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Returning: Star Trek: Picard

Third season in February is the final for Patrick Stewart adventure.

Season 3 of Star Trek: Picard will debut in February.

The 10-episode season will be the last.

Star Trek: Picard features Patrick Stewart reprising his iconic role as Jean-Luc Picard, which he played for seven series on “Star Trek: The Next Generation,” and follows this iconic character into the next chapter of his life. LeVar Burton, Michael Dorn, Jonathan Frakes, Gates McFadden, Marina Sirtis, Brent Spiner, Jeri Ryan and Michelle Hurd star alongside Patrick Stewart in the third and final series of the hit show.

Tony Award winner Amanda Plummer (“The Fisher King,” “Pulp Fiction”) has also joined the cast in a recurring role as Vadic, the mysterious alien captain of the Shrike, a warship that has set its sights on Jean-Luc Picard and his old crewmates from his days on the Enterprise. Mica Burton (“Critical Role,” “Vampire: The Masquerade: L.A. by Night”) and Ashlei Sharpe Chestnut (“Cruel Summer”) joins in recurring roles. Ensign Sidney La Forge is played by Sharpe Chestnut and is the eldest daughter of Geordi La Forge and helmsman of the U.S.S. Titan. Ensign Alandra La Forge is played by Mica Burton, Geordi La Forge’s youngest daughter who works alongside her father. Daniel Davis will also take up the role again as Professor Moriarty from “Star Trek: The Next Generation.”

The series is produced by CBS Studios in association with Secret Hideout and Roddenberry Entertainment, and is distributed internationally by Paramount Global Content Distribution on Prime Video, outside of the U.S. and Canada. For series three, Alex Kurtzman, Akiva Goldsman, Terry Matalas, Patrick Stewart, Heather Kadin, Aaron Baiers, Rod Roddenberry, Trevor Roth, Doug Aarniokoski and Dylan Massin serve as executive producers. Terry Matalas serves as showrunner for season three.

Friday 17th February on Prime Video.

2 Responses

  1. Most Trek fans will know that this is the last season of Picard, which it has to be said did not live up to pre-release expectations to begin a renewal of the Star Trek franchise. From my point of view the recent Seth MacFarlane Trek parody The Orville has showed the way as far as the Star Trek universe is concerned, Seth revealed it isn’t all that hard to keep screenplays true to the original source material and preserving the atmosphere of the past original shows while using modern production techniques. Star Trek has had a bit too much studio creative license applied to it for a while now.

    1. Still hanging on for an Orville renewal. As someone extremely disappointed by the current Star Trek, didn’t even finish Discovery. Don’t even know why I finished the bad Picard seasons but I really enjoyed Strange New Worlds.

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