Saturday, May 30, 2026

Legendary Star Wars Actor Dies at 82

Michael Pennington, the British actor who played Imperial officer Moff Jerjerrod in “Star Wars: Return of the Jedi” but devoted much of his career to classical theater, died May 7, 2026. He was 82. The cause of death has not been disclosed.

News of Pennington’s passing became public through actress Miriam Margolyes, his longtime friend from their Cambridge days, who posted an emotional tribute on social media.

“Michael Pennington has died. An old friend, from Cambridge days, a very fine actor, brilliant, wise, clear. I am sad beyond measure. Bless your dear memory. Old chum,” Margolyes wrote. Responding to a comment under her post, she added, “It happened very recently at Denville Hall. I am sad to confirm.”

Pennington’s agent, Lesley Duff, confirmed that the actor had been living at Denville Hall, the famed care home for retired performers, in his later years.

A Shakespearean Giant

While film audiences recognized Pennington as the steely Imperial officer Moff Jerjerrod in 1983’s “Return of the Jedi,” British theatre devotees knew him as a master Shakespearean who helped reshape classical performance in the United Kingdom. In 1986, he co-founded the English Shakespeare Company with director Michael Bogdanov, serving as joint artistic director.

Throughout the 1980s and beyond, Pennington appeared in scores of Shakespeare productions, with celebrated turns in “Hamlet” and “The Henrys.” In 2013, he became an associate artist of the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC), a recognition reserved for the most accomplished interpreters of the Bard.

Reflecting on his career, Pennington spoke warmly of the company he helped build. “Yet at the same time we also succeeded in turning a lot of young actors, who might have drifted off elsewhere, into Classical actors,” he said. “And I see the influence of the ESC everywhere, wherever Shakespeare is done in belt and braces, whenever the productions are irreverent and joyful.”

In 2012, he took on the title role of Antony in the Chichester Festival Theatre’s “Antony and Cleopatra” — a role he confessed had taken him by surprise.

Choosing Hamlet Over Hollywood

Trained in the classics, Pennington made his film debut as Laertes in the 1969 production of “Hamlet” alongside a young actor Anthony Hopkins. In 1980, he turned down the starring role in Karel Reisz’s 1981 drama “The French Lieutenant’s Woman” opposite Meryl Streep to play Hamlet for the RSC. “I realised I couldn’t let Hamlet go. It is one of the prizes,” he said. Jeremy Irons took the part instead, earning the film five Oscar nominations. Decades later, in 2011, he would once again find himself alongside Hollywood royalty, portraying former Labour Party leader Michael Foot in “The Iron Lady” opposite Meryl Streep.

His appearance as Imperial officer Moff Jerjerrod in “Return of the Jedi” earned him lifelong recognition among science fiction fans, though he viewed the role with characteristic candor and self-deprecation.

“I look at it now and I think I overact horribly and I can’t even remember the storyline,” Pennington once admitted. “We all did it for a song but I suppose that it has given me some kind of calling card for movies. Whenever I come out of the Stage Door after a performance, all people would ask about was ‘Star Wars.'”

Stage and Screen Work

Pennington’s stage work extended far beyond Shakespeare. London audiences fondly remember his 1998 performance alongside Elaine Paige in “The Misanthrope,” and earlier still, his 1967 role opposite Portland Mason in Oscar Wilde’s “A Woman of No Importance” at the Piccadilly Theater. In 2017, he returned to Cambridge — the city where he had first formed lifelong friendships, including with Margolyes — and continued to be an acclaimed figure in the theater world right through his final years.

Television audiences knew him from his work on “The Bill,” “The Tudors,” “Father Brown,” and the TV movie “The Return of Sherlock Holmes,” as well as his final screen role, voicing The Trust in five episodes of Ridley Scott’s 2022 sci-fi series “Raised by Wolves.”

His influence on classical British acting cannot be overstated. From an audio production of Antony and Cleopatra with Lindsay Duncan for the Open University to packed houses at the National Theater, Pennington’s voice — sonorous, precise, alive with intelligence — was a defining sound of his era. Tributes have poured in from across the entertainment community since news of his death broke.

The loss comes after a difficult period for Pennington, whose longtime partner, Prue Skene, passed away at the age of 81.

Whether commanding the Death Star or commanding the stage at Stratford, Michael Pennington brought intelligence, grace, and unmistakable craft to every role. He is survived by his son, Mark, a body of work, and a generation of actors he inspired, who will continue to echo through theaters for years to come.

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