The Unforgettable Women of Dallas
In the 1980s, one prime-time soap didn’t just rule television — it owned it. Dallas swaggered onto the airwaves like a chauffeured limousine pulling up to Southfork Ranch and changed the TV game forever. Before the world started asking “Who shot J.R.?” there were no jaw-dropping cliffhangers, no season-long betrayals, and no must-watch drama stretching from episode to episode in prime time. That kind of obsession was reserved for daytime soaps. Without Dallas, there would be no Grey’s Anatomy, Gossip Girl, Game of Thrones, or Euphoria keeping you up way past bedtime.
Of course, J.R.’s scheming, backstabbing, bourbon-soaked bravado didn’t do it alone. The glamorous women of Dallas were just as essential to the show’s oil-soaked allure. Sue Ellen’s resilience, Pamela’s heart, Lucy’s wild streak, and Miss Ellie’s steel-spined Southern grace kept viewers glued to their TVs week after week — cocktail in hand, jaws on the floor. These women weren’t just arm candy at Southfork; they were power players in pearls, heels, and perfectly coiffed hair.
In honor of my in-depth conversation with actress Sheree J. Wilson, who brought the business-savvy, fierce, and endlessly charming April Stevens to life for five unforgettable seasons, on Hollywood Obsessed Podcast Episodes 153 & 154, I thought it was the perfect time to take a stroll back down the long driveway to Southfork Ranch. This is a loving look back at the fabulous ladies of Dallas — highlighting the good, the bad, and of course, the absolutely wicked things they did on one of the biggest television shows in the world.
Pour yourself a drink, settle in, and enjoy. And don’t be surprised if you find yourself obsessing about the entire series all over again when we’re done.
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THE OG EWING WOMEN
If Dallas was the crown jewel of prime-time television, then the Ewing women were the diamonds — glamorous, unbreakable, and often sharp enough to cut. From Southfork’s moral compass to its most scandalous siren, these women weren’t just living in J.R.’s shadow. They defined the drama, the heart, and the heat that kept America glued to their TVs every Friday night.
MISS ELLIE SOUTHWORTH EWING
The soul of Southfork Ranch itself, Miss Ellie was the beloved matriarch of the Ewing dynasty. Iconically portrayed by Barbara Bel Geddes (and briefly by Donna Reed), Miss Ellie embodied Southern grace, quiet strength, and unwavering integrity. She was the moral glue holding the family together, forever stepping in to referee the epic battles between her sons, J.R. and Bobby.
Miss Ellie was deeply tied to the land and to her Southworth roots, which made her especially close to her middle son, Gary — the “sensitive” Ewing who took after her side of the family. She famously bought Gary and Valene their home in Knots Landing after their second marriage, setting the stage for an entirely new saga. Widowed after the death of oil baron Jock Ewing in 1981, she later found love again with rancher Clayton Farlow in 1984.
Though Barbara Bel Geddes passed away before the 2012 Dallas revival, Miss Ellie’s presence was still felt as the enduring spirit of Southfork.
Fun Fact: Bel Geddes won a Primetime Emmy Award (1980) and a Golden Globe (1982) for her performance. After temporarily leaving the show for quadruple bypass heart surgery, she returned to grace the series for its final seasons — proving Miss Ellie was as tough as Texas itself.
SUE ELLEN SHEPARD EWING
No woman in television history suffered — or evolved — quite like Sue Ellen. Masterfully played by Linda Gray, Sue Ellen began as J.R. Ewing’s glamorous, long-suffering trophy wife and became one of the most complex female characters prime time had ever seen.
A former Miss Texas, Sue Ellen battled alcoholism, manipulation, betrayal, and heartbreak while trapped in a volatile marriage to television’s most notorious oil baron. Over time, Sue Ellen transformed from a “tortured victim” into a formidable power player, ultimately rising to become CEO of Ewing Oil — the ultimate act of poetic justice.
She is the mother of John Ross Ewing III and the older sister of Kristin Shepard (yes, that Kristin — the one who shot J.R.). Linda Gray’s performance earned widespread acclaim, including a Primetime Emmy nomination and two Golden Globe nominations, cementing Sue Ellen as a television icon.
PAMELA BARNES EWING
Portrayed by Victoria Principal, Pamela Barnes was the emotional heart of Dallas. As the daughter of Willard “Digger” Barnes — the Ewings’ sworn enemy — Pam’s secret marriage to Bobby Ewing ignited the legendary Barnes–Ewing feud and launched the series into orbit.
Pam was the show’s moral compass. Her story is forever linked to one of television’s most infamous twists: the “dream season.” After Bobby was killed off and ratings plummeted, his miraculous return revealed that the entire previous season had been a dream Pam had while asleep in bed.
Victoria Principal played Pam for nine seasons (1978–1987) before leaving the series. The character was ultimately written out following a horrific car accident involving an oil tanker, leaving Pam severely burned. Actress Margaret Michaels briefly took over the role in 1988 to write Pam out of the show. Principal declined to return for the 2012 reboot, preserving the tragic, romance of Bobby and Pam.
LUCY EWING COOPER
The wild child of Southfork, Lucy Ewing — portrayed by Charlene Tilton — was trouble in designer heels. The granddaughter of Jock and Miss Ellie, Lucy earned her reputation as the show’s scheming, scandal-loving “sexpot,” but her backstory added layers beneath the attitude.
Lucy was the eldest child of Gary Ewing and Valene Clements. With her father battling alcoholism and her parents’ marriage collapsing, she was raised at Southfork by her grandparents — surrounded by oil money, chaos, and zero supervision. Over the years, Lucy tried on many identities: beauty queen (Young Miss Dallas), waitress at The Hot Biscuit, model, and eventually an arts patron.
Her on-again, off-again romance with medical student Mitch Cooper led to two marriages — and two divorces. Charlene Tilton played Lucy throughout the original series (1978–1985, 1988–1990), appeared on Knots Landing, and returned for the TNT Dallas revival (2012–2014).
Listen to Tony’s interview with Charlene Tilton on Hollywood Obsessed Episodes 85 & 86 — HERE
VALENE CLEMENTS EWING
Often called “Poor Val,” Valene Clements Ewing — portrayed by Joan Van Ark — may have endured more heartbreak than anyone in the Ewing orbit. First introduced on Dallas as the long-suffering wife of Gary Ewing, Val’s journey truly flourished on the spin-off Knots Landing.
Married to Gary three times (1961, 1979, and 1991), Val struggled endlessly against J.R.’s cruelty, which once drove her off Southfork and stripped her of her daughter, Lucy, who was deemed worthy of being raised only by “true Ewings.” Thankfully, Bobby often stepped in as her protector and ally.
Across 13 seasons of Knots Landing, Val evolved from a wounded outsider into a successful author and deeply resilient woman. Joan Van Ark reprised the role in the 2013 Dallas revival episode aptly titled “Ewings Unite!”, bringing Val full circle back to her roots.
Listen to Tony’s interview with Joan Van Ark on Hollywood Obsessed Episodes 123 & 124 — HERE
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THE SECOND MRS. EWING WIVES CLUB
Marrying into the Ewing family was never for the faint of heart — and becoming a second Mrs. Ewing required nerves of steel and a killer wardrobe.
CALLY HARPER EWING
Portrayed by Cathy Podewell, Cally Harper arrived from Arkansas as a wide-eyed, small-town waitress — and before she could blink, she was standing at the altar in a shotgun wedding to none other than J.R. Ewing. What followed was a marriage fueled by manipulation, culture shock, and emotional whiplash, as Cally tried to survive life inside the Ewing lion’s den.
Despite their rocky beginnings, Cally eventually moved into Southfork Ranch, attempting to carve out a place for herself in a world where power ruled and innocence was a liability. Over time, she grew from naïve outsider into a more determined and self-aware woman, especially after becoming genuinely pregnant and giving birth to J.R.’s son — a development that complicated their already volatile marriage.
The union ultimately ended in divorce in 1991, but Cally’s story didn’t end there. She returned years later for J.R.’s funeral in the Dallas revival, a poignant reminder that once you’re an Ewing, you’re never truly gone.
APRIL STEVENS EWING
Few women entered Dallas with more confidence — or controversy — than April Stevens, brought to life by Sheree J. Wilson. Introduced in Season 10 (1986), April first appeared as the scheming ex-wife of Jack Ewing, arriving in Dallas determined to claim what she believed was her rightful piece of the Ewing fortune.
At first, April fit the classic Dallas mold of the glamorous femme fatale. But as the seasons unfolded, she evolved into one of the show’s most compelling and sympathetic heroines. Smart, ambitious, and unapologetically driven, April became a major shareholder in both Ewing Oil and WestStar Oil, owned her own company (April Oil Co.), and proved she could hold her own in the ruthless world of Texas oil.
She was also fiercely loyal to those she loved — especially her sister Michelle Stevens — and eventually found true happiness when she married Bobby Ewing in 1990, becoming his second wife after his epic romance with Pamela Barnes ended with a bang!
Tragically, April’s story came to a heartbreaking end in the final season (Season 14). While honeymooning with Bobby in Paris, she was shot by kidnappers and died in his arms — one of the most emotional scenes Dallas ever delivered. Sheree J. Wilson earned a Soap Opera Digest Award for Best Death Scene (1991) for the unforgettable performance.
To hear why April was written off the show — plus plenty of behind-the-scenes stories from the Dallas set — listen to Tony’s interview with Sheree J. Wilson on Hollywood Obsessed Episodes 153 & 154 — HERE
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EWING WOMEN OF THE TNT REBOOT
When Dallas thundered back onto television in 2012, it didn’t just revive old rivalries — it introduced a new generation of powerful women who carried the legacy of Southfork into the modern era.
ANN EWING (Brenda Strong)
Ann stepped into Southfork as Bobby Ewing’s third wife and quickly became the ranch’s emotional anchor. Graceful yet formidable, she embodied a modern-day Miss Ellie, blending compassion with quiet strength and fierce loyalty to her family. Before marrying Bobby, Ann was wed to ruthless transportation tycoon Harris Ryland, whose cruelty haunted her long after their marriage ended, including the kidnapping of their infant daughter, Emma — a trauma that lingered until mother and daughter were finally reunited. A devoted stepmother to Christopher Ewing and a trusted confidante of Sue Ellen, Ann served as a vital bridge between generations, proving that Southfork always needs a strong woman at its center. Fun fact: before landing the role of Ann, Brenda Strong appeared in the original Dallas in 1987 as an unnamed character memorably credited as “Cliff’s One-Night Stand.”
PAMELA REBECCA BARNES (Julie Gonzalo)
Pamela was born into rivalry as the daughter of Cliff Barnes and Afton Cooper, carrying the full weight of the Barnes–Ewing feud into the reboot. Introduced in 2012 under the alias Rebecca Sutter, she married Christopher Ewing as part of an elaborate scheme orchestrated by her father to infiltrate the Ewing empire — only to fall genuinely in love with him. When her true identity was exposed, betrayal and heartbreak followed, culminating in a devastating miscarriage caused by a rig explosion later revealed to have been engineered by Cliff himself. Shattered yet hardened, Pamela transformed from pawn to power player, ultimately aligning with and marrying John Ross Ewing III to seize control of Barnes Global and exact revenge on the man who had manipulated her life. Her name echoed deep Dallas history, honoring her aunt Pamela Barnes Ewing and grandmother Rebecca Barnes Wentworth. Fun fact: the character was previously portrayed by Jenna Pangburn in the original series and Deborah Kellner in Dallas: J.R. Returns.
ELENA RAMOS (Jordana Brewster)
The daughter of longtime Southfork cook Carmen Ramos, Elena grew up alongside Christopher and John Ross Ewing, but her ambitions extended far beyond ranch life. Armed with a master’s degree in energy resources, Elena became a brilliant resource engineer and key partner in Ewing Energies, bringing intelligence, innovation, and a moral compass to the modern oil business. Frequently torn between loyalty to the Ewings and her own ideals, she embodied the evolving themes of the reboot, while her turbulent love triangle with Christopher and John Ross proved that romance and rivalry at Southfork never go out of style. The players may have been younger, but the drama was every bit as fierce as in J.R. and Bobby’s day — and it’s a shame the reboot ended before these women’s stories could fully unfold.
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THE MISTRESSES
KRISTIN SHEPARD (Mary Crosby / Colleen Camp)
Beautiful, volatile, and dangerously unhinged, Kristin Shepard remains J.R. Ewing’s most catastrophic mistake. The scheming younger sister of Sue Ellen, Kristin seduced, manipulated, and ultimately changed television history forever as the woman who pulled the trigger in the legendary “Who Shot J.R.?” saga. To avoid prison, she revealed she was pregnant with J.R.’s child, forcing him into a deal that sent her fleeing Dallas. Her return in 1981 ended in tragedy when she was found dead in the Southfork swimming pool after falling from a balcony while under the influence of drugs. Her son, Christopher Ewing, was later adopted by Bobby and Pamela — though it was eventually revealed his biological father was Jeff Farraday, not J.R.
MANDY WINGER (Deborah Shelton)
Sultry, ambitious, and unapologetically self-serving, Mandy Winger was J.R.’s most persistent and provocative mistress. Equally comfortable in the boardroom and the bedroom, she entangled herself with both J.R. Ewing and Cliff Barnes, igniting rivalry, manipulation, and nonstop intrigue. Mandy frequently went head-to-head with Sue Ellen, proving she was far more than a disposable side piece. She ultimately exited Dallas in true Dallas fashion — with a Hollywood movie contract, conveniently orchestrated in part by Sue Ellen herself. Deborah Shelton later reprised the role in the TNT reboot episode “J.R.’s Masterpiece” (2013), returning to attend J.R. Ewing’s funeral.
JULIE GREY (Tina Louise)
Sophisticated, seductive, and lethal with information, Julie Grey was J.R. Ewing’s secretary-turned-mistress who played both sides of the oil war with chilling precision. Feeling undervalued by J.R., she leaked incriminating documents to Cliff Barnes, exposing the Ewings’ bribery of a state senator. Her involvement with Jock Ewing only deepened the danger — and soon after, Julie met a suspicious end, pushed from the roof of her apartment building, with Cliff framed for her murder. In Dallas, betrayal was deadly — and Julie paid the ultimate price.
KIMBERLY CRYDER (Leigh Taylor Young)
A wealthy vixen with a razor-sharp edge, Kimberly Cryder was the glamorous wife of Wilson Cryder, a key executive at WestStar Oil. J.R. seduced Kimberly as part of a calculated power play to seize control of WestStar — but emotions and egos quickly collided. When Kimberly demanded J.R. divorce Sue Ellen, the affair imploded, exposing J.R.’s true nature. Disillusioned and furious, Kimberly even considered teaming up with Sue Ellen for revenge. She remains forever iconic for her jaw-dropping entrance at Ewing Oil wearing nothing but a fur coat — a moment pure Dallas excess.
Listen to Tony’s interview with Leigh Taylor Young on Hollywood Obsessed Episodes 125 & 126 — HERE
SERENA WALD (Stephanie Blackmore)
Elegant, discreet, and famously known for making “the best little cup of coffee in Dallas,” Serena Wald was far more than she appeared. A high-end call girl and trusted associate of J.R. Ewing, Serena was one of his go-to “setup queens,” expertly used to manipulate business rivals, extract secrets, and grease the wheels of power. In J.R.’s world, information was currency — and Serena knew exactly how to collect it.
VANESSA BEAUMONT (Gayle Hunnicutt)
Worldly, refined, and undeniably dangerous, Vanessa Beaumont was an English aristocrat — and one of J.R. Ewing’s great unfinished romances. Their affair in the late 1960s resurfaced decades later when Vanessa returned to Dallas, revealing a stunning secret: she had borne J.R. a son he never knew existed, James Richard Beaumont (Sasha Mitchell). Her return reignited old passions, briefly turning Vanessa into J.R.’s fiancée and adding yet another heir to the ever-growing Ewing legacy.
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OIL BUSINESS QUEENS
MARILEE STONE (Fern Fitzgerald)
Shrewd, seductive, and impeccably strategic, Marilee Stone was a formidable oil cartel power player who thrived in the ruthless world of Texas oil. After the death of her husband, she took control of Stonehurst Oil, becoming a recurring thorn in J.R. Ewing’s side and proving that calculated restraint could be just as dangerous as outright aggression.
HOLLY HARWOOD (Lois Chiles)
Sophisticated and fiercely intelligent, Holly Harwood was one of the few businesswomen who could match the Ewings move for move. Both a corporate rival and romantic interest to J.R. and Bobby Ewing, Holly navigated high-stakes oil deals and complicated emotions with equal precision, blurring the line between love and leverage.
LEE ANN DE LA VEGA (Barbara Eden)
Wealthy, glamorous, and driven by vengeance, Lee Ann De La Vega arrived in Dallas with unfinished business and a carefully plotted plan to destroy J.R. Ewing. A sharp businesswoman who briefly bought Ewing Oil, she executed her revenge through family secrets, calculated seduction, and strategic humiliation — before exiting town on her own terms.
LESLIE STEWART (Susan Flannery)
Cool, polished, and quietly dangerous, Leslie Stewart was the public relations consultant hired to clean up J.R. Ewing’s tarnished image — only to become deeply entangled in the Ewing family’s web of ambition and betrayal. Brilliant at her job but underestimated at her peril, Leslie ultimately left J.R. with something he rarely experienced: regret.
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ALLIES
DONNA CULVER KREBBS (Susan Howard)
Sophisticated, wealthy, and fiercely intelligent, Donna Culver Krebbs was a political powerhouse in the Ewing orbit. A lobbyist, businesswoman, and author, she first entered Dallas society as the much younger wife of former Texas Governor Sam Culver, before finding real love with Ray Krebbs, Southfork’s foreman and Jock Ewing’s illegitimate son. Their marriage was often strained by class differences and Ray’s feelings of inferiority to Donna’s success, ultimately ending in divorce. Donna later married Senator Andrew Dowling and relocated to Washington, D.C., but remained forever tied to Southfork through her daughter Margaret Krebbs, born after her split from Ray.
JENNA WADE (Priscilla Presley / Francine Tacker / Morgan Fairchild)
Jenna Wade was Bobby Ewing’s first love, and one of the most enduring romantic figures in his life. The daughter of oilman Lucas Wade, she shared decades of unfinished business with Bobby, marked by passion, heartbreak, and missed timing. A devoted mother to Charlotte “Charlie” Wade and Lucas Wade-Krebbs, Jenna ultimately closed one chapter of her life by marrying Ray Krebbs in 1987 — proving that in Dallas, love rarely follows a straight line.
TRACEY LAWTON (Beth Toussaint / Melinda Clarke)
Street-smart and guarded, Tracey Lawton entered Bobby Ewing’s life from the most unexpected place — a pool hall, where she revealed herself to be a skilled pool shark. The estranged daughter of Ewing rival Carter McKay, and sister to troubled Tommy McKay, Tracey’s romance with Bobby was overshadowed by family chaos and violence. Her story took a darker turn in the TNT reboot, when Bobby sought her out only to uncover devastating cartel secrets and the tragic death of her nephew, Hunter.
SLY LOVEGREN (Deborah Rennard)
Sharp, loyal, and unflinchingly competent, Sly Lovegren was J.R. Ewing’s long-serving secretary and one of his most trusted confidantes at Ewing Oil. Deeply embedded in his schemes, Sly proved indispensable — until rival Cliff Barnes discovered her brother was in prison and blackmailed her into spying. Torn between loyalty and survival, Sly remained one of the most human figures in J.R.’s world and returned years later in Dallas: J.R. Returns.
CONNIE BRASHER (Donna Bullock)
Quietly devoted and endlessly capable, Connie Brasher was Bobby Ewing’s trusted secretary and emotional counterweight to the chaos of Ewing Oil. Known for her loyalty and meticulous preparation of oil contracts, Connie harbored unspoken romantic feelings for Bobby — a classic Dallas case of love expressed through loyalty rather than words.
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VILLAINS
PATRICIA SHEPARD (Martha Scott)
Elegant, calculating, and relentlessly meddlesome, Patricia Shepard was the scheming mother of Sue Ellen Ewing and Kristin Shepard, and a constant source of emotional manipulation at Southfork Ranch. Often hovering over Sue Ellen’s marriage to J.R., she pushed her daughters toward wealth and status, earning a reputation as the ultimate society “gold digger by proxy” — always angling for Ewing money and influence.
KATHERINE WENTWORTH (Morgan Brittany)
One of Dallas’ most infamous villainesses, Katherine Wentworth was the ambitious, unhinged half-sister of Pamela Ewing and Cliff Barnes, and a relentless obsession in Bobby Ewing’s life. A wealthy heiress with a talent for manipulation, she schemed endlessly to steal Bobby from Pam — even attempting murder to get him. Her actions triggered the show’s legendary “dream season,” cementing Katherine as a master of chaos and one of the series’ most unforgettable antagonists.
HILLARY TAYLOR (Susan Lucci)
Under the alias Sheila Foley, Hillary Taylor arrived as a full-blown force of madness and malice. A psychotic villainess with a vendetta against the Ewings, she orchestrated the kidnapping of April Stevens Ewing during her honeymoon in Paris — a terrifying plot that ended in April’s tragic death during a violent shootout. Hillary’s reign of terror remains one of the darkest chapters in Dallas history.
ANGELICA NERO (Barbara Carrera)
Seductive, brilliant, and utterly ruthless, Angelica Nero was an international shipping magnate whose power rivaled that of the Ewings themselves. Operating largely in the shadows during the infamous “dream season,” she manipulated J.R. with precision until her ambition spiraled into catastrophe. Her storyline ended with imprisonment after she planted a bomb that accidentally killed Jamie Ewing, proving even global empires crumble when vengeance overtakes reason.
MICHELLE STEVENS (Kimberly Foster)
Cold, cunning, and relentlessly ambitious, Michelle Stevens was the volatile younger sister of April Stevens and a dangerous presence in the Ewing orbit. Through seduction, marriage, and ruthless strategy, she secured partial control of Ewing Oil, entangling herself with Bobby Ewing, J.R. Ewing, James Beaumont, and even Cliff Barnes. After tracking down and killing the woman responsible for April’s death, Michelle served a brief jail sentence before J.R. bailed her out in exchange for corporate power — after which she divorced Cliff and disappeared from Dallas for good.
JUDITH BROWN RYLAND (Judith Light)
A formidable and ice-cold strategist, Judith Brown Ryland emerged as one of the most chilling antagonists of the TNT reboot. The controlling matriarch of the Ryland empire and mother of Harris Ryland, she waged corporate and personal war against the Ewings in her quest to dominate Ryland Transport. Her feud with Ann Ewing escalated to shocking extremes, including the orchestration of Emma’s kidnapping — proving that some villains are at their most dangerous when they wear a smile.
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THE BARNES WOMEN
AFTON COOPER (Audrey Landers)
Sultry, savvy, and endlessly adaptable, Afton Cooper arrived in Dallas as a lounge singer and quickly found herself entangled in the Ewing–Barnes war. Initially J.R. Ewing’s mistress, she later crossed enemy lines to become romantically involved with Cliff Barnes, ultimately giving birth to their daughter, Pamela Rebecca Barnes. Introduced during her brother Mitch Cooper’s wedding to Lucy Ewing, Afton proved she could survive — and thrive — in Dallas’ cutthroat social scene. Audrey Landers reprised the role in Dallas: J.R. Returns (1996) and the TNT reboot (2012–2014), cementing Afton’s place in Dallas history.
REBECCA BARNES WENTWORTH (Priscilla Pointer)
Mysterious, wealthy, and shrouded in secrets, Rebecca Barnes Wentworth cast a long shadow over the Barnes family legacy. Once romantically involved with Digger Barnes, she later married Herbert Wentworth and was presumed dead after a plane crash — a lie that shaped decades of betrayal. The estranged mother of Pamela Barnes Ewing and Cliff Barnes, as well as Katherine Wentworth, Rebecca’s hidden survival and divided loyalties proved that in Dallas, even death could be strategic.
JAMIE EWING BARNES (Jenilee Harrison)
Bright, determined, and unknowingly explosive to the Ewing dynasty, Jamie Ewing Barnes arrived with documents that threatened to rewrite the ownership of Ewing Oil itself. The daughter of Jason Ewing and cousin to J.R. and Bobby, Jamie became the centerpiece of a fierce legal battle suggesting the company should be equally divided between Jock Ewing, Jason Ewing, and Digger Barnes. She eventually married Cliff Barnes — a union that began as strategy but evolved into genuine affection before unraveling. Jamie holds the rare distinction of being killed off twice, thanks to the infamous “dream season,” making her one of Dallas’ most tragically memorable figures.
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Some of the facts shared in this post were sourced from IMDb and Wikipedia.
And if you’re craving even more Dallas magic, be sure to listen to my fun, informative, and unforgettable podcast conversation with Sheree J. Wilson on Hollywood Obsessed Episodes 153 & 154. Sheree opens up about her five seasons portraying the bold, brilliant April Stevens Ewing, sharing incredible behind-the-scenes stories, heartfelt memories, and what it was really like working on one of television’s most iconic series.
It’s a conversation packed with heart, history, and classic TV magic — one Dallas fans absolutely won’t want to miss.
Listen to the full interview on the Hollywood Obsessed Podcast below:
Episode 153 — HERE
Episode 154 — HERE