Difference between revisions of "William Shatner"

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{{about|the actor|the ''[[Futurama]]'' [[character]]|William Shatner's head}}
{{about|the actor|the ''[[Futurama]]'' [[character]]|William Shatner's head}}


'''William Alan Shatner''' is a Canadian actor, producer, director, singer, and author who voiced [[William Shatner's head|himself]] in "[[Where No Fan Has Gone Before]]".  Active in film and television since [[1951]], he is best known internationally for his role as the original {{st|James T. Kirk}} in ''[[Star Trek]]: {{st|Star Trek: The Original Series|The Original Series}}'' and in the {{st|Category:Star Trek movies|first six films}}.  Outside of ''Star Trek'', he is the host of the interview series ''{{w|Shatner's Raw Nerve}}'', and he is known for his title role in ''{{w|T.J. Hooker}}'' and his Emmy Award-winning role as {{w|Denny Crane}} in ''{{w|Boston Legal}}'' and ''{{w|The Practice}}''.  In addition, he is the official author of the book series ''{{w|TekWar}}'', was director of ''{{st|Star Trek V: The Final Frontier}}'', and has a {{w|William Shatner's musical career|musical career}} which includes an infamous [[1978]] spoken-word performance of {{w|Elton John}}'s "{{w|Rocket Man (song)|Rocket Man}}".
'''William Alan Shatner''' is a Canadian actor, producer, director, singer, and author who voiced [[William Shatner's head|himself]] in "[[Where No Fan Has Gone Before]]".  Active in film and television since [[1951]], he is best known internationally for his role as the original {{st|James T. Kirk}} in ''[[Star Trek]]: {{st|Star Trek: The Original Series|The Original Series}}'' and in the {{st|Category:Star Trek movies|first six films}}.  Outside of ''Star Trek'', he is the host of the interview series ''{{w|Shatner's Raw Nerve}}'', and he is known for his title role in ''{{w|T.J. Hooker}}'' and his [[Emmy Award]]-winning role as {{w|Denny Crane}} in ''{{w|Boston Legal}}'' and ''{{w|The Practice}}''.  In addition, he is the official author of the book series ''{{w|TekWar}}'', was director of ''{{st|Star Trek V: The Final Frontier}}'', and has a {{w|William Shatner's musical career|musical career}} which includes an infamous [[1978]] spoken-word performance of {{w|Elton John}}'s "{{w|Rocket Man (song)|Rocket Man}}".


Shatner was originally apprehensive about appearing on the show but a conversation with [[Billy West]] made it known that the entire cast and crew would treat him with complete respect, and so he agreed to appear.  He and [[Leonard Nimoy]] are the only performers in the shows run who were allowed to record into the same microphone.
Shatner was originally apprehensive about appearing on the show but a conversation with [[Billy West]] made it known that the entire cast and crew would treat him with complete respect, and so he agreed to appear.  He and [[Leonard Nimoy]] are the only performers in the shows run who were allowed to record into the same microphone.

Revision as of 16:10, 26 March 2012

William Shatner
Shatner 2005.jpg
In 2005.
ProfessionGuest voice actor
Singer
Born22 March, 1931
IMDB profilenm0000638
Wikipedia has information unrelated to Futurama
This article is about the actor. For the Futurama character, see William Shatner's head.

William Alan Shatner is a Canadian actor, producer, director, singer, and author who voiced himself in "Where No Fan Has Gone Before". Active in film and television since 1951, he is best known internationally for his role as the original James T. Kirk in Star Trek: The Original Series and in the first six films. Outside of Star Trek, he is the host of the interview series Shatner's Raw Nerve, and he is known for his title role in T.J. Hooker and his Emmy Award-winning role as Denny Crane in Boston Legal and The Practice. In addition, he is the official author of the book series TekWar, was director of Star Trek V: The Final Frontier, and has a musical career which includes an infamous 1978 spoken-word performance of Elton John's "Rocket Man".

Shatner was originally apprehensive about appearing on the show but a conversation with Billy West made it known that the entire cast and crew would treat him with complete respect, and so he agreed to appear. He and Leonard Nimoy are the only performers in the shows run who were allowed to record into the same microphone.

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