Outstanding Contribution: Ewan McGregor OBE

Posted: 16 Nov 2025

Words by Toby Weidmann

If timing is everything then actor Ewan McGregor’s arrival on our screens could not have been better. Tired of the bombastic, taciturn action heroes of the 1980s, audiences were in the mood for something different in the 90s, and it came in the shape of a young man from Perthshire. Alongside a seemingly natural talent for acting, Ewan brought something else to the table: a subtlety, nuance, and captivating screen charisma that blended kinetic masculine energy with a softer, empathetic edge.

Redefining the leading man

Ewan’s explosion onto the scene timed perfectly with the arrival of another exciting new voice in British cinema. While the six-part drama Lipstick on Your Collar (1993) marked Ewan’s screen debut, it was his vibrant collaboration with filmmaker Danny Boyle that catapulted him to international stardom. As Danny’s trilogy of hits, Shallow Grave (1994), Trainspotting (1996), and A Life Less Ordinary (1997) injected a much-needed adrenalin shot in the arm of our homegrown storytelling, Ewan’s captivating performances in those films would help redefine the makeup of the modern leading man.

He can be the steely action hero, as demonstrated by Obi-Wan Kenobi in the blockbusting Star Wars franchise (1999-2022) or in Michael Bay thrill-ride The Island (2005). He excels as a treacherous villain: Angels & Demons (2009) and Birds of Prey and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn (2020). He can play flamboyant and charming: Moulin Rouge! (2001) and Big Fish (2003). He can be outrageous and overt: the Iggy Pop-inspired Curt Wild in Velvet Goldmine (1998). But he is perhaps at his best in more grounded, often more intimate stories: Brassed Off (1996), Little Voice (1998), Young Adam (2003), Miss Potter (2006), Fargo (2017), Halston (2021), Bleeding Love (2023), and A Gentleman in Moscow (2024), to name a few from Ewan’s 100-plus film and TV credits.

He has also become a familiar face in factual TV, with his entertaining travelogue series with friend Charley Boorman, A Long Way… (2004-2025), now in its fourth series. Their most recent adventure, The Long Way Home (2025), saw the pair ride vintage motorbikes from Ewan’s home in Scotland to Charley’s place in London, but, as the title suggests, it was far from an uneventful trip down the M1, taking them all over Europe.

Multi-award winning talent

This Special Award is not Ewan’s first brush with BAFTA, previously earning two BAFTA Scotland wins alongside a BAFTA Britannia award in recognition of his humanitarian work, which includes being a goodwill ambassador for UNICEF UK. Among his other accolades are an Emmy, Golden Globe, BIFA, and Critics Choice awards, and he was appointed OBE in 2013.

About this BAFTA Scotland Outstanding Contribution to Film and Television award, Ewan says: “It’s so lovely to be thought of for this year’s Special Award. I am excited to go to the event and looking forward to meeting with my peers there. Who knows? A new collaboration could be born out of such a thing. Thank you, BAFTA Scotland.”