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Robert Duncan McNeill

American actor and director (born 1964) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Robert Duncan McNeill
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Robert Duncan McNeill (born November 9, 1964)[1][2] is an American director, producer, and actor. As an actor, he is best known for his role as Lieutenant Tom Paris on the television series Star Trek: Voyager. He has also served as an executive producer and frequent director of the television series Chuck, Resident Alien, The Gifted, and Turner & Hooch.

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Career

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Acting

McNeill grew up in Atlanta, and began his career acting in local and regional productions before becoming a student at Juilliard School in New York City.[3][4] He enjoyed early success as a professional actor, winning the role of Charlie Brent on All My Children[1][5] and starring in the feature film Masters of the Universe[1][6] alongside Courtney Cox. He starred in an episode of the 1980s version of The Twilight Zone, "A Message From Charity".[7]

He appeared with Stockard Channing in the Broadway production of Six Degrees of Separation[8] McNeill played the role of "Jack" in the national touring company of "Into the Woods," Stephen Sondheim's Tony Award-winning musical, before returning to Los Angeles to pursue roles on television. He also featured in guest roles on numerous TV series, including L.A. Law, Quantum Leap, and Murder, She Wrote. He was a featured cast member on the short-lived 1992 series Going to Extremes,[9][10] Another guest role that same year was in "The First Duty", an episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, in which he played Nick Locarno, a Starfleet Academy cadet and squad leader who pressures fellow cadets, including Wesley Crusher, into covering up their wrongdoings. He later became a Trek regular in 1995 on Star Trek: Voyager, on which he played Tom Paris, a Starfleet officer with a backstory similar to Locarno's.[11] In 2023, he reprised the role of Nick Locarno in Star Trek: Lower Decks season four.

His other credits include Zebulon in "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat" at the Paper Mill Playhouse.

Directing

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McNeill began his directing career with several episodes of Voyager.[12] He then wrote, produced, and directed two award-winning short films, The Battery starring Joshua Jackson and 9mm of Love,[1][13] and began to direct other episodic television shows. While he has since performed as a guest star on television shows such as The Outer Limits and Crossing Jordan, McNeill is now focusing on his directing career, helming episodes of Dawson's Creek, Everwood, Star Trek: Enterprise, Dead Like Me, The O.C., One Tree Hill, Las Vegas, Summerland, and Supernatural. His directing credits for 2006–2007 include episodes of Desperate Housewives, Medium, Standoff, The Nine, The Knights of Prosperity, In Case of Emergency, What About Brian, and My Boys. In 2007, he directed the season-five premiere of Las Vegas, the pilot of Samantha Who?, and then signed on as a producer-director of the NBC show Chuck, helming numerous episodes, including the first episode of a television show to be broadcast entirely in three dimensional style. From 2010 through 2015, McNeill directed episodes of V.[14][15], Smash, White Collar, Breaking In, The Mentalist, Blue Bloods, Suburgatory, Warehouse 13, Mind Games, and Red Band Society. In 2013 McNeill became and Executive Producer and Director of Girlfriends Guide to Divorce for all 5 seasons. As of 2019, he has directed episodes of the Fox series The Orville, as well as episodes of A Million Little Things, The Resident, and Suits, and Executive Produced and Directed The Gifted. In 2021, McNeill Executive Produced and directed several episodes of the Disney+ series Turner & Hooch. In 2019, he became the producer-director on SYFY's Resident Alien,[16] now in its 4th season. From 2022 to 2024 McNeill has directed episodes of So Help Me Todd, True Lies, and Alert: Missing Persons Unit.

Podcast

In May 2020, McNeill and Voyager co-star Garrett Wang started the podcast The Delta Flyers, wherein they discuss episodes of Voyager. The show has been successful enough that it has progressed to episodes of Deep Space Nine, with Armin Shimerman and Terry Farrell as regular hosts.[17]

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Personal life

McNeill and his first wife, Carol, had three children together before their 2015 divorce.[18]

In 2005, McNeill directed his then teenaged daughter, Taylor, when she had a small role in the episode "The Pleiades" of the series Summerland.[19]

His son Kyle is a singer songwriter.[20]

McNeill married Rebecca Jayne McNeill in Vancouver, Canada, on March 7, 2021.[21]

Filmography

Films

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Television

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References

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