Photo: James Dimmock/Paramount+

Picard Star Patrick Stewart Admits He Initially Had Staunch Stance Against a TNG Series Reunion

WhenPatrick Stewartsigned on to star inStar Trek: Picard, he was adamant that there would be noStar Trek: The Next Generationcast reunion — then an early scene between two old friends changed his mind.

Joining Stewart and Frakes (who previously stepped on thePicardset both as a guest star and director) are Michael Dorn as Worf, Gates McFadden as Dr. Beverly Crusher andLeVar Burtonas Geordi La Forge. Brent Spiner, Marina Sirtis and Wil Wheaton — who previously guest-starred onPicard— also return for the final season.

Below, Stewart and Frakes open up about the last season ofPicard, the death of a beloved colleague and whatTNGkeepsakes they took from set.

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Picard Star Patrick Stewart Admits He Initially Had Staunch Stance Against a TNG Series Reunion

I’m sad to start with this, but I wanted to express my condolences for thedeath of Annie Wersching. She was amazing, and I believe playing the Borg Queen was her final on-screen role. Would either of you like to share a memory?

JONATHAN FRAKES:I spent a lot of time with her, withAlison Pillwhen I directed last season. And I know, from having doneFirst Contactwith Alice Krige playing the Borg Queen, that there’s no glamour in becoming the Borg Queen. It’s four hours of makeup and prosthetics and hair and skin-tight costumes and tubes being stuck into your head. So it tries your patience before you’ve even set foot on the stage. And Annie never lost her sense of humor and never lost her focus. She was a beacon of joy on the set as an actor.

Did either of you have any idea that the series would ultimately lead to a fullTNGreunion, or were you just pleasantly surprised as fans?

STEWART:No. Initially, my feeling had been — I had certain conditions attached to signing onto this. Though I was excited about the idea of aStar Trekseries calledPicard,Next Generationwas something I thought we had done great work on, but this now was something very different. So even when we started shooting, there wasn’t a plan about the assembly.

FRAKES:Patrick had the good taste to initially gather us and say, “I’m doing a Picard series. It’s after Picard has left Star Fleet, and I want to be the first to tell you that it’s just Picard.” So [a reunion] to come as a surprise is an understatement.

Editorial use only. No book cover usage. Mandatory Credit: Photo by Moviestore/Shutterstock (1606908a) Star Trek: Nemesis, Patrick Stewart Film and Television

With the finalTNGfilm,Star Trek: Nemesis, having such a rough go with critics and underperforming at the box office, was there a part of either of you that yearned for one lastproperadventure and send-off for these characters?

FRAKES:OurTNGdays ended because it was the firstStar Trekmovie to lose money. And Paramount cut their losses. I don’t know whatNemesiscost to make, but it lost money, and therefore they were done with us. I never thought it was going to be the end until they said, “You’re done.” Did you, Patrick? Did you think we were done done?

STEWART:Oh no, on the contrary. And I have to say before I get into that:Nemesis, I think was a disappointment to all of us. It was not of the quality of what had gone before with the three previous movies, particularly the one that Jonathan had directed,First Contact, which was absolutely brilliant. They had already a draft of a movie project, which would followNemesis, but we just got kind of brutally axed.

FRAKES:Yeah, it was brutal.

So it’s fair to say then that you did not have closure with these characters and that this must have been therapeutic, to say the least, to revisit them and close it out the way that you wanted to?

STEWART:Yes. And certainly, in that, all of this came together and developed while we were shooting the first season of thePicard. Countless conversations with [executive producers] Terry Matalas and Alex Kurtzman about this. And we met and met and discussed and went through a whole series of storylines and ideas about reuniting. And eventually, we did. And it was wonderfully successful.

In my opinion,TNGhad the perfect ending, with Capt. Picard finally joining the senior crew’s poker game. Without any spoilers, do you feel this series ends as satisfying?

FRAKES:I’m too much of a spoiler mouth when someone asks me a question like that. I’m lucky I still work at CBS. I would say it’s a very satisfying season with a very satisfying ending.

FRAKES:We have a very interesting group text, I will say.

Joe Pugliese/Paramount+

Michael Dorn as Worf, LeVar Burton as Geordi, Jeri Ryan as Seven of Nine, Michelle Hurd as Raffi, Marina Sirtis as Deanna Troi, Brent Spiner as Data, Jonathan Frakes as Riker, Patrick Stewart as Picard and Gates McFadden as Dr. Beverly Crusher in the teaser art of the Paramount+ original series STAR TREK: PICARD. Photo Cr: Joe Pugliese/Paramount+. © 2022 CBS Studios Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Finally, do either you have any keepsakes from the original series in your office? And are there any keepsakes that you have from this series in your office?

STEWART:I have my last captain’s suit from the series. And it hangs in my wardrobe. I have not actually put it on for a very, very long time. But the one person who, if I were to do this, I would want to surprise is my wife, who loved and adoredTNGwith her family. So one day, she will never know when, there might just be a surprise stored up — and I shall appear wearing my Picard uniform. I’ve also got the badge secretly stored away in a safe.

FRAKES:I stole my lastTNGsuit, and it hangs in my closet in a plastic bag. And one of my contractors saw it and borrowed it for Halloween one year, and I think that’s the last time it was worn.

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Star Trek: Picardseason 3 premieres Thursday on Paramount+.

This interview has been eedited for length and clarity.

source: people.com