Actor Michael Pennington, a classically trained stage standout best known for his Shakespearean work and a role in the original Star Wars trilogy, has died. He was 82, his agent said.
Pennington died peacefully in the early hours of Thursday, May 7, at Denville Hall, according to his agent, Lesley Duff.
Pennington was an honorary associate artist with the Royal Shakespeare Company and co-founded the English Shakespeare Company with theatre director Michael Bogdanov. Across a career spanning roughly six decades, he became a familiar presence in Britain’s theatre world, praised for versatility and stamina in some of the repertoire’s most demanding roles.
Fellow actor Miriam Margolyes remembered him as an “old friend, from Cambridge days, a very fine actor, brilliant, wise, clear”. She added: “I am sad beyond measure,” and, “Bless your dear memory, old chum.”
Michael Pennington
Pennington’s Shakespeare credits read like a greatest-hits list. He played Hamlet, Mercutio and Macbeth, as well as King Lear, Richard II and Henry V. He also appeared as Coriolanus, Timon of Athens, Angelo, Leontes and Jack Cade.
He also worked as a director, staging Twelfth Night in the U.K., Tokyo and Chicago, and leading the Hamlet Project for the National Theatre Bucharest.
In his 2004 British Academy Shakespeare lecture, Pennington described the moment he first felt pulled toward the playwright’s language.
“Like trying to establish the moment when one first stood up and walked, it is hard for many of us to remember when Shakespeare first entered our lives; but my own memory is extremely precise. Shakespearean verse hit me like a hammer when I was 11.
“It was Macbeth, rolling off the stage of the Old Vic: ‘My way of life Is fall’n into the sere, the yellow leaf.’ The yellow leaf? It was the beginning of winter, and this was familiar – it was what I had shuffled through a couple of hours before in our street in north London under the equally yellow streetlamps, on my way home from school.
“I didn’t know what ‘sere’ meant, but I heard its tearing sound, just as even now there are many words in Shakespeare whose weight and power in the theatre are gathered more readily than their meaning. And underneath it, that heavy beat of the verse, this new thing softly pounding.”
Pennington maintained a long association with Bogdanov. Bogdanov cast him as the lead in Seán O’Casey’s The Shadow of a Gunman in 1980 and in Tolstoy’s Strider: The Story of a Horse three years later. Pennington also worked with Dame Judi Dench and her husband, Michael Williams, including a King Lear production in the 1970s.
Michael Pennington has sadly passed away at the age of 82.
He played Moff Tiaan Jerjerrod in ‘Star Wars: Return of the Jedi’ pic.twitter.com/HqTCKovVPe
— Cosmic Marvel (@cosmic_marvel) May 10, 2026
In a 2015 interview, Pennington said watching Dench play Ophelia in a 1957 Hamlet production in London inspired him to go into theatre.
“There’s no one quite like Judi. For her acting is playing: she’s a lass unparalleled.”
Alongside his stage work, Pennington appeared in more than 70 on-screen productions. He played the Death Star commander Moff Jerjerrod in Return of the Jedi (1983), the third instalment in the original Star Wars trilogy. He also appeared opposite Meryl Streep in The Iron Lady.
“After a long and wonderful life and career, Michael Pennington died peacefully in the early hours of Thursday 7 May at Denville Hall,” Duff said.
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