Warning: This article contains spoilers.
Once upon a time, a director created a tiny craze when he released a trilogy of films known as Star Wars.
While Star Wars made the likes of Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, and Mark Hamilton famous, some well-known actors were also in some of the franchise’s movies and TV shows. Hiding in plain sight, these Hollywood stars and notable talents passed for everything from an alien junk boss to a queen, and most people didn’t even notice.
See if you remember any of these minor Star Wars roles and cameos on our list.
1. George Lucas
After guiding the franchise through the original trilogy and the first two prequel movies, George Lucas finally found it in himself to step in front of the camera. In Revenge of the Sith, Lucas slapped on some blue makeup to portray Baron Notluwiski Papanoida, a Pantoran chairman of Pantora, a moon orbiting around Orto Plutonia. Papanoida went on to also appear in The Clone Wars TV series.
If you want to get technical, Lucas did have a clever easy-to-miss background appearance in Attack of the Clones as one of “The Lost Twenty” busts in the Jedi archives.
2. John Williams
It took nine movies, but legendary composer John Williams eventually made his on-screen Star Wars debut in The Rise of Skywalker. Williams played Oma Tres, a bartender at the Space Runners’ Den on Kijim. Initially, Williams turned down the cameo, fearing it would be silly for him to step in front of the camera. However, his wife, Samantha Winslow, affirmed it would be “more important than doing the score.”
According to the official Star Wars databank, Tres is no stranger to conflict and simply hopes for a more peaceful future.
3. Simon Pegg
Comedian and all-around funny actor Simon Pegg took on the role of Unkar Plutt, an alien junk boss residing in Jakku. Playing Plutt, Pegg cheated Rey Skywalker out of money when she sold him her salvage in The Force Awakens.
Pegg, famous for movies like Hot Fuzz and Sean of the Dead, suffers a less admirable fate as Plutt. Chewbacca, stepping in to protect Rey, rips Unkar Plutt’s arm off and endears himself to even the staunchest Star Wars newbie.
4. Keira Knightley
Known most recently for her role as Loretta MacLaughlin in The Boston Strangler, Knightley entered the Star Wars world when she became Sabe, Padmé’s, and later Queen Amidala’s double. The Pirates of the Caribbean actress was just 12 years old when she took on the role, and while casting director Robin Gurland had no plans to create a part for Amidala’s double, she said this about Sabe’s casting:
“One of the hardest roles to cast was that of Sabé, the handmaiden that fills in for the Queen when she is in hiding. Originally we were going to use a stand-in, but that was before we found a girl by the name of Keira Knightley.”
5. Dominic West
Television and big-screen actor Dominic West grabbed a small role as Jarus Jannick. As a palace guard for the Royal Naboo Security Forces, Jannick was in charge of guarding Padmé Amidala’s room inside the Royal House. When Anakin Skywalker visits the eventual Queen, West says, “The boy is here to see Padmé. Let him in.”
While West’s role in Star Wars was small, he’s a well-known movie and television actor with credits like 300, Centurion, and Downtown Abbey: A New Era. He also turned down the role of Mance Rayder in Game of Thrones because he didn’t want to be away from his family for such long periods.
6. Billie Lourd
As the only child of Carrie Fisher, who played Princess Leia and twin to Luke Skywalker in the Star Wars series, it was only fitting that she garnered a small role in this series that made her mother a Hollywood star.
In Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens, Lourd played a resistance fighter, Lt. Connix, who ran tactical machinery for General Leia Organa. While Fisher died in 2016, her daughter posthumously celebrated the former actress receiving her star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on Star Wars Day, May 4th, 2023.
7. Tony Cox
At three foot and six inches tall, Tony Cox is a little person. As such, he perfectly positioned himself to play an Ewok in Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi. He also reprised his role as Widdle Warrick for two Star Wars-themed TV shows.
Cox was born in Uniontown, Alabama, with an acting career spanning over three decades and includes titles like Legends, Bad Santa, and Date Movie. Cox excels at both serious and comedic entertainment.
8. Keisha Castle-Hughes
Queen Apailana would likely be a very different character if not for 33-year-old actress Keisha Castle-Hughes. Finding her place in Star Wars Episode Three: Revenge of the Sith, Castle-Hughes was just 15 years old when she took the role.
Perfectly cast to play Naboo’s Queen Apailana, Castle-Hughes fit seamlessly into the structure of Naboo society. While kings weren’t unheard of on Naboo, the elected official was often a younger woman—usually a teenager—because people thought of them as endowed with pure wisdom that adults lacked.
9. Treat Williams
Imagine deciding to visit a friend on a movie set and end up in the movie. That’s what happened to Treat Williams when he decided to see Carrie Fisher on the set of Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back.
Deciding he wanted to be a part of this fun film day, Williams took on the part of an extra and played an officer in the rebel forces. Pictures of him and Carrie Fisher attest to their time together on set, and we’re sure are an enduring memory for him and fans of the movie series alike.
10. Jodie Comer
Jodi Comer took on the role of Rey’s mother in Star Wars Episode IX: The Rise of Skywalker. The exciting aspect of this mother-daughter duo is that in real life, Comer is 11 months younger than Daisy Ridley, the actress who played Rey.
In the movie, however, Comer perfects the emotional plea to Rey and secures a death scene that leaves viewers with more questions than answers. For instance, since Rey is a Palpatine, possessing the same power as her dark Sith Grandfather, which of her parents was his child? And if one of her parents was also a Palpatine, why didn’t they use that same innate power to overthrow their killer?
11. John Ratzenberger
While having never auditioned for an acting part and missing the experience of acting school, Ratzenberger got his first part on Cheers with a straightforward question. After tanking his first audition, he asked the casting director, “Do you have a know-it-all?” That led to an improv scene that solidified John Ratzenberger’s place in Cheers as the mailman, Cliff Clavin.
Ratzenberger also has a part in every Pixar movie to hit the big screen, from Toy Story to Soul, but what you might not know about the beloved actor is that he has an important, if very brief, part in Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back. He plays Major Bren Derlin, a Rebel Alliance officer who speaks to Princess Leia as they await Luke and Han Solo’s return. “Your Highness,” Ratzenberger says, “there’s nothing more we can do tonight. The shield doors must be closed.”
This decision effectively leaves Skywalker and Solo at the mercy of the frigid temperatures on Hoth, an icy abyss in the planetary system by the same name. Covered in snow and ice year-round, Hoth would offer little to no hope of survival in the elements without the protection of the Alliance’s Echo Base.
12. Sofia Coppola
Director and actress Sofia Coppola is the youngest child and only daughter of famed filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola and his wife, Eleanor. She debuted in film in her infancy in the cult classic crime drama, The Godfather. She’s been active in film since 1972, and with titles like Lost in Translation and Marie Antoinette to her name, she is as accomplished as her father before her.
As a director, she has numerous works to her name, but her handmaiden role as Saché in Star Wars Episode 1: The Phantom Menace may surprise fans of her work. It’s not a significant role, but Coppola left her imprint on Star Wars.
13. Richard Armitage
Don’t feel bad if you have trouble finding Richard Armitage in Star Wars Episode 1: The Phantom Menace. He can’t see himself either! He had this to say when asked about his role as a Bravo fighter pilot. “I certainly turned up and filmed a day, but I can’t find myself in the movie! I think I ended up as a droid. I thought I was a fighter pilot. I can’t find where I am.”
Armitage is a British actor who has done several television and movie roles for British and American-made TV and film. His most famous roles include Netflix’s Castlevania, The Strangers, and Francis Dolarhyde in the TV series Hannibal.
14. Rose Byrne
At just 22 years old, Rose Byrne stepped onto the set of Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones. As Dormé, Byrne’s sole focus was to protect Natalie Portman’s Queen Amidala. In issue 61 of Star Wars Insider, Byrne spoke about her time on set. “What really helped me get into the character of Dormé was definitely her costume. It was so regal that it made me walk and behave very differently than a twenty-two-year-old Sydney girl. Her entire role really is to support Amidala, and her safety is Dormé’s top priority…”
Also, don’t worry if you have trouble figuring out which way to watch the Star Wars movies. Rose Byrne didn’t even know she was in a prequel movie until her husband, Bobby Cannavale, was showing the movie to their two children.
15. Bill Hader/Ben Schwartz
Star Wars wouldn’t be as cool without the loveable droids aiding our heroes in their fight against the Empire or the First Order. C3PO, R2D2, and BB-8 are as central to the story as Luke Skywalker, Princess Leia, and Han Solo. BB-8 needed a unique way to communicate, and the little droid got the voice he needed from Bill Hader and Ben Schwartz.
In a Time Magazine article, Bill Hader, best known for his stint on a little comedy show known as Saturday Night Live, described finding BB-8’s voice. “JJ [Abrams] screwing around with this sound effects app on his iPad that was attached to a talk box operated by me. It looked ridiculous, but it made BB-8’s voice. At first, I tried doing a voice, but we all agreed it sounded too human.”
Hader and Schwartz received credit in Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens for lending their voice consultations to the film.
16. Celia Imrie
Celia Imrie is an English actress with quite a list of roles to her name. Movies like Bridget Jones’ Diary, The Gathering Storm, and Lucky Break wouldn’t be what they are without her.
But her role in Star Wars Episode 1: The Phantom Menace might be the most surprising. According to Female First, she took the part “so her son would think she’s cool.”
Originally Imrie intended to snap up the role of Shmi Skywalker, young Anakin Skywalker’s mother. However, when that failed, she jumped at the chance to play a fighter pilot for the Bravo Five.
17. Thomas Brodie-Sangster
Thomas Brodie-Sangster might be best known as Sam in Love Actually and Newt from The Maze Runner, but the British actor has many more roles to his name. The 33-year-old actor has been in the business since he was eleven and racked up quite a list of movies and television parts in that time.
He scored a tiny bit-part in Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens as Petty Officer Thanisson. Outside of Hollywood, Brodie-Sangster plays guitar and is in the band Winnet along with his mother, Tasha Bertram.
18. Bai Ling
Senator Bana Breemu informed Padmé Amidala that she and other senators “Represented the petition of 2000, and things would change.” She is part of the Galactic Senate from the Humbarine Sector during the fading days of the Galactic Republic. She is also part of the Loyalist Committee.
Although her part was cut from the final film, Bai Ling showed up as Senator Bana Breemu. When her scenes were deleted, Bai alleged they were chopped because she posed for Playboy in 2005. George Lucas, however, refutes that, saying her scenes were axed simply due to time restraints for the finished movie.
19. Daniel Craig
Sometimes you’re cool enough that simply asking for a role is enough to nab one. At least it was for Daniel Craig. The 55-year-old James Bond actor has opened up about his role as a stormtrooper in Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens.
“I love [Star Wars], of course I do. I wouldn’t have asked to be in them if I wasn’t a fan.” Having worked with assistant director, Ben Dixon, Craig added, “I just said ‘Could I get a part in this?’ and he went ‘Yeah’.”
20. Harriet Walter
Dame Harriet Mary Walter has been nominated for or won almost every acting award. With a Tony, a Laurence Olivier, a Screen Actor’s Guild, and three Primetime Emmy awards, she’s no novice when it comes to drama.
When asked about her seven-second bit as Dr. Harter Kalonia in the Star Wars series, Walter said it was “a crucial seven seconds in my career.”
She added how someone once told her, “More people will have seen you in those seven seconds than in everything you’ve done to date added up together.”
21. Joseph Gordon-Levitt
Joseph Gordon-Levitt scored a more extensive, broader role in Star Wars: Visions than his original outing with Star Wars Episode VIII: The Last Jedi. However, his turn as Slowen Lo has some nostalgia behind it. A ‘smalltime’ band known as The Beastie Boys has a 1986 song titled “Slow and Low.”
Interestingly, Gordon-Levitt has been in every Rian Johnson film, including Star Wars: The Last Jedi, even if it was just a tiny bit-part.
22. Sally Hawkins
Though her role is uncredited, Sally Hawkins did have a scene in 1999’s Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace. And while she’s certainly gone on to better roles, she might not have been a part of anything quite as big as Star Wars since.
She said this about her role as an extra. “Oh, I don’t even know if I made the final cut. It was one day many years ago. I was still in drama school. A friend was working on it and got me in. I was in a huge audience scene. We were replicated about a thousand times.”
One reason she might not know whether she made the final cut for the film is that Hawkins admits that she’s never seen her Star Wars performance.
23. Jon Favreau
Star Wars: The Clone Wars likely wouldn’t be as cool without the voice of Jon Favreau. Always a Star Wars fan, Favreau got his chance to be part of the franchise by providing the voice of Mandalorian Pre Vizsla.
He also provided the voices of Ardennian pilot Rio Durant in Solo: A Star Wars Story and Paz Vizsla in The Mandalorian. Since the release of The Mandalorian, Favreau has dedicated time to the Star Wars TV series Ahsoka and Rangers of the New Republic. While there hasn’t been an official announcement, Favreau also hinted at the possibility of doing a live-action take on the popular Star Wars video game, Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order.
24. Tom Hardy
Tom Hardy had a great cameo in Star Wars Episode VIII: The Last Jedi. As Stormtrooper 926, he finds Finn as he is attempting an incursion into the Supremacy. He congratulates him on his promotion. Unfortunately, Tom’s cameo got axed by director Rian Johnson for unknown reasons.
For his part, Hardy did try to keep his involvement on the down low. In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, he was asked about the rumor that he planned to be in the movie, and he said. “I don’t know if I can even say that. Where did you hear that?” When the interviewer answered, he laughed, adding, “Ah, the internet is a glorious web of deceit and misinformation, isn’t it?”
25. Lin-Manuel Miranda
Lin-Manuel Miranda might be best known as the director of the massively popular Broadway hit Hamilton. But this writer and composer has more tricks up his sleeve than just music. He also acted and had a small part as a Resistance fighter on Ajan Kloss in Star Wars Episode IX: The Rise of Skywalker.
What you might not know, however, is that Miranda also wrote two songs for Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens. The tracks “Jabba Flow” and “Dobra Doompa” were written by Miranda, and he and Director J. J. Abrams provided vocals.
26. Julian Glover
Julian Glover took part in providing the image and voice of General Maximillian Veers in Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back. At age 88, Glover has been part of some of the biggest movie franchises ever to grace the big screen.
Besides Star Wars, Glover has offered his acting prowess to Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, Game of Thrones, and Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, to name a few. Having had an incredible career, Glover told The Guardian just how he came about his role in The Empire Strikes Back. According to the well-seasoned actor, his neighbor offered him a spot.
27. Ed Sheeran
British singer Ed Sheeran doesn’t just like to stick to music. When given a chance, he also likes to act; although he has yet to pick up a leading role, he has made some cameos. He first played in the “Dragonstone” episode of season seven of Game of Thrones. Then came Star Wars Episode VII: The Rise of Skywalker, where the ballad crooner had two roles. His first role was as a First Order stormtrooper, and the second was as Enji Golba — a Didynon male from Didyma V.
Rebecca Holcomb is a mother of seven with extensive knowledge of lifestyle topics like family and parenting, food (especially cooking at home), book lists, and health and wellness, including natural remedies. As a former athlete, she utilizes walking and strength training to stay fit and combat stress. She loves to spend time reading, studying the Russo-Ukraine War, and learning about personal finance and politics. Rebecca has been a freelance writer for eleven years and a freelance journalist since 2018. Before joining the Wealth of Geeks Trending Topics team, she wrote for NickiSwift and TheThings.