challenger crash that killed all the astronauts on board. It comes and goes like a summer cold. Shatner began his screen acting career in Canadian films and television productions, including the role of Ranger Bob during the first year of the popular children's show Howdy Doody.
In fact, Shatner would eventually be Plummer's understudy at the Stratford Shakespearan Festival's production of Henry V , where Shatner had to take Plummer's role for a performance when he was ill, giving the younger actor his major break in his career. One of Shatner's earliest American television appearances was a episode of The Kaiser Aluminum Hour called "Gwyneth," in which he co-starred with Joanne Linville , who played the title role.
Shatner ultimately landed several guest roles on the TV series Studio One in His first appearance on that program was in a two-parter entitled "The Defender" featuring Ian Wolfe , which served as the basis for the aforementioned TV show The Defenders , on which Shatner had a recurring role albeit as a different character than the one he played on Studio One.
This play ran for a total of performances from 14 October through 2 January Shatner's performance won him a Theatre World Award in His next Broadway play was the comedy A Shot in the Dark , which ran for performances between October and September Fritz Weaver joined the cast late in the run, replacing actor Walter Matthau. He also had a recurring role as Dr. Carl Noyes on Dr. Kildare in early , during which he co-starred with Bruce Hyde and Diana Muldaur — both of whom he was reunited with on Star Trek.
Most notably, however, he starred in two episodes of The Twilight Zone , both written by Richard Matheson , including the famous "Nightmare at 20, Feet", in which he played Bob Wilson, a man released from a mental hospital who seemingly suffers a relapse aboard an airliner after seeing a creature on the plane's wing.
Shatner also continued acting in films during the s. That same year, he had the starring role as a revolutionary and controversial high school teacher in The Explosive Generation , and the following year he starred as a bigot in the Roger Corman classic The Intruder with George Clayton Johnson. He then appeared as a preacher in 's The Outrage co-starring Paul Fix.
The film was believed to be lost for some years, until a copy was found in France. Its main point of interest, other than Shatner's starring role is that it is entirely filmed in Esperanto , a constructed language, which has very rarely been used onscreen.
The pronunciation of the language by the actors has been criticized by fluent speakers; Shatner's has been compared to Montreal French. He also did a television movie entitled Perilous Voyage in , again working alongside Louise Sorel. For unknown reasons, NBC sat on this film for eight years, not airing it until 29 July Shatner's first television series, the crime drama For the People , aired in but failed to gain the attention needed to keep it on the air past the initial thirteen episodes.
Also in , Shatner played the title role in a pilot, Alexander the Great , which co-starred Robert Fortier and featured music by Leonard Rosenman. However, the pilot was not picked up for a series. It was finally aired on television in Stardom was not immediate for Shatner or the rest of the Star Trek cast.
Ratings for the series were low and, after only three years, resulted in its cancellation in But that same year, the Apollo 11 moon landing transformed the vision of interplanetary travel from fantasy to a more realistic possibility.
Star Trek reruns gained new popularity and thrust Shatner and the cast into television immortality. By Star Trek had gained an extensive amount of popularity thanks to reruns. There was such a high demand for more Star Trek that a new animated series was put together, reuniting most of the original cast members to lend their voices to their now famous characters.
The series lasted for two seasons, with Shatner voicing Captain Kirk in all but one of the 22 episodes. Although the animated series came to an end in , Trek had still not died; pre-production began on a new, live-action Star Trek series in Although this new series was never made, it resulted in the first Trek feature film, Star Trek: The Motion Picture , in And, for the first time in ten years, Shatner was back, in the flesh, in the role that had made him famous.
Shatner continued playing the Kirk character through the next six features, concluding with his character's demise in 's Star Trek Generations. Although Shatner enjoyed working on the film, he later displayed regret at having Kirk killed off and commenced to look for the opportunity to once again play the legendary Starfleet captain, although he did play him during a pre- Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country period for video cutscenes along with Walter Koenig and George Takei for Interplay's Starfleet Academy in He did not appear in 's Star Trek , however.
Shatner has also reprised the role of Kirk — albeit, in voice over only — for the video game Star Trek: Legacy. Shatner has been contacted about a possible role in Star Trek Beyond. Along with Shatner, Leonard Nimoy was also rumored to appear before his death in , in a scene with Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto , as the future alternate reality versions of the characters.
In the aftermath of Star Trek 's cancellation Shatner continued to work steadily in film and television; because his marriage to Gloria Rand had failed, he was no longer living to pursue his career as a direct result, but instead pursuing his career to live.
He also made guest appearances in such shows as The F. The following year, he was reunited with his " Miri " co-star Kim Darby in the science fiction telefilm The People. In Shatner became the star of another series, a Western comedy-drama called Barbary Coast. However, the series was canceled after its first season. Wallace , and Morgan Woodward.
Another movie from the s was titled Want a Ride, Little Girl? This film, also called Impulse and I Love to Kill , and in which he again co-starred with wife Lafferty, has been so critically condemned that Shatner himself has come forward and said that it was a "bad time" for him, and he has also denied being able to remember why he agreed to join its cast. Unlike many actors who have become identified to specific characters in film and television, Shatner has been able to escape typecasting and continued to find roles outside the realm of Trek which have also been popular; this is due at least in part to, as having been pointed out above, his having pursued his career to live rather than his living to pursue his career.
From to , he starred in the title role of T. Hooker , a hard-boiled police officer. It was during the s that Shatner began an acting trend that lasts to this day: making fun of himself and of his role as Captain Kirk, the popularity of which he had trouble understanding. Marcy Lafferty also appeared in the film, as did Bruce French. In Shatner hosted Saturday Night Live and took part in an infamous sketch in which he told Star Trek fans to " get a life!
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