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Revision as of 14:36, 10 August 2010

Dallas
Dallas title card from 1989–1991
Created byDavid Jacobs
StarringLarry Hagman
Barbara Bel Geddes
Jim Davis
Patrick Duffy
Linda Gray
Susan Howard
Steve Kanaly
Howard Keel
George Kennedy
Ken Kercheval
Cathy Podewell
Priscilla Beaulieu Presley
Victoria Principal
Dack Rambo
Donna Reed
Charlene Tilton
Sheree J. Wilson
Country of originUnited States
No. of seasons14 (including mini-series)
No. of episodes357 (list of episodes)
Production
Running time45 Minutes (excluding commercials)
Production companyLorimar Productions 1978-86, Lorimar Telepictures 1986-88, Lorimar Television 1988-1991
Original release
NetworkCBS
ReleaseApril 2, 1978 –
May 3, 1991
Related
Knots Landing
The Southfork Ranch, home of the Ewing family
The original cast of Dallas. Clockwise from top right are: Larry Hagman (in cowboy hat), Linda Gray, Jim Davis, Charlene Tilton, Victoria Principal, Patrick Duffy, and Barbara Bel Geddes

Dallas is an American prime-time television soap opera that originally ran from 1978 to 1991. It revolved around the Ewings, a wealthy Texas family in the oil and cattle-ranching industries. The show debuted in April 1978 as a five-part miniseries on the CBS network, and then was broadcast for thirteen seasons from 1978 through 1991. In 2007, Dallas was listed as one of Time magazine's "100 Best TV Shows of All-TIME."[1]

History

The show's central character is John Ross "J.R." Ewing Jr., a greedy, scheming oil baron played by Fort Worth native Larry Hagman. J.R. was only intended to be a supporting character when the show premiered, as the series was originally based around J.R.'s brother Bobby and his new bride, Pam. However, J.R.'s machinations became popular with viewers and he quickly became the focus of the series.

Creator David Jacobs originated the idea for a drama series about four married couples (which would later become the spinoff series Knots Landing), but CBS wanted a glitzy "saga-like" show. Jacobs therefore created Dallas, a series about a wealthy family in the oil business. When Dallas proved to be a hit, CBS reconsidered Jacobs' original idea and turned Knots Landing into a spin-off of Dallas in late 1979.

The Dallas miniseries that started in April 1978 was shot entirely on location in Dallas, Texas, and at the Cloyce Box Ranch in Frisco, Texas. Later, most interiors for the show were shot at the MGM studios in Hollywood, with exteriors being shot at the Southfork Ranch in Parker, Texas, and other sections of Dallas, until 1989, when rising production costs led to all filming being relocated to California.

Premise

The show was known for its wealth, sex, intrigue, and power struggles. When the series began, the founder of Ewing Oil and patriarch of the Ewing family was Jock (veteran movie actor Jim Davis), a malevolent oil tycoon who had allegedly cheated his one-time partner, Digger Barnes (David Wayne, later replaced by Keenan Wynn) out of his share of the company as well as Digger's only love, Eleanor "Ellie" Southworth (veteran stage/movie actress Barbara Bel Geddes). Later, the offspring of Jock's brother would claim that their father was intregal to the oil boon that created the Ewing dynasty, and successfully sued the estate.

Jock and Miss Ellie raised three sons, J.R., Gary (David Ackroyd and later Ted Shackelford) and Bobby (Patrick Duffy). J.R., the eldest Ewing son, unscrupulous and unhappily married to a former Miss Texas, Sue Ellen Shepard Ewing (Linda Gray), was frequently at odds with his youngest brother, Bobby, who displayed the morals and integrity that his eldest brother lacked. Gary, the middle son, was the "black sheep" of the family. Long estranged from Jock, and treated terribly by J.R., he did have a good, though distant relationship with Bobby and Ellie. He in turn was also married to Valene "Val" Clements Ewing (later Gibson Waleska Ewing) (Joan Van Ark), who also raised a young lady, Lucy (Charlene Tilton), J.R.'s and Bobby's saucy, yet confused niece, who spent most of her time, residing at Southfork with her grandparents, all the while, she was sleeping with ranch foreman, Ray Krebbs (Steve Kanaly). Ray would later become a half- sibling, as he lamented to Hagman that he was planning to leave the series. Hagman suggested the plot line wherein Ray becomes a half-brother. The episode where Ray and half-niece Lucy had a fling is, as Kanaly told Dianh Shore, "prayerfully forgotten we hope".

Ray had previously engaged in a short fling with Pamela Barnes (Victoria Principal), who was Digger Barnes' daughter and Cliff's (Ken Kercheval) sister. However, Pam loved Bobby Ewing and the two married in the pilot episode. J.R., who loathed the Barnes family, was not happy with Pam living at Southfork and tried to constantly undermine her marriage to Bobby. The feeling of acrimony was mutual from Cliff and he too tried to undermine their marriage, but in time he grew to accept it and Bobby as his brother in law.

The series ended each season with ratings-grabbing cliffhangers. Some notable cliffhangers included the landmark "Who shot J.R.?" episode (which TV Guide ranked #69 on its list of "TV's Top 100 Episodes of All Time"[2]), an unidentified floating female corpse in the Southfork swimming pool, a blazing house fire, etc.

Cast of characters

Original main cast

Larry Hagman as J.R. Ewing (1978–1991 – entire run)
Eldest son of Jock and Miss Ellie.
Patrick Duffy as Bobby Ewing (1978–1985, 1986–1991)
Youngest son of Jock and Miss Ellie.
Linda Gray as Sue Ellen Ewing (1978–1989, 1991)
J.R.'s long-suffering alcoholic wife.
Victoria Principal as Pamela Barnes Ewing (1978–1987)
Bobby's wife, who is forced to act as a buffer between the two feuding families.
Jim Davis as Jock Ewing (1978–1981)
Founder of Ewing Oil and head of the Ewing family.
Barbara Bel Geddes as "Miss Ellie" Southworth Ewing (1978–1984, 1985–1990)
Jock's wife, whose family owned Southfork Ranch originally.
Charlene Tilton as Lucy Ewing Cooper (1978–1985, 1988–1990)
Gary and Val's daughter. Saucy granddaughter of Jock and Miss Ellie. Confused niece of J.R. and Bobby.
Steve Kanaly as Ray Krebbs (1978–1988)
Ranch foreman; Jock's illegitimate son.
Ken Kercheval as Cliff Barnes (1978–1991 – entire run)
Pam's brother, whose schemes are aimed directly against the Ewings, specifically J.R.

Additional cast members

Susan Howard as Donna Culver Krebbs (1979–1987)
Political woman who marries Ray.
Howard Keel as Clayton Farlow (Spring 1981–1991)
Dignified, and sometimes hot-tempered, oil baron.
Priscilla Beaulieu Presley (1983–1988), Morgan Fairchild (briefly in 1978), and Francine Tacker (briefly in 1980) as Jenna Wade
Bobby's first true love, before Pam.
Donna Reed as Miss Ellie (1984–1985)
Dack Rambo as Jack Ewing (Spring 1985–1987)
A wandering cousin, son of Jock's brother Jason.
Sheree J. Wilson as April Stevens Ewing (1986–1991)
Jack's ex-wife, who eventually marries Bobby.
George Kennedy as Carter McKay (1988–1991)
Becomes the head of WestStar oil and the adversary of J.R.
Cathy Podewell as Cally Harper Ewing (1988–1991)
J.R.'s young second wife.
Kimberly Foster as Michelle Stevens (1989–1991)
April's sister, who marries James Beaumont and then Cliff Barnes.
Sasha Mitchell as James Richard Beaumont (1989–1991)
J.R.'s illegitimate son with old flame Vanessa Beaumont.
Lesley-Anne Down as Stephanie Rogers (Spring 1990)
PR woman who plots to make Cliff a powerful political figure.
Barbara Stock as Liz Adams (Spring 1990–1991)
Cliff's girlfriend during the final season.

Important secondary characters

Tina Louise as Julie Gray (1978–1979)
J.R.'s first secretary, whom he is personally involved with
Gene Evans as Garrison Southworth (January 1979)
Ellie's long lost brother who is afflicted with a terminal illness and returns to Southfork to live out the rest of his life. Gary Ewing is named after him.
Mary Crosby (1979–1981, 1991) and Colleen Camp (briefly in 1979) as Kristin Shepard
Sue Ellen's scheming sister, who has an affair with J.R.
Ted Shackelford (1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1985, 1991 guest appearances) and David Ackroyd (briefly in 1978) as Garrison Arthur "Gary" Ewing
Alcoholic black sheep of the Ewing family and Lucy's father, who moves away to California to star in the spinoff series Knots Landing.
Joan Van Ark as Valene "Val" Clements Ewing (later Gibson Waleska Ewing) (1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1991 guest appearances)
Gary's wife and Lucy's mother, a central character on Dallas spinoff Knots Landing.
David Wayne (1978) and Keenan Wynn (1979–1980) as Willard "Digger" Barnes
Cliff and Pam's father, former partner and sworn enemy of Jock Ewing. A legendary prospector but erratic personality, it was implied in Dallas: The Early Years that Digger could smell oil underground.
Sandy Ward as Jeb Ames (1978–1979)
One of J.R.'s business associates, involved in a deal based on the infamous Red Files.
John Ashton (1978–1979) and Ed Nelson (briefly in 1978) as Willie Joe Garr
One of J.R.'s business associates, involved in a deal based on the infamous Red Files.
Lisa LeMole as Susan (1978)
J.R.'s second secretary.
Meg Gallagher as Louella Caraway Lee (1978–1981)
J.R.'s third secretary.
Jeanna Michaels (1979–1981) and Donna Bullock (briefly in 1978) as Connie Brasher
Bobby's first secretary.
Don Starr as Jordan Lee (1979–1990)
A member of the cartel.
Fern Fitzgerald as Marilee Stone (1979–1990)
Promiscuous female member of the cartel, whose husband committed suicide after losing money in a deal with J.R.
Dennis Patrick as Vaughn Leland (1979–1984)
Cattleman's Bank executive.
Barbara Babcock as Liz Craig (1978–1982)
Pam's boss at The Store.
John Zaremba (1978–1986) and Dan Ammerman (briefly in 1978) as Dr. Harlen Danvers
The Ewing family physician.
George O. Petrie as Harv Smithfield (1979–1991)
The Ewing family's attorney.
Tom Fuccello as Senator Dave Culver (1979–1984, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991)
Donna's stepson.
Jeff Cooper as Dr. Simon Ellby (1979–1981)
Sue Ellen's psychiatrist.
Jared Martin as Steven "Dusty" Farlow (1979–1982, 1985, 1991)
Clayton's son and Sue Ellen's sometimes lover.
E.J. André as Mr. Eugene Bullock (1979–1983)
Elderly international oilman.
Randolph Powell as Alan Beam (1979–1980)
Smooth-talking, ambitious lawyer who works for J.R. and was briefly engaged to Lucy.
Martha Scott as Patricia Shepard (1979 and 1985)
Sue Ellen and Kristin's controlling mother.
Karlene Crockett as Muriel Gillis (1979–1983)
Lucy's nerdy best friend.
Leigh McCloskey as Mitch Cooper (1980–1982, 1985, 1988)
Lucy's husband and Afton's brother.
Morgan Woodward as Punk Anderson (1980–1987)
Oil executive and good friend to Jock and Miss Ellie.
Stephen Elliott as Scotty Demarest (1980, 1985, 1987)
The Ewing family's criminal attorney.
Joanna Cassidy (1980–1981) and Andra Akers (briefly in 1979) as Sally Bullock
Shipping magnate who sleeps with J.R., wife of Eugene Bullock.
Morgan Brittany as Katherine Wentworth (1981–1985, 1987)
Wicked half-sister of Pam and Cliff, who falls in love with Bobby
Priscilla Pointer as Rebecca Blake Barnes Wentworth (1981–1983)
Mother of Pam, Cliff and Katherine
William Smithers as Jeremy Wendell (1981, 1984–1989)
Head of the powerful WestStar Oil and proverbial thorn in J.R.'s side.
Audrey Landers as Afton Cooper (1981–1984, 1989)
Mitch's sister and aspiring singer who becomes Cliff's girlfriend and later mother of his daughter Pamela Rebecca Cooper.
Anne Francis as Arliss Cooper (1981)
Mitch and Afton's mother, Lucy's mother-in-law
Susan Flannery as Leslie Stewart (1981)
A public relations agent who works with Ewing Oil and secretly tapes her conversations with J.R.
Debbie Rennard as Sylvia "Sly" Lovegren (1981–1991)
J.R.'s fourth secretary.
Deborah Tranelli as Phyllis Wapner (1981–1991)
Bobby's second secretary.
Sherill Lynn Rettino as Jackie Dugan (1979–1991)
Pam's co-worker at The Store, later Cliff's secretary at Barnes-Wentworth Oil, eventually James's secretary at Ewing Oil.
Roseanna Christiansen as Teresa (1982–1991)
The Ewing's maid.
Alice Hirson as Mavis Anderson (1982–1988)
Punk's wife and Miss Ellie's closest friend.
Lois Chiles as Holly Harwood (1982–1983)
Oil heiress who becomes involved in a complex scheme with J.R. and causes Sue Ellen to drink again.
Timothy Patrick Murphy as Mickey Trotter (1982–1983)
Ray's rebellious cousin who becomes involved with Lucy.
Danone Simpson as Kendall Chapman (1982–1991)
Ewing Oil receptionist.
John Beck as Mark Graison (Spring 1983–1984, 1985–1986)
Pamela's beau after her first divorce from Bobby whom Pam vows to marry in Spring 1984 due to his contraction of a fatal disease
Christopher Atkins as Peter Richards (1983–1984)
Twenty-year old lover of Sue Ellen and mentor to little John Ross.
Omri Katz (1983–1991) and Tyler Banks (1980–1983) as John Ross Ewing III
J.R. and Sue Ellen's son.
Martin E. Brooks as Edgar Randolph (1983–1984)
Government worker in charge of Offshore Oil Field auctions that JR drives to sanitarium from blackmail about his troubled past.
Shalane McCall as Charlie Wade (1983–1988)
Jenna's daughter.
Alexis Smith as Lady Jessica Farlow Montford (1984, 1990)
Clayton's criminally insane sister and biological mother of Dusty Farlow.
Daniel Pilon as Renaldo Marchetta (1984–1985)
Jenna's ex-husband and Charlie's father.
Jenilee Harrison as Jamie Ewing Barnes (1984–1986)
Daughter of Jock's brother Jason who Cliff marries to gain control of her share of Ewing Oil. She later divorces Cliff, moves to California
Deborah Shelton as Mandy Winger (1984–1987)
A model who becomes one of J.R.'s many mistresses. She was previously involved romantically with Cliff Barnes.
Joshua Harris (1985–1991) and Eric Farlow (1983–1985) as Christopher Ewing
Bobby and Pam's adopted son, biological son of Kristin Shepard and Jeff Farraday.
Barbara Carrera as Angelica Nero (1985–1986)
Exotic businesswoman who dangerously tangles with J.R.
Steve Forrest as Ben Stivers/Wes Parmalee (1986)
Ranch hand who claims to be Jock.
Jack Scalia as Nicholas Pearce (1987–1988, 1991)
Stockbroker who becomes infatuated with Sue Ellen.
Andrew Stevens as Casey Denault (1987–1989)
Young hustler who works for J.R., romances Lucy in order to use her money.
Leigh Taylor-Young as Kimberly Cryder (1987–1988)
Daughter of the largest owner of WestStar stock, whom J.R. tries to marry in order to gain control of the company.
Beth Toussaint as Tracy McKay Lawton (1988–1989)
Carter McKay's daughter who becomes involved with Bobby.
J. Eddie Peck as Tommy McKay (1989)
Son of Carter McKay, a drug dealer.
Jeri Gaile as Rose Daniels McKay (1989–1991)
Carter's young wife.
Ian McShane as Don Lockwood (1989)
English film director who helps produce Sue Ellen's idea for an unflattering film about J.R., eventually Sue Ellen moves to London and marries him.
Gayle Hunnicutt as Vanessa Beaumont (1989–1991)
Mother of James, an old flame of J.R., briefly attempts to rekindle their romance after J.R. has married Cally.
Susan Lucci as Hilary Taylor/faux Sheila Foley (1990–1991)
Psychotic kidnapper who causes April's death as April and Bobby honeymoon in Europe.
Barbara Eden as Lee Ann De La Vega (1990–1991)
An old girlfriend of J.R. who plots revenge against him.

Family tree

John Ross "Jock" Ewing, Sr.Eleanor "Miss Ellie" Southworth Ewing FarlowClayton Farlow
John Ross "J.R." Ewing, Jr.Sue Ellen Shepard EwingGarrison Arthur "Gary" EwingValene Clements EwingRobert James "Bobby" EwingPamela Jean Barnes Ewing
John Ross Ewing IIILucy Ewing CooperMitch CooperChristopher Ewing (adopted)

Deaths and departures

By the time the series ended, most of the family had departed:

  • Jock Ewing (Jim Davis) was the first to depart, with the actor's death in 1981.
  • Bobby Ewing was twice heartbroken, having lost both Pamela Ewing and April Stevens Ewing.
  • Pamela Ewing was severely injured in a car accident in the 1986–1987 season finale, and left Bobby and Christopher due to her apparent inability to let them see her in such a physically disfigured fashion. Nevertheless, while Victoria Principal never returned again to the series as Pam during its final four years before cancellation, Margaret Michaels, a Principal look-alike, played the character in the season premiere of 1988–1989.
  • Donna and Ray divorced in 1987, the former moving to Washington, D.C. Ray then subsequently left Dallas with his new wife, Jenna, bound for Europe by the fall of 1988.
  • Lucy Ewing returned to Southfork in spring 1988, but then left again two years later for Europe as well.
  • Sue Ellen Ewing left Dallas in 1989 to move to London with her new film-director boyfriend and then-husband.

Episodes

Cliffhangers

Dallas was notable for its cliffhangers. Throughout the series' run, every season ended with some sort of cliffhanging ending designed to drive ratings up for the season premiere the following year.

Miniseries cliffhanger: Although this really wasn't a cliffhanger, the end of the fifth episode of the original Dallas miniseries saw J.R. go up to the loft of the barn to talk to Pam, who had gone up there to escape the wild time at the barbecue going on at Southfork (which includes embarrassing actions from both the Ewing and Barnes family, most notably Digger's drunk rendition of "The Yellow Rose of Texas"). J.R., intoxicated, tries to convince her to tell Bobby not to leave the ranch. However, she doesn't want to be bothered, and, in trying to escape J.R., she falls from the loft, landing square on her stomach.

Season One cliffhanger: Sue Ellen's drinking problem has landed her in a sanitarium, where she is pregnant with a child she believes is Cliff Barnes'. She escapes from the sanitarium, gets drunk, and then gets into a severe car accident, putting her life and the baby's life in danger. The doctors deliver the baby, named John Ross Ewing III (after J.R (John Ross, Jr.). and Jock (John Ross, Sr.)), but he is very small on delivery and isn't out of the woods yet. Neither is his mother, who, as the episode ends, is clinging to life. A very distraught J.R. is watching his wife at the end of the episode in tears, saying that she's "just gotta live."


Season Two cliffhanger: To cap off a season where J.R. has angered nearly everyone in the state of Texas, someone comes into his office late at night and shoots him twice.


Season Three cliffhanger: Cliff finds a body in the Southfork pool while heading to a late-night business meeting with Bobby. He goes to see who it is (factors point to Pam although there is no definitive evidence to that effect), and when he looks back up J.R. is standing on the balcony over the pool, near the area where the person fell. Believing J.R. is responsible Cliff says to his rival, "She's dead. You bastard."


Season Four cliffhanger: Cliff Barnes' year had not been a good one. Sue Ellen, with whom he'd had an off and on relationship, decided to return to J.R. and marry him again. In addition, J.R. helped to nearly drive Cliff's mothers tool and die company into bankruptcy, which cost Cliff his job. He attempts suicide with an overdose of pills and a guilt-ridden Sue Ellen rushes to his bedside as Cliff lays in a coma. J.R. tries to convince Sue Ellen that it wasn't anybody's fault but Cliff's for what happened, but Sue Ellen disagrees and says she doesn't know if she can remarry J.R. if Cliff dies.


Season Five cliffhanger: A drunk Sue Ellen and Ray Krebbs' cousin Mickey Trotter are involved in an accident, in a car belonging to J.R., just outside Southfork. Sue Ellen emerges unhurt, but Mickey is paralyzed and in a coma. Ray finds out that the driver of the other car was Walt Driscoll, J.R.'s rival. He also learns that Driscoll deliberately caused the accident, thinking that J.R. was driving, as a means of revenge for being put in jail by J.R. earlier in the year. An angered Ray comes to Southfork late at night demanding answers from J.R., who was not expecting to see him. J.R. asks him what is going on and Ray says he's going to kill J.R. for what happened. J.R. throws a candle holder at Ray, which misses him and knocks over another candle holder with lit candles in it. As the two brawl, the candles ignite a fire and the smoke starts to creep into both John Ross and Sue Ellen's bedrooms. J.R. notices the fire and tries to break free of Ray, finally knocking him out with a telephone, and runs upstairs to try and save his wife and son. Ray recovers and runs after J.R. but is consumed by smoke and falls. J.R. is hit with a falling beam as he gets upstairs and both men are unconscious as Southfork burns.


Season Six cliffhanger: Just like in season two, J.R. was crossing people left and right. And just like in season two, a mysterious figure broke into his office at Ewing Oil at night. Someone is sitting in his office chair with their back to the potential assassin, who fires three shots at this person. The person slumps out of the chair and falls on the floor, and the audience sees that Bobby Ewing has been shot.


Season Seven cliffhanger: Bobby, who has been divorced from Pam for two years and is engaged to Jenna Wade, decides that he wants to remarry his ex-wife instead and Pam agrees. The next morning, as the two are getting set to leave, someone drives a car at a high rate of speed toward Pam. Bobby shoves her out of the way just before she is hit, but can't get out of the way of the car in time to save himself and is hit and severely injured. Bobby is rushed to the hospital where he later dies.


Season Eight cliffhanger: Evil businesswoman Angelica Nero intends to kill J.R. and his cousin Jack for double crossing her, but J.R. has her apprehended by the police. Unfortunately, Angelica has already put her plans into motion. She has her henchman attach a car bomb to Jack's car, which explodes with Jamie inside. After hearing this on the phone, J.R. runs out of his office to go to Jack's apartment. As he leaves the office, Sue Ellen arrives in the other elevator looking for him. As soon as she enters J.R.'s office, a time bomb left by Angelica goes off, and the entire floor that houses Ewing Oil explodes, showering debris onto the street below. The scene then shifts to Pam in bed, the day after her marriage to Mark Graison. Pam wakes up to hear the shower running. Assuming it's Mark, she opens the shower door, only to find Bobby Ewing, alive and well.


Season Nine cliffhanger: Pam, on her way home from the doctor's office after finding out she can finally conceive a baby, crashes into the fuel tank of a semi-truck, engulfing her car in a fiery explosion.

Season Ten cliffhanger: J.R. and Sue Ellen's new beau Nicholas Pearce fight in J.R.'s penthouse hotel suite, and during the course of the fight Pearce goes over the balcony and falls to his death. Shocked by what she has just seen and believing that J.R. has killed her lover, Sue Ellen then picks up a gun from the floor and shoots J.R. three times. She then picks up the phone and tells the police she would like to report a double murder.


Season Eleven cliffhanger: Sue Ellen prepares to leave Dallas for good, but before she does she has one last surprise for her ex-husband J.R. Sue Ellen has made a biographical motion picture about her marriage to him (with actors portraying them and the other Ewings) and previews the film to J.R. who is shocked by what he has just seen. Sue Ellen tells J.R. that she is leaving Dallas, but if he ever crosses her again in the future- or even if she wakes up on the wrong side of bed one morning-she will release the film and J.R. will be made "the laughing stock of Texas" and ruined forever. She then leaves Dallas, triumphant at last.

Season Twelve cliffhanger: After deliberately committing himself into a sanitarium in order to persuade a patient (Clayton's sister Jessica) to sign over her voting majority in Weststar Oil, J.R.'s plan backfires when Cally Harper, his latest scorned woman, and his illegitimate son James Beaumont coerce him into signing a property waiver before they will allow him to be released. Once he does, James tears up J.R.'s release papers anyway leaving him trapped in the sanitarium with no means of escape.


Season Fourteen cliffhanger: After finally losing Ewing Oil to Cliff Barnes, control of Southfork to Bobby, and being abandoned by his wife and children, a drunk and despondent J.R. begins walking around the ranch alone with a loaded gun wishing he had never been born. A gunshot is later fired in J.R.'s bedroom as Bobby returns to Southfork, and he rushes up to J.R.'s room and gasps, saying "Oh, my God!" as the series ends. (See below for more information.)

Final episode

In this episode, titled "Conundrum" (originally aired on CBS, May 3, 1991), J.R. is contemplating committing suicide. Southfork was taken out of his control and given to Bobby by Miss Ellie, while Cliff Barnes now had control of Ewing Oil. Clayton had given J.R. voting rights at Weststar, but J.R. was tricked into believing he would become Chairman of Weststar by Carter McKay. J.R. had sold his half of Ewing Oil to Cliff to take over Weststar, but old foe Dusty Farlow revealed that he had sold his Weststar shares to McKay, thus making McKay the majority stockholder. McKay fired J.R. from Weststar after revealing that he had set him up (McKay had sent two Weststar directors to J.R. and convinced him to sell Ewing Oil to pave the way for a Weststar takeover that would never happen). John Ross, his own son, disowned him and moved to London to be with his mother. Now, drunk and despondent, J.R. walks around the pool with a bourbon bottle and a loaded gun, when suddenly another person comes into view...a spirit named Adam (portrayed by Joel Grey), whose "boss" has been watching J.R. and likes him. Adam proceeds to take him on a journey to show him what life would've been like for other people if he hadn't been born. Among what he shows him:

  • Without J.R., Gary became the oldest Ewing son, and the youngest was Jason (who would have been born had J.R. never been around; Jason never appeared in the TV series as he didn't really exist).
  • With Gary in charge of Ewing Oil upon Jock's retirement, the company went bankrupt. Stress from it killed Jock, and Miss Ellie died of a broken heart two years later, she never meets Clayton Farlow.
  • Jason, a shady real estate developer swindled Gary and Bobby out of their shares in the company and Southfork, and proceeded to tear the compound down and build tract houses on it called Southfork Estates.
  • Having never met Pam, Bobby continued his wild ways from before and ended up as a down-on-his-luck hustler who was behind on alimony payments to his wife Annie and kids J.R., Bobby, and Ellie. He also ends up behind on his gambling debts to Carter McKay, who owns casinos in Las Vegas. (McKay was fired by Jeremy Wendell at Westar.)
  • Gary became a successful divorce lawyer who never married, and thus never had Lucy Ewing, J.R.'s niece. (He does eventually meet Valene Ewing, his wife in the real world, but nothing ever comes of it other than a date whose outcome was never discussed).
  • Without having met J.R., Cally Harper never left her poor roots, and ends up as a battered wife who lives with her husband in a shack, where she kills him and (according to Adam) will be convicted and sentenced to life in prison as no one would believe she was beaten.
  • Without J.R. in the way and forcing him to be a part of the Ewing/Barnes rivalry, Cliff Barnes was able to earn a law degree and enter politics, becoming Vice President of the United States and later Acting President due to a stroke suffered by the President.
  • Since J.R. was never born (and thus, never shot), Kristin Shepard never met him (and, thus, never died), and became a successful con artist in Los Angeles. She poses as a hooker initially and then a police officer, which sees her accept a bribe from an embarrassed customer.
  • Having never met J.R., Sue Ellen has become a successful soap opera star, with Nicholas Pierce (who was never killed off) as her loving husband.
  • With J.R. out of the picture and Jock dying before he could find out, Ray Krebbs never knew of his Ewing blood ties. After an injury he suffered in a Ewing Oil-sponsored rodeo, Ray became a down on his luck ranchhand, forcing to work two or three jobs to support his family, who are loving and very supportive of him. He does have a son called Jock.

After one final scene where Bobby settles his gambling debts with McKay, Adam eggs J.R. on to kill himself. J.R. won't do it, as he doesn't want Adam to be sent back to heaven with his job incomplete. Adam laughs at this, saying "Angel? What makes you think I'm from heaven?" A startled J.R. wakes up, gun and bourbon still in hands, and the scene appears to be a dream... only Adam returns, appearing to J.R. in his mirror, dressed entirely in red, and continuing to egg him on. J.R. slowly raises the loaded gun to his head, unaware that Bobby has returned home. The gun goes off while Bobby is in the hallway, and he rushes to J.R.'s room. He looks at what has gone down, gasps, "Oh, my God," and the series ends on that note with the fate of J.R. never settled (although it eventually would be five years later, in the reunion movie, Dallas: J.R. Returns). It was believed J.R. killed himself, although in later years it was revealed he had shot the mirror (although no glass was heard).

Production details

Dallas was eventually translated and dubbed into 67 languages in over 90 countries, a record that to this day still stands for an American television series.[citation needed]

Dallas originally aired on Saturday nights when it debuted as a regular series. Within a month, the show was moved to Sunday nights, where it would stay until halfway through the season, when it took a Friday-night slot. Dallas remained on Fridays until the show ended in 1991, alternating between 9 p.m. and 10 p.m. airings.

The "Who Done It?" episode of Dallas that revealed "Who shot J.R.?", the famous 1980 cliffhanger, received the highest domestic ratings at that point with over 90 million American viewers tuning in for the answer. The last episode of M*A*S*H in 1983 finally had more viewers than Dallas. The final episode of The Fugitive, broadcast in August 1967, was watched by a higher percentage of television-owning Americans (72%), although it had lesser absolute numbers. Internationally Dallas still holds the record for the most watched episode with nearly 360 million viewers tuning in to see who shot J.R. [verification needed]

Ratings

Season Premiere Finale Episodes Rank
Miniseries April 2, 1978 April 30, 1978 5 #44
Season 1 September 23, 1978 April 06, 1979 24
Season 2 September 21, 1979 March 21, 1980 25 #6
Season 3 November 7, 1980 May 1, 1981 23 #1
Season 4 October 9, 1981 April 9, 1982 26 #1
Season 5 October 1, 1982 May 6, 1983 28 #2
Season 6 September 30, 1983 May 18, 1984 30 #1
Season 7 September 28, 1984 May 17, 1985 30 #2
Season 8 September 27, 1985 May 16, 1986 31 #6
Season 9 September 26, 1986 May 15, 1987 29 #11
Season 10 September 25, 1987 May 13, 1988 30 #22
Season 11 October 28, 1988 May 19, 1989 26 #29
Season 12 September 22, 1989 May 11, 1990 27 #43
Season 13 November 2, 1990 May 3, 1991 23 #61
JR Returns November 15, 1996 November 15, 1996 1 #10
War Of The Ewings April 24, 1998 April 24, 1998 1 #23

DVD releases

Season 1 on DVD is the original mini-series. When the show went to formal production as a regular weekly series, what is on DVD referred to as Season 2 was Season 1 of the weekly series.

DVD Season Common Season Count Ep # Region 1 Region 2 Region 4 Comments
Seasons 1 & 2 Mini-Series & Season 1 29 August 8, 2004 November 1, 2004 October 22, 2004 The first-and-second-seasons DVD box set has five double-sided DVDs, which contain the 5 episodes from the miniseries and the 24 episodes from the first regular season. The Region 1 release includes a "Soap Talk" Dallas reunion special. Both Region 1 and Region 2 have three commentaries by actors Larry Hagman and Charlene Tilton, and series creator David Jacobs.
Season 3 Season 2 25 August 9, 2005 September 26, 2005 October 19, 2005 The third-season DVD box set has five double-sided DVDs, which contain the 25 episodes from that season. It includes commentaries by Patrick Duffy and Linda Gray on two major episodes and the special documentary Who Shot J.R.?: The Dallas Phenomenon.
Season 4 Season 3 23 January 24, 2006 May 22, 2006 May 5, 2006 The fourth-season DVD box set has four double-sided DVDs, which contain the 23 episodes from that season. It includes a cast reunion special from 2004: Dallas Reunion: The Return To Southfork, which aired on CBS on November 7, 2004.
Season 5 Season 4 26 August 1, 2006 November 17, 2006 December 6, 2006 The fifth-season DVD box set has five double-sided DVDs, which contain the 26 episodes from that season. It includes a documentary called: A Living Landmark: A Tour of the Real Southfork Ranch.
Season 6 Season 5 28 January 30, 2007 February 19, 2007 June 5, 2007 The sixth-season DVD box set has five double-sided DVDs, which contain the 28 episodes from that season. It includes a documentary that delves into the legacy of Dallas then and now.
Season 7 Season 6 30 July 31, 2007 September 17, 2007 TBA The seventh-season DVD box set has five double-sided DVDs, which contain the 30 episodes from that season. It includes the story behind the iconic Dallas theme song and is titled The Music of Dallas.
Season 8 Season 7 30 February 12, 2008 February 18, 2008 TBA The eighth-season DVD box set has five double-sided DVDs, which contain the 30 episodes from that season. The special feature is called Dallas Makeover – Travilla Style and deals with the Emmy award winning costumes of the show.
Season 9 Season 8 31 July 15, 2008 September 22, 2008 TBA The ninth-season DVD box set has four double-sided DVDs, which contain the 31 episodes from that season. The special features include the documentary Seasons of Change, an in depth look at the most famous dream sequence of all time, the entire ninth season, and its impact on the storylines, the fans, and stars. There is also a look back at Season 8 to examine the effect of Barbara Bel Geddes' departure for a year, and her eventual return.
Season 10 Season 9 29 January 13, 2009 January 19, 2009 TBA The tenth-season DVD box set has three double-sided DVDs, which contain the 29 episodes from that season. The opening episode, "Return to Camelot" is the two part syndicated version. This set contains no special features, unlike previous releases.
Season 11 Season 10 30 April 21, 2009 July 20, 2009 TBA The eleventh-season DVD box set has three double-sided DVDs, which contain the 30 episodes from that season. The opening episode, "After the Fall" is the two part syndicated version. This set contains no special features, just as the previous release.
Season 12 Season 11 26 January 19, 2010[3] March 1, 2010[4] TBA The Complete Twelfth Season DVD box set has three double-sided DVDs, which contain the 26 episodes from that season. Like Seasons 10 and 11, this set contains no special features.
Season 13 Season 12 27 April 13, 2010[5] September 13, 2010[6] TBA The Complete Thirteenth Season DVD box set has three double-sided DVDs, which contain the 27 episodes from that season. Like Seasons 10, 11 & 12, this set contains no special features.
Season 14 Season 13 22 TBC – Expected 2011[7] TBC – Expected 2011 TBA TBA
J.R. Returns TV Movie N/A TBC – Expected 2011[8] TBC – Expected 2011 TBA TBA
The War of the Ewings TV Movie N/A TBC – Expected 2011[8] TBC – Expected 2011 TBA TBA

Syndication

Dallas began airing on SoapNet in 2003, but has been off that network since August 2008 following SoapNet's decision not to renew their rights to it. Previously the show aired on TNN.

Dallas was syndicated to local stations beginning in the 1980s, but it is unclear as to what markets still air the series.

Bring Back Dallas – Special Reunion

In 2007, British comedian Justin Lee Collins went about searching for all the stars of Dallas to bring them back together for a special reunion party. The show was broadcast at 9 p.m. Sunday, May 27, 2007, on UK television network Channel 4 as part of the Bring Back... series. After hunting down most of the main cast by any means necessary (e.g., climbing over security fences and ambushing hotels), Collins managed to interview them and gain more knowledge about some of the decisions made throughout the show's seasons. The participants amongst the cast were Larry Hagman, Linda Gray, Patrick Duffy, Ken Kercheval, Charlene Tilton, Susan Howard and Mary Crosby. He held his own Oil Baron's Ball, where unfortunately none of the cast turned up. However, in a surprise move, the actor who played baby Christopher (Eric Farlow) turned up.

Revival

According to the New York Times, the television network TNT has ordered a Dallas pilot. The new show would follow the lives of J.R. and Bobby's sons, John Ross and Christopher Ewing. Original Dallas veteran actors Larry Hagman, Linda Gray, and Patrick Duffy have already been contacted for their appearance in the pilot.[9]

Tie-ins

  • A Dallas comic strip ran in newspapers during the 1980s, illustrated by cartoonist Dick Kulpa and distributed by the L.A. Times Syndicate.
  • There was a 1980s computer game based on the series called Dallas Quest.
  • In spring 2004, a prime-time special was taped in which actors reminisced about their work on the series. It aired on November 7, 2004, on CBS, though it was delayed due to football. Actor Howard Keel (Clayton Farlow) had died earlier that same day.

Legacy

On November 8, 2008, a reunion to commemorate the show's 30th anniversary was held at Southfork Ranch in Parker, Texas, reuniting original cast members Larry Hagman, Patrick Duffy, Linda Gray, Ken Kercheval, Steve Kanaly and Charlene Tilton. Other cast members in attendance were: Susan Howard, Audrey Landers, Mary Crosby, and Sheree J. Wilson. The front and back lawn of the fictional Ewing family home played host to a massive barbecue filled with people from the Dallas area, across the U.S. and around the world (who paid as much as $1,000) to reminisce and celebrate the series, as well as meeting with cast members. During the festivities, Kercheval said he was shocked to see the continued support for the show 17 years after it last aired. "I don't understand it," he said. "The staying power. Who knew?" Linda Gray also fondly remembered her time on the show: "I think it was a special time. It was a time when there weren't a hundred million channels and the internet and all of the other things that came to existence."

After Dallas ended, co-stars Patrick Duffy and Sasha Mitchell starred in a successful ABC sitcom, Step By Step. Mitchell again played Duffy's nephew.

In popular culture

References in songs/music videos

  • In his 1987 song "Posse on Broadway", Sir Mix-a-Lot refers to himself with regards to the other local MCs as, "The man they love to hate, the "J. R. Ewing of Seattle".
  • Mentioned in The Message by hip hop DJ Grandmaster Flash as, "My brother's doing bad, stole my mother's TV / Says she watches too much / It's just not healthy / All My Children in the daytime, Dallas at night / Can’t even see the game or the Sugar Ray fight.
  • Swedish group ABBA's final recording "The Day Before You Came" (1982) relates the story of a mundane day in the life of an ordinary woman in the suburbs. The song incorporates the lines "I must have had my dinner watching something on TV / There's not I think a single episode of Dallas that I didn't see." This grammatically challenging lyric may have been partially biographical as it was reported in the UK press that ABBA member Agnetha Faltskog (who performed the song) was dating one of the Dallas producers and had been offered a part in the series. She never appeared in the show. When British group Blancmange released their version of the song on single in 1984, the picture sleeve included a picture of a shot JR on a TV screen.
  • Ozzy Osbourne, in 1986 made a music video for the song "The Ultimate Sin" loosely based on Dallas. Ozzy played J.R. Ewing and his company was called Ozzy Oil.
  • In the song "Live Television", the Senegalese singer Youssou N'Dour describes how during a visit to a friend's house he was left alone in the living room waiting for dinner while his hosts all packed in a small room to watch the show on television.
  • On George Strait's debut album "Strait Country" (1981), in the song "Friday Night Fever" the lyrics are: "I love the sound of a jukebox playing, so I sit here while she's staying home, watching Dallas on TV."

Opening title sequence

"Who Shot J.R.?"

  • The "Who Shot J.R.?" episode entered into American popular culture, with t-shirts printed with such references as "Who shot J.R.?" and "I Shot J.R.!" becoming common throughout the summer of 1980. The cliffhanger was also referenced in the The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air episode "As the Will Turns"; when Will was trying to get fired from a television show via a ridiculous monologue that incorporated elements from numerous TV shows, he says that he's "the guy who shot J.R." (as well as the sheriff).
  • Charlene Tilton hosted an episode of Saturday Night Live (which Larry Hagman had turned down) centered around the "shooting" of Charles Rocket, in which Rocket says, "I'd like to know who the fuck did it." For his use of the profanity, he was fired.
  • During a scene in The Wedding Singer, Frank Sivero, who plays Andy, refuses to leave the living room and says, "Hang on! I'm watching Dallas! I think J.R. might be dead or something! They shot him!"
  • During the mania surrounding "Who Shot J.R.?", Happy Days aired an episode in which the Fonz (Henry Winkler) was shot in the behind. Three different versions of the incident come forward, with the one told by Roger (Ted McGinley) being the most accurate. Fonzie, Chachi (Scott Baio), Roger and Potsie (Anson Williams) have gone camping. Fonzie and Chachi are at odds with Roger and Potsie trying to restore order. When Potsie intervenes, Fonzie tells him to mind his own business and shoves him hard enough that he hits the mantelpiece above the fireplace. This dislodges a mounted rifle, which discharges upon hitting the floor. Thus, the shooting is determined to have been an accident.
  • The Jeffersons also had a Dallas parody through a script written by Florence, the maid. The cast was George as G.R. Jenkins, Louise as Lou Weezy Jenkins, Helen as Ellen Wallis, Tom as Tim Wallis, Lionel as Leon Jenkins, and Jenny as Jannice Wallis Jenkins. There is even a scene in which G.R. is shot but fakes his coma to draw out the assailant—Florence as Flossie.
  • In the Irish sitcom Father Ted, one of the locals (Tom) on Craggy Island constantly wears a shirt that reads "I Shot J.R." and quotes repeatedly to the local Priest, "I killed a man Father".
  • The Simpsons episode "Who Shot Mr. Burns?" parodies "Who shot J.R.?" A deleted scene in "Bart vs. Australia" also includes a reference when one of the courtmembers shouts, "Don't tell us who shot J.R.!" whilst covering his ears.

Season 8 (the "Dream Season")

  • In the Family Guy episode "Da Boom" (1999), the Y2K virus changes civilization for the worse. In a parody of "Blast from the Past" episode climax, Victoria Principal and Patrick Duffy reprise their roles in a live-action segment at the end of the episode, when Pam wakes up and tells Bobby, who is in the shower, that she just dreamt about the strangest episode of Family Guy. Bobby pauses, then asks, "What's Family Guy?"
  • Introducing Saturday Night Live's 1986–1987 season, Madonna, who hosted the first episode of the dismally rated 1985–1986 season, read a statement from NBC that claimed the previous season of SNL was "all a dream, a horrible, horrible dream."
  • During the episode of Night Court entitled "Her Honor: Part 2", Judge Harold T. Stone is removed from the bench. Christine Sullivan, the Public Defender, tries to persuade him to fight for his job, he retorts with: "Like What? Like it turns out I'm on Dallas and I've been dreaming all of this!?" (Source: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0660650/quotes)
  • The show Reno 911! sometimes references Dallas by having a character dream some event that happened on a previous episode, notably at the end of the season.
  • The final episode of Newhart revealed the entire series was Bob Hartley's (the character that Bob Newhart played on The Bob Newhart Show) dream.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Poniewozik, James (2007). "The 100 Best TV Shows of All-TIME". Time. Time.com. Retrieved March 4, 2010.
  2. ^ "TV's Top 100 Episodes of All Time" TV Guide; June 15, 2009; Pages 34–49
  3. ^ Dallas Season 12 DVD at Amazon.com
  4. ^ Dallas Season 12 UK confirmation at Ultimate Dallas
  5. ^ Dallas Season 13 TvShowsOn.com
  6. ^ Dallas Season 13 Play.com
  7. ^ Dallas Season 14 Expected Release Date at TVShowsOnDVD
  8. ^ a b Dallas Reunion Movies Expected Release Date at TVShowsOnDVD
  9. ^ Barnes, Brooks. "Who Reshot J.R.? ‘Dallas’ Remake Is Planned" The New York Times; October 8, 2009
  10. ^ "J.R.'s Hat". National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved June 25, 2008.
  11. ^ YouTube – NHL All-Star Game – CBC Intro

External links

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