William Shatner AKA William Alan Shatner Born: 22-Mar-1931 Birthplace: Montreal, Canada
Gender: Male Religion: Jewish Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Actor Nationality: Canada Executive summary: Captain Kirk on Star Trek In his first TV show, William Shatner played Ranger Bob on Howdy Doody in 1954. In a beloved 1963 episode of The Twilight Zone, he played a passenger with a severe fear of flying. He played a crusading district attorney on the CBS series For the People in 1965, while Gene Roddenberry was filming the pilot for a science fiction series called Star Trek. When CBS cancelled For the People, and NBC told Roddenberry to shake up the cast and film a second Star Trek pilot, Shatner replaced Jeffrey Hunter as the captain of the Enterprise. While Star Trek went on to great success on television and in movies, Shatner's Captain Kirk has become more identified with camp. With Shatner's overacting, bad toupee, and his trademark delivery of lines with lengthy dramatic pauses, his performance as Kirk has been parodied endlessly, often by Shatner himself. Most of the cast and crew of Star Trek remember Shatner as an egotistical pain in the butt. He had a long-running friendship and feud with co-star Leonard Nimoy, who has said that Shatner's sense of humor basically consists of bad puns and practical jokes.
After Star Trek, Shatner remained a TV star with the western Barbary Coast, the cop show T.J. Hooker, the sci-fi TekWar based on his novels, and as a fading but still egotistical lawyer on Boston Legal. He co-wrote and directed the fifth Star Trek movie -- generally considered the worst. It is the only Star Trek film or episode to include a fart joke. Shatner has also directed episodes of T.J. Hooker, the 1990s Kung Fu, in addition to a horrendous science fiction movie called Groom Lake, starring Shatner and Dick Van Patten. In Invasion: Iowa, a 2005 reality series for Spike TV, Shatner travelled to Captain Kirk's attributed home town of Riverside, Iowa, and pretended to film a movie, essentially "punking" the whole community.
Shatner owns a horse-breeding facility in Kentucky, and was sued by ex-wife Marcy Shatner when she alleged she received frozen horse semen for breeding purposes, when their divorce agreement spelled out that the horse semen was to be "fresh cooled".
Shatner memorably destroyed "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds" on his 1968 album The Transformed Man. In 2004 Shatner released another album, Has Been, which included a Shatner-Joe Jackson duet covering Pulp's "Common People", and Shatner warbling "I Can't Get Behind That" with Henry Rollins.
Father: Joseph Shatner Mother: Anna (Garmaise) Shatner Wife: Gloria Rand (m. 12-Aug-1956, div. 1969, three children) Daughter: Leslie Carol Shatner (b. 31-Aug-1958, with Rand) Daughter: Lisabeth Mary Shatner (sculptor, b. 12-Jun-1960, with Rand) Daughter: Melanie Ann Shatner (actress, b. 1-Aug-1964, with Rand) Wife: Marcy Lafferty (actress, m. 20-Oct-1973, sep. 1994, div. 1996) Girlfriend: Vera Montez (actress, dated 1994-96) Wife: Nerine Kidd (m. 15-Nov-1997, d. 9-Aug-1999 drowning) Wife: Elizabeth Anderson Martin (m. 13-Feb-2001) Mistress: Heather Locklear Mistress: Kirstie Alley Mistress: Joan Collins
High School: Baron Byng High School, Montreal, PQ Canada University: BA Business, McGill University
William Shatner Broadcasting and Cable Hall of Fame Grand Marshal of the Tournament of Roses 1994 Hollywood Walk of Fame 6901 Hollywood Blvd. Canada's Walk of Fame 2000 Endorsement of Blizzard Entertainment World of Warcraft (2007)
Endorsement of Blockbuster Video
Endorsement of Commodore Business Machines Vic-20 (1980)
Endorsement of DirecTV
Endorsement of Kellogg
Endorsement of Priceline (1998-2012)
Endorsement of Wendy's
Endorsement of Western Airlines (1985)
Pied Risk Factors: Toupee, Claustrophobia, Sleep Apnea
TELEVISION Boston Legal Denny Crane (2004-08) The Practice Denny Crane (2004) Third Rock from the Sun Rock (leader of the galaxy, 1999-2000) TekWar Walter H. Bascom (1994-96) T. J. Hooker T. J. Hooker (1982-86) Star Trek James T. Kirk (1966-69) Dr. Kildare Dr. Carl Noyes (1961-66) Howdy Doody Ranger Bob (1954)
FILMOGRAPHY AS DIRECTOR Groom Lake (21-Sep-2002) TekWar (23-Jan-1994) Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (9-Jun-1989)
FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR For the Love of Spock (16-Apr-2016) · Himself To Be Takei (18-Jan-2014) · Himself Escape from Planet Earth (15-Feb-2013) [VOICE] Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel (21-Jan-2011) · Himself Transcendent Man (5-Nov-2009) · Himself Fanboys (31-Jul-2008) · Himself Over the Hedge (29-Apr-2006) [VOICE] The Wild (6-Apr-2006) [VOICE] Miss Congeniality 2: Armed and Fabulous (11-Mar-2005) Lil' Pimp (11-Jan-2005) [VOICE] Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story (18-Jun-2004) A Carol Christmas (7-Dec-2003) Groom Lake (21-Sep-2002) American Psycho II: All American Girl (22-Apr-2002) · Starkman Showtime (11-Mar-2002) · Himself Festival in Cannes (3-Nov-2001) · Himself Osmosis Jones (7-Aug-2001) · The Mayor [VOICE] Miss Congeniality (14-Dec-2000) Falcon Down (2000) Free Enterprise (7-Oct-1998) Trekkies (18-Oct-1997) · Himself Dead Man's Island (5-Mar-1996) Trinity and Beyond (29-Sep-1995) · Narrator [VOICE] Star Trek: Generations (18-Nov-1994) · Kirk TekWar: TekLab (27-Feb-1994) · Walter H. Bascom TekWar (23-Jan-1994) Loaded Weapon 1 (5-Feb-1993) Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (6-Dec-1991) · Kirk Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (9-Jun-1989) · Kirk Broken Angel (14-Mar-1988) · Chuck Coburn Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (26-Nov-1986) · Kirk Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1-Jun-1984) · Kirk Airplane II: The Sequel (10-Dec-1982) · Murdock Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (4-Jun-1982) · Kirk Visiting Hours (18-Apr-1982) · Gary Baylor The Babysitter (28-Nov-1980) The Kidnapping of the President (15-Aug-1980) Star Trek: The Motion Picture (7-Dec-1979) The Crash of Flight 401 (29-Oct-1978) Little Women (2-Oct-1978) Kingdom of the Spiders (31-May-1978) The Bastard (22-May-1978) The Devil's Rain (Jul-1975) Impulse (Oct-1974) Big Bad Mama (19-Sep-1974) · William J. Baxter Horror at 37,000 Feet (13-Feb-1973) Go Ask Alice (24-Jan-1973) Incident on a Dark Street (13-Jan-1973) Hound of the Baskervilles (12-Feb-1972) Vanished (8-Mar-1971) The Andersonville Trial (17-May-1970) · Col. Chipman Sole Survivor (9-Jan-1970) · Lt. Colonel Josef Gronke Comanche Blanco (23-Dec-1968) Incubus (26-Oct-1966) The Outrage (7-Oct-1964) · Preacher The Intruder (14-May-1962) · Adam Cramer Judgment at Nuremberg (14-Dec-1961) · Capt. Byers The Explosive Generation (Oct-1961) · Peter Gifford The Brothers Karamazov (20-Feb-1958) · Alexei Karamazov
Official Website: http://www.williamshatner.com/
Appears on the cover of:
Fighting Stars, Apr-1974, DETAILS: William Shatner... The fighting star of "Star Trek"
Author of books:
Captain's Log: William Shatner's Personal Account of the Making of Star Trek V, the Final Frontier (1989, memoir, with Lisabeth Shatner) Star Trek Memories (1994, memoir, with Chris Kreski) Star Trek Movie Memories (1994, memoir, with Chris Kreski) Get a Life! (1999, with Chris Kreski) Up Till Now: The Autobiography (2008, )memoir, with David Fisher) Shatner Rules: Your Guide to Understanding the Shatnerverse and the World at Large (2011)
Requires Flash 7+ and Javascript.
Do you know something we don't?
Submit a correction or make a comment about this profile
Copyright ©2019 Soylent Communications
|