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Larry Hagman

Larry Martin Hagman (September 21, 1931 – November 23, 2012) was an American film and television actor, director, and producer, best known for playing ruthless oil baron J. R. Ewing in the 1978–1991 primetime television soap opera, Dallas, and the befuddled astronaut Major Anthony Nelson in the 1965–1970 sitcom I Dream of Jeannie. Hagman had supporting roles in numerous films, including Fail-Safe, Harry and Tonto, S.O.B., Nixon, and Primary Colors. His television appearances also included guest roles on dozens of shows spanning from the late 1950s until his death, and a reprise of his signature role on the 2012 revival of Dallas. Hagman also worked as a television producer and director. He was the son of actress Mary Martin. Hagman underwent a life-saving liver transplant in 1995. He died on November 23, 2012, from complications of acute myeloid leukemia.[1][2]

Larry Hagman
Hagman in 1973
Born
Larry Martin Hagman

(1931-09-21)September 21, 1931
DiedNovember 23, 2012(2012-11-23) (aged 81)
Dallas, Texas, U.S.
EducationBard College, New York (withdrawn)
Occupation(s)Actor, director, producer
Years active1950–2012
Known for
Spouse
Maj Axelsson
(m. 1954)
Children2
Parent
Military career
Allegiance United States
Service/branch United States Air Force
Years of service1952–1956
Rank Airman 1st Class
UnitAllied Forces Central Europe (AFCENT)
Battles/warsKorean War
Websitelarryhagman.com

Early life

Hagman was born on September 21, 1931, in Fort Worth, Texas.[3] His mother, Mary Martin, became a Broadway actress and musical comedy star after his birth. His father, Benjamin Jackson Hagman, who was of Swedish descent, was an accountant and lawyer who worked as a district attorney.[4][5][6] Hagman's parents divorced in 1936 when he was five years old. He lived with his maternal grandmother, Juanita Presley Martin, in Texas and California, while his mother became a contract player with Paramount in 1938. In 1940, Hagman's mother met and married Richard Halliday before giving birth to a daughter, Heller, the following year.[7] Hagman attended a strict academy, Black-Foxe Military Institute and briefly Woodstock Country School, a boarding school in Vermont.[8]

When his mother moved to New York City to resume her Broadway career, Hagman again lived with his grandmother in California.[9] A few years later, his grandmother died, so Hagman joined his mother in New York City. In 1946, Hagman moved back to his hometown of Weatherford, and attended Weatherford High School, from which he graduated. One summer, he worked for oilfield-equipment maker Antelope Tool Company. Although his father wanted Hagman to become a lawyer and join his practice,[9] he was drawn to drama classes and reportedly fell in love with the stage. He graduated from high school in 1949, and decided to pursue acting.[9] He attended Bard College, New York, majoring in dance and drama, but dropped out after one year.[10]

Career

Hagman began his career in 1950 acting in productions at Margaret Webster's school at the Woodstock Playhouse in Woodstock, New York.[11] That summer, during a break from his one year at Bard College, he worked in Dallas as a production assistant and acting in small roles in Margo Jones's theater company. He appeared in The Taming of the Shrew in New York City, followed by numerous tent show musicals with St. John Terrell's Music Circus in St. Petersburg, Florida and Lambertville, New Jersey. In 1951, Hagman appeared in the London production of South Pacific with his mother and stayed in the show for nearly a year. In 1952, Hagman received his draft notice and enlisted in the United States Air Force.[12]

Stationed in London, he spent the majority of his military service entertaining U.S. troops in the United Kingdom and at bases in Europe.[13] After leaving the Air Force in 1956, Hagman returned to New York City, where he appeared in the off-Broadway play Once Around the Block, by William Saroyan. That was followed by nearly a year in another off-Broadway play, James Lee's Career. His Broadway debut occurred in 1958 in Comes a Day. Hagman appeared in four other Broadway plays, God and Kate Murphy, The Nervous Set, The Warm Peninsula and The Beauty Part.[14] During this period, he also appeared in numerous, mostly live, television programs.

Hagman's first television role was as Kenneth Davidson in the 1957 episode "Saturday Lost" of the syndicated crime drama, Decoy, starring Beverly Garland as the first female police officer in a television lead. In 1958, he joined Barbara Bain as a guest star in the short-lived adventure-drama series Harbormaster and appeared three times on Lloyd Bridges' syndicated adventure series, Sea Hunt. In 1960, he was cast in the CBS summer medical series Diagnosis: Unknown in the role of Don Harding in the episode, "The Case of the Radiant Wine". In 1961, Hagman joined the cast of daytime soap opera The Edge of Night as Ed Gibson and stayed in that role for two years. In 1963 and 1964, he appeared twice in segments of the CBS legal drama, The Defenders[15]

In 1964, he made his film debut in Ensign Pulver, which featured a young Jack Nicholson. That same year, he also appeared in Fail-Safe, with Henry Fonda.

I Dream of Jeannie

 
Hagman and Barbara Eden on
I Dream of Jeannie (1965)

In 1965, Hagman was cast as "genie" Barbara Eden's master and eventual love interest, Air Force Captain (later Major) Anthony Nelson, in the NBC situation comedy I Dream of Jeannie, which ran for five seasons from 1965 to 1970.[16] The show entered the top 30 in its first year and was NBC's answer to the successful 1960s magical comedies, Bewitched on ABC and My Favorite Martian on CBS. Two reunion movies were later made, both televised on NBC: I Dream of Jeannie... Fifteen Years Later (1985) and I Still Dream of Jeannie (1991), but Hagman did not appear in either of them. At Dragon Con, in 2010, Hagman said he was never approached about it.[17]

In 1999, after 29 years, Hagman agreed to reunite with Jeannie co-stars Barbara Eden and Bill Daily and creator/producer Sidney Sheldon on The Donny and Marie Show. In 2002, when I Dream of Jeannie was set to join the cable channel TV Land, Hagman once again took part in a reunion with Eden and Daily, this time on Larry King Live. On the TV Land Awards in March 2004, Hagman and Eden were the first presenters to reunite on stage. The following October, Hagman and Daily appeared at the Ray Courts Hollywood Autograph Show. And the following year, 2005, brought all three surviving stars from I Dream of Jeannie to the first cast reunion at the Chiller Expo Show.[18]

Hagman and Eden reunited in March 2006 for a publicity tour in New York City to promote the first-season DVD of I Dream of Jeannie. He reunited once again with Eden on stage in the play Love Letters at the College of Staten Island in New York and the United States Military Academy, West Point, New York. The appearance marked the first time the two performers had acted together since Eden appeared with Hagman in a five-episode arc on Dallas in 1990.[19][20]

Dallas

In 1978, Hagman was offered two roles on two television series that were debuting. One was for The Waverly Wonders and the other for Dallas, in the role of conniving elder son and businessman J.R. Ewing. When Hagman read the Dallas script at his wife's suggestion, they both concluded it was perfect for him. Hagman based his portrayal in part on Jess Hall Jr., the owner of Antelope Tool and Supply Company, where Hagman had worked as a young man.[9]

Dallas became a worldwide success, airing in 90 countries, most notably the United Kingdom,[21] where it was enjoyed even by members of the country's royal family,[22] and led to several successful primetime spin-offs.[23] Hagman became one of the best-known television stars of the era. Producers were keen to capitalize on that love/hate family relationship of J.R., building anticipation to a fever pitch in "A House Divided", the 1980 cliffhanger season finale in which J.R. is shot by an unknown assailant, leading to the world-wide "Who shot J.R.?" phenomenon.[24]

At the beginning of the fourth season[25] later that year, audience and actors were trying to guess "Who shot J.R.?", now one of fictional TV's most famous questions. During the media buildup, Hagman was involved in contract negotiations, delaying his return in the fourth season. Holding out for a higher salary, Hagman did not appear in the first episode of the show until the final few minutes. Producers were faced with a dilemma of whether to pay the greatly increased salary or to write J.R. out of the program. Lorimar Productions, the makers of the series, began shooting different scenes of Dallas that did not include Hagman. In the midst of negotiations, Hagman took his family to London for their July vacation.[9] He continued to fight for his demands and network executives conceded that they wanted J.R. to remain on Dallas. From then on, Hagman became one of the highest-paid stars in television. At the beginning of the 1980–81 season, writers were told to keep the storylines away from the actors until they really found out who actually shot J.R. and three weeks passed until the culprit was revealed on November 21, 1980, in a ratings record-breaking episode.

For his performance as J.R. Ewing, Hagman was nominated for two Emmy Awards for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series in 1980 and 1981, but did not win. He was also nominated for four Golden Globe Awards, between 1981 and 1985. He was nominated for a Soap Opera Digest award seven times for Outstanding Villain on a Prime Time Serial, Outstanding Actor in a Leading Role on a Prime Time Serial, Favorite Super Couple: Prime Time and Outstanding Actor in a Comic Relief Role on a Prime Time Serial and won five times. Hagman received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement from Academy member Ray Lee Hunt at the 1981 Achievement Summit in Dallas.[26] In 1984, co-star Barbara Bel Geddes left Dallas, following a contract dispute that had resulted from her March 1983 quadruple heart bypass surgery. At one point, Hagman suggested to his real-life mother Mary Martin that she play Miss Ellie, but she rejected the suggestion and Bel Geddes was briefly replaced by Donna Reed for the 1984–1985 season, before Bel Geddes returned in better health for the 1985–1986 season. By the end of its 14th season in 1991, ratings had slipped to the extent that CBS decided to end Dallas. Hagman was the only actor to appear in all 357 episodes. He had also made five guest appearances on the Dallas spin-off series Knots Landing in the early 1980s. Some years after Dallas ended, Hagman appeared in two subsequent Dallas television movies: J.R. Returns in 1996 and War of the Ewings in 1998.

Hagman reprised his role as J.R. Ewing in TNT's continuation of Dallas, which began in 2012.[27][28] In 2011, while filming the new series, Hagman said, "Of course it's fun to play the villain."[29] As a result of Hagman's death in 2012, his character J.R. was killed off in season two of Dallas. Unused footage of Hagman was used in season three as part of the season's story arc, which aired in 2014.

Other work

Television

 
TV series Here We Go Again (1973): From top: Dick Gautier, Nita Talbot, Hagman and Diane Baker

Hagman starred in two short-lived series in the 1970s, The Good Life (1971–1972) and Here We Go Again (1973). In 1993, Hagman starred in Staying Afloat as a down-on-his-luck former millionaire who agrees to work undercover with the FBI to maintain his playboy lifestyle.[30] Originally ordered for two TV movies and a weekly series by NBC, the pilot movie aired in November 1993 to critical drubbing and low ratings, ending production.[31][32]

In January 1997, Hagman starred in a short-lived television series titled Orleans as Judge Luther Charbonnet, which lasted only eight episodes. In 2002, he made an appearance in the fourth series of Vic Reeves and Bob Mortimer's British comedy panel game, Shooting Stars, often appearing bewildered at the nonsensical questions and the antics of the hosts - during the show Hagman even stated that he would fire his agent as a result. In January 2011, Hagman made a guest appearance in the seventh season of Desperate Housewives as a new husband for Lynette Scavo's mother, Stella (played by Polly Bergen).

He also directed episodes of I Dream of Jeannie and The Good Life, as well as several episodes of Dallas and In the Heat of the Night, which was the only series he directed, but in which he did not act.[citation needed]

Film

Hagman appeared in such feature films as The Group, Fail-Safe, Harry and Tonto, Mother, Jugs & Speed, In Harm's Way, The Eagle Has Landed, Superman, S.O.B., Nixon and Primary Colors. His television work included Getting Away from It All, Sidekicks, The Return of the World's Greatest Detective, Intimate Strangers, Checkered Flag or Crash and A Howling in the Woods

Hagman also directed (and appeared briefly in) a low-budget comedy and horror film in 1972 called Beware! The Blob, also called Son of Blob, a sequel to the classic 1958 horror film The Blob. This was the only feature film he directed.[citation needed]

Music

The release of a Columbia single performed with his mother Mary Martin, Get Out Those Old Records, in 1950, was credited to Mary Martin and her Son Larry, with orchestration by Mitch Miller. It was released in Australia as a-78 rpm single, catalogue number DO-3409.

In 1980, Hagman recorded a single called "Ballad of the Good Luck Charm".[33][34]

Product spokesman

During the 1980s, Hagman was featured in a national televised Schlitz beer campaign, playing on, but not explicitly featuring, the J.R. character. He wore the same kind of Western business outfit – complete with cowboy hat – that he wore in his role. The end of each 30-second spot featured a male voice-over saying, "Refreshing Schlitz beer...the gusto's back..." Hagman, grinning into the camera, added: "...and I'm gonna get it!" He also made commercials for BVD brand underwear.

In 2010, Hagman was hired as a spokesman for SolarWorld, a German solar energy commercial enterprise. While the SolarWorld commercials specifically mention neither Dallas nor J. R. Ewing, Hagman essentially revisits the character (complete with a picture of Hagman as J. R. Ewing from the original series on the mantle), stating that his oil company days are long over, "though still in the energy business", meaning solar energy, instead,[35] which alternative energy now plays a major part of the next-generation Ewing family war between Christopher and John Ross III.

Personal life

 
Hagman with Maj Axelsson in 1983
 
Hagman in August 2011

In 1973, his stepfather Richard Halliday died and Hagman reconciled with his mother, Mary Martin, soon after. The two were close until her death from colon cancer in 1990.

In 1954, Hagman married Swedish-born Maj Axelsson[9] (born May 13, 1928, in Eskilstuna, Södermanlands län, Sweden – died May 31, 2016, in Los Angeles, California); they had two children, Heidi Kristina (born 1958) and Preston (born 1962). Longtime residents of Malibu, California, they then moved to Ojai. Hagman was a member of the Peace and Freedom Party from the 1960s.[36] Hagman derided U.S. President George W. Bush prior to the Iraq War.

In 1969, Hagman's friend, musician David Crosby, supplied him with LSD after a concert:[37] "LSD was such a profound experience in my life that it changed my pattern of life and my way of thinking and I could not exclude it [from my autobiography]."[38] Hagman was introduced to marijuana by Jack Nicholson as a safer alternative to Hagman's heavy drinking. "I liked it because it was fun, it made me feel good and I never had a hangover."[9] Although Hagman was a member of a 12-step program, he publicly advocated marijuana as a better alternative to alcohol.

In 1995, Hagman underwent a life-saving liver transplant after he was diagnosed with liver cancer, which was most likely brought on by roughly 40 years of heavy drinking.[39][40] His clinical picture was further complicated by cirrhosis of the liver, which had been diagnosed three years earlier in 1992. Hagman did not receive preferential treatment as a celebrity, with a 1995 UPI article stating that the donor liver "matched Hagman's anonymous physical profile listed with the United Network for Organ Sharing."[39]

He was also a heavy smoker as a young man before quitting at age 34.[41] He was the chairman of the American Cancer Society's annual Great American Smokeout for many years and also worked on behalf of the National Kidney Foundation.[12]

After attending a soccer game in Bucharest between FC Steaua București and West Ham United, he became a well-known fan of the Romanian team.[42][43][44]

In 2001, Hagman wrote his autobiography titled Hello Darlin': Tall (and Absolutely True) Tales About My Life.[12] In a 2007 interview, Hagman discussed his support for alternative energy.[45] On a 2008 episode of Living With Ed, Hagman and his wife showed actor Ed Begley Jr. their solar-powered, super-energy efficient home named "Heaven" and talked about their green lifestyle.[46] Maj Hagman was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in 2008 and Hagman at first took the lead in caring for her, but her condition deteriorated. By 2010, she required 24-hour nursing care. As a result, Hagman put their 43-acre estate in Ojai up for sale listing it at $11 million.[9][40]

Friendship with Carroll O'Connor

Hagman had a long friendship with actor Carroll O'Connor, beginning in 1959 when Hagman was starring in the Broadway play God and Kate Murphy and O'Connor was working as an assistant stage manager.[citation needed] Later, as the two struggled as young actors, they rented apartments near each other in New York. Over the years, they had much in common. O'Connor renegotiated his contract over his salary on All in the Family in 1974, causing him to miss two episodes and Hagman did the same during his tenure with Dallas, with similar results. Hagman's daughter Heidi, whom O'Connor had known since her childhood, joined the cast for one season of Archie Bunker's Place. Hagman directed several episodes of O'Connor's later series In the Heat of the Night. They both endured serious health issues: O'Connor underwent heart bypass surgery and Hagman received a liver transplant. The two remained close after the death of O'Connor's son Hugh and Hagman delivered a eulogy at the funeral.

Illness and death

In June 2011, Hagman said he had stage 2 throat cancer.[9] He commented, "As J. R. I could get away with anything — bribery, blackmail and adultery, but I got caught by cancer. I do want everyone to know that it is a very common and treatable form of cancer. I will be receiving treatment while working on the new Dallas series. I could not think of a better place to be than working on a show I love, with people I love."[47][48] Hagman had an acorn-sized tumor removed from his tongue in 2011. In June 2012, the cancer was said to be in remission.[9] Then, in July 2012, doctors diagnosed Hagman with myelodysplastic syndrome (formerly known as preleukemia).

Hagman died on November 23, 2012, at Medical City Dallas Hospital in Dallas following complications from acute myeloid leukemia, after being interviewed for the National Geographic documentary, The '80s: The Decade that Made Us, which aired in April 2013.[49] In a statement to the Dallas Morning News, Hagman's family said: "Larry's family and close friends had joined him in Dallas for the Thanksgiving holiday. He died surrounded by loved ones. It was a peaceful passing, just as he had wished for."[29][50] The New York Times described him as "one of television's most beloved villains".[51]

Tributes

Actress Barbara Eden, a longtime friend of Hagman's, who played Jeannie on I Dream of Jeannie and Lee Ann de la Vega on Dallas, said: "Larry was one of the most intelligent actors I ever worked with. He more than hit his marks. And when you're working with another actor, you know immediately if the ball isn't tossed back. Plus, Larry was savvy about the business, which I wasn't."[52] In an interview with Australia's News 10, she commented that their on-screen chemistry on the set of Jeannie "was not work" and "our timing was right. I can't even explain it. It was wonderful."[53]

Actress Linda Gray, who played Sue Ellen Ewing on Dallas, called Hagman her "best friend for 35 years" and was at his bedside when he died, her agent told the BBC. In a statement, she said: "He was the Pied Piper of life and brought joy to everyone he knew. He was creative, generous, funny, loving and talented and I will miss him enormously. He was an original and lived life to the fullest."[54][55]

Actor Patrick Duffy, who played Bobby Ewing on Dallas, was also at his bedside when he died. In a statement, he said: "Friday, I lost one of the greatest friends ever to grace my life. The loneliness is only what is difficult, as Larry’s peace and comfort is always what is important to me, now as when he was here. He was a fighter in the gentlest way, against his obstacles and for his friends. I wear his friendship with honor."[56][57]

TV and filmography

Stage

References

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  25. ^ Season four going by DVD listings - prior to the DVD releases, the first five episodes of Dallas were a part of what was called "the miniseries" rather than being season one. Therefore, the season four DVD was originally season three.
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This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Larry Hagman news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Larry Martin Hagman September 21 1931 November 23 2012 was an American film and television actor director and producer best known for playing ruthless oil baron J R Ewing in the 1978 1991 primetime television soap opera Dallas and the befuddled astronaut Major Anthony Nelson in the 1965 1970 sitcom I Dream of Jeannie Hagman had supporting roles in numerous films including Fail Safe Harry and Tonto S O B Nixon and Primary Colors His television appearances also included guest roles on dozens of shows spanning from the late 1950s until his death and a reprise of his signature role on the 2012 revival of Dallas Hagman also worked as a television producer and director He was the son of actress Mary Martin Hagman underwent a life saving liver transplant in 1995 He died on November 23 2012 from complications of acute myeloid leukemia 1 2 Larry HagmanHagman in 1973BornLarry Martin Hagman 1931 09 21 September 21 1931Fort Worth Texas U S DiedNovember 23 2012 2012 11 23 aged 81 Dallas Texas U S EducationBard College New York withdrawn Occupation s Actor director producerYears active1950 2012Known forI Dream of Jeannie 1965 1970 Dallas 1978 1991 Dallas 2012 2013 SpouseMaj Axelsson m 1954 wbr Children2ParentMary Martin mother Military careerAllegiance United StatesService wbr branchUnited States Air ForceYears of service1952 1956RankAirman 1st ClassUnitAllied Forces Central Europe AFCENT Battles warsKorean WarWebsitelarryhagman wbr com Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 I Dream of Jeannie 4 Dallas 5 Other work 5 1 Television 5 2 Film 5 3 Music 5 4 Product spokesman 6 Personal life 7 Friendship with Carroll O Connor 8 Illness and death 9 Tributes 10 TV and filmography 11 Stage 12 References 13 External linksEarly life EditHagman was born on September 21 1931 in Fort Worth Texas 3 His mother Mary Martin became a Broadway actress and musical comedy star after his birth His father Benjamin Jackson Hagman who was of Swedish descent was an accountant and lawyer who worked as a district attorney 4 5 6 Hagman s parents divorced in 1936 when he was five years old He lived with his maternal grandmother Juanita Presley Martin in Texas and California while his mother became a contract player with Paramount in 1938 In 1940 Hagman s mother met and married Richard Halliday before giving birth to a daughter Heller the following year 7 Hagman attended a strict academy Black Foxe Military Institute and briefly Woodstock Country School a boarding school in Vermont 8 When his mother moved to New York City to resume her Broadway career Hagman again lived with his grandmother in California 9 A few years later his grandmother died so Hagman joined his mother in New York City In 1946 Hagman moved back to his hometown of Weatherford and attended Weatherford High School from which he graduated One summer he worked for oilfield equipment maker Antelope Tool Company Although his father wanted Hagman to become a lawyer and join his practice 9 he was drawn to drama classes and reportedly fell in love with the stage He graduated from high school in 1949 and decided to pursue acting 9 He attended Bard College New York majoring in dance and drama but dropped out after one year 10 Career EditHagman began his career in 1950 acting in productions at Margaret Webster s school at the Woodstock Playhouse in Woodstock New York 11 That summer during a break from his one year at Bard College he worked in Dallas as a production assistant and acting in small roles in Margo Jones s theater company He appeared in The Taming of the Shrew in New York City followed by numerous tent show musicals with St John Terrell s Music Circus in St Petersburg Florida and Lambertville New Jersey In 1951 Hagman appeared in the London production of South Pacific with his mother and stayed in the show for nearly a year In 1952 Hagman received his draft notice and enlisted in the United States Air Force 12 Stationed in London he spent the majority of his military service entertaining U S troops in the United Kingdom and at bases in Europe 13 After leaving the Air Force in 1956 Hagman returned to New York City where he appeared in the off Broadway play Once Around the Block by William Saroyan That was followed by nearly a year in another off Broadway play James Lee s Career His Broadway debut occurred in 1958 in Comes a Day Hagman appeared in four other Broadway plays God and Kate Murphy The Nervous Set The Warm Peninsula and The Beauty Part 14 During this period he also appeared in numerous mostly live television programs Hagman s first television role was as Kenneth Davidson in the 1957 episode Saturday Lost of the syndicated crime drama Decoy starring Beverly Garland as the first female police officer in a television lead In 1958 he joined Barbara Bain as a guest star in the short lived adventure drama series Harbormaster and appeared three times on Lloyd Bridges syndicated adventure series Sea Hunt In 1960 he was cast in the CBS summer medical series Diagnosis Unknown in the role of Don Harding in the episode The Case of the Radiant Wine In 1961 Hagman joined the cast of daytime soap opera The Edge of Night as Ed Gibson and stayed in that role for two years In 1963 and 1964 he appeared twice in segments of the CBS legal drama The Defenders 15 In 1964 he made his film debut in Ensign Pulver which featured a young Jack Nicholson That same year he also appeared in Fail Safe with Henry Fonda I Dream of Jeannie Edit Hagman and Barbara Eden onI Dream of Jeannie 1965 In 1965 Hagman was cast as genie Barbara Eden s master and eventual love interest Air Force Captain later Major Anthony Nelson in the NBC situation comedy I Dream of Jeannie which ran for five seasons from 1965 to 1970 16 The show entered the top 30 in its first year and was NBC s answer to the successful 1960s magical comedies Bewitched on ABC and My Favorite Martian on CBS Two reunion movies were later made both televised on NBC I Dream of Jeannie Fifteen Years Later 1985 and I Still Dream of Jeannie 1991 but Hagman did not appear in either of them At Dragon Con in 2010 Hagman said he was never approached about it 17 In 1999 after 29 years Hagman agreed to reunite with Jeannie co stars Barbara Eden and Bill Daily and creator producer Sidney Sheldon on The Donny and Marie Show In 2002 when I Dream of Jeannie was set to join the cable channel TV Land Hagman once again took part in a reunion with Eden and Daily this time on Larry King Live On the TV Land Awards in March 2004 Hagman and Eden were the first presenters to reunite on stage The following October Hagman and Daily appeared at the Ray Courts Hollywood Autograph Show And the following year 2005 brought all three surviving stars from I Dream of Jeannie to the first cast reunion at the Chiller Expo Show 18 Hagman and Eden reunited in March 2006 for a publicity tour in New York City to promote the first season DVD of I Dream of Jeannie He reunited once again with Eden on stage in the play Love Letters at the College of Staten Island in New York and the United States Military Academy West Point New York The appearance marked the first time the two performers had acted together since Eden appeared with Hagman in a five episode arc on Dallas in 1990 19 20 Dallas EditIn 1978 Hagman was offered two roles on two television series that were debuting One was for The Waverly Wonders and the other for Dallas in the role of conniving elder son and businessman J R Ewing When Hagman read the Dallas script at his wife s suggestion they both concluded it was perfect for him Hagman based his portrayal in part on Jess Hall Jr the owner of Antelope Tool and Supply Company where Hagman had worked as a young man 9 Dallas became a worldwide success airing in 90 countries most notably the United Kingdom 21 where it was enjoyed even by members of the country s royal family 22 and led to several successful primetime spin offs 23 Hagman became one of the best known television stars of the era Producers were keen to capitalize on that love hate family relationship of J R building anticipation to a fever pitch in A House Divided the 1980 cliffhanger season finale in which J R is shot by an unknown assailant leading to the world wide Who shot J R phenomenon 24 At the beginning of the fourth season 25 later that year audience and actors were trying to guess Who shot J R now one of fictional TV s most famous questions During the media buildup Hagman was involved in contract negotiations delaying his return in the fourth season Holding out for a higher salary Hagman did not appear in the first episode of the show until the final few minutes Producers were faced with a dilemma of whether to pay the greatly increased salary or to write J R out of the program Lorimar Productions the makers of the series began shooting different scenes of Dallas that did not include Hagman In the midst of negotiations Hagman took his family to London for their July vacation 9 He continued to fight for his demands and network executives conceded that they wanted J R to remain on Dallas From then on Hagman became one of the highest paid stars in television At the beginning of the 1980 81 season writers were told to keep the storylines away from the actors until they really found out who actually shot J R and three weeks passed until the culprit was revealed on November 21 1980 in a ratings record breaking episode For his performance as J R Ewing Hagman was nominated for two Emmy Awards for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series in 1980 and 1981 but did not win He was also nominated for four Golden Globe Awards between 1981 and 1985 He was nominated for a Soap Opera Digest award seven times for Outstanding Villain on a Prime Time Serial Outstanding Actor in a Leading Role on a Prime Time Serial Favorite Super Couple Prime Time and Outstanding Actor in a Comic Relief Role on a Prime Time Serial and won five times Hagman received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement from Academy member Ray Lee Hunt at the 1981 Achievement Summit in Dallas 26 In 1984 co star Barbara Bel Geddes left Dallas following a contract dispute that had resulted from her March 1983 quadruple heart bypass surgery At one point Hagman suggested to his real life mother Mary Martin that she play Miss Ellie but she rejected the suggestion and Bel Geddes was briefly replaced by Donna Reed for the 1984 1985 season before Bel Geddes returned in better health for the 1985 1986 season By the end of its 14th season in 1991 ratings had slipped to the extent that CBS decided to end Dallas Hagman was the only actor to appear in all 357 episodes He had also made five guest appearances on the Dallas spin off series Knots Landing in the early 1980s Some years after Dallas ended Hagman appeared in two subsequent Dallas television movies J R Returns in 1996 and War of the Ewings in 1998 Hagman reprised his role as J R Ewing in TNT s continuation of Dallas which began in 2012 27 28 In 2011 while filming the new series Hagman said Of course it s fun to play the villain 29 As a result of Hagman s death in 2012 his character J R was killed off in season two of Dallas Unused footage of Hagman was used in season three as part of the season s story arc which aired in 2014 Other work EditTelevision Edit TV series Here We Go Again 1973 From top Dick Gautier Nita Talbot Hagman and Diane Baker Hagman starred in two short lived series in the 1970s The Good Life 1971 1972 and Here We Go Again 1973 In 1993 Hagman starred in Staying Afloat as a down on his luck former millionaire who agrees to work undercover with the FBI to maintain his playboy lifestyle 30 Originally ordered for two TV movies and a weekly series by NBC the pilot movie aired in November 1993 to critical drubbing and low ratings ending production 31 32 In January 1997 Hagman starred in a short lived television series titled Orleans as Judge Luther Charbonnet which lasted only eight episodes In 2002 he made an appearance in the fourth series of Vic Reeves and Bob Mortimer s British comedy panel game Shooting Stars often appearing bewildered at the nonsensical questions and the antics of the hosts during the show Hagman even stated that he would fire his agent as a result In January 2011 Hagman made a guest appearance in the seventh season of Desperate Housewives as a new husband for Lynette Scavo s mother Stella played by Polly Bergen He also directed episodes of I Dream of Jeannie and The Good Life as well as several episodes of Dallas and In the Heat of the Night which was the only series he directed but in which he did not act citation needed Film Edit Hagman appeared in such feature films as The Group Fail Safe Harry and Tonto Mother Jugs amp Speed In Harm s Way The Eagle Has Landed Superman S O B Nixon and Primary Colors His television work included Getting Away from It All Sidekicks The Return of the World s Greatest Detective Intimate Strangers Checkered Flag or Crash and A Howling in the WoodsHagman also directed and appeared briefly in a low budget comedy and horror film in 1972 called Beware The Blob also called Son of Blob a sequel to the classic 1958 horror film The Blob This was the only feature film he directed citation needed Music Edit The release of a Columbia single performed with his mother Mary Martin Get Out Those Old Records in 1950 was credited to Mary Martin and her Son Larry with orchestration by Mitch Miller It was released in Australia as a 78 rpm single catalogue number DO 3409 In 1980 Hagman recorded a single called Ballad of the Good Luck Charm 33 34 Product spokesman Edit During the 1980s Hagman was featured in a national televised Schlitz beer campaign playing on but not explicitly featuring the J R character He wore the same kind of Western business outfit complete with cowboy hat that he wore in his role The end of each 30 second spot featured a male voice over saying Refreshing Schlitz beer the gusto s back Hagman grinning into the camera added and I m gonna get it He also made commercials for BVD brand underwear In 2010 Hagman was hired as a spokesman for SolarWorld a German solar energy commercial enterprise While the SolarWorld commercials specifically mention neither Dallas nor J R Ewing Hagman essentially revisits the character complete with a picture of Hagman as J R Ewing from the original series on the mantle stating that his oil company days are long over though still in the energy business meaning solar energy instead 35 which alternative energy now plays a major part of the next generation Ewing family war between Christopher and John Ross III Personal life Edit Hagman with Maj Axelsson in 1983 Hagman in August 2011 In 1973 his stepfather Richard Halliday died and Hagman reconciled with his mother Mary Martin soon after The two were close until her death from colon cancer in 1990 In 1954 Hagman married Swedish born Maj Axelsson 9 born May 13 1928 in Eskilstuna Sodermanlands lan Sweden died May 31 2016 in Los Angeles California they had two children Heidi Kristina born 1958 and Preston born 1962 Longtime residents of Malibu California they then moved to Ojai Hagman was a member of the Peace and Freedom Party from the 1960s 36 Hagman derided U S President George W Bush prior to the Iraq War In 1969 Hagman s friend musician David Crosby supplied him with LSD after a concert 37 LSD was such a profound experience in my life that it changed my pattern of life and my way of thinking and I could not exclude it from my autobiography 38 Hagman was introduced to marijuana by Jack Nicholson as a safer alternative to Hagman s heavy drinking I liked it because it was fun it made me feel good and I never had a hangover 9 Although Hagman was a member of a 12 step program he publicly advocated marijuana as a better alternative to alcohol In 1995 Hagman underwent a life saving liver transplant after he was diagnosed with liver cancer which was most likely brought on by roughly 40 years of heavy drinking 39 40 His clinical picture was further complicated by cirrhosis of the liver which had been diagnosed three years earlier in 1992 Hagman did not receive preferential treatment as a celebrity with a 1995 UPI article stating that the donor liver matched Hagman s anonymous physical profile listed with the United Network for Organ Sharing 39 He was also a heavy smoker as a young man before quitting at age 34 41 He was the chairman of the American Cancer Society s annual Great American Smokeout for many years and also worked on behalf of the National Kidney Foundation 12 After attending a soccer game in Bucharest between FC Steaua București and West Ham United he became a well known fan of the Romanian team 42 43 44 In 2001 Hagman wrote his autobiography titled Hello Darlin Tall and Absolutely True Tales About My Life 12 In a 2007 interview Hagman discussed his support for alternative energy 45 On a 2008 episode of Living With Ed Hagman and his wife showed actor Ed Begley Jr their solar powered super energy efficient home named Heaven and talked about their green lifestyle 46 Maj Hagman was diagnosed with Alzheimer s disease in 2008 and Hagman at first took the lead in caring for her but her condition deteriorated By 2010 she required 24 hour nursing care As a result Hagman put their 43 acre estate in Ojai up for sale listing it at 11 million 9 40 Friendship with Carroll O Connor EditHagman had a long friendship with actor Carroll O Connor beginning in 1959 when Hagman was starring in the Broadway play God and Kate Murphy and O Connor was working as an assistant stage manager citation needed Later as the two struggled as young actors they rented apartments near each other in New York Over the years they had much in common O Connor renegotiated his contract over his salary on All in the Family in 1974 causing him to miss two episodes and Hagman did the same during his tenure with Dallas with similar results Hagman s daughter Heidi whom O Connor had known since her childhood joined the cast for one season of Archie Bunker s Place Hagman directed several episodes of O Connor s later series In the Heat of the Night They both endured serious health issues O Connor underwent heart bypass surgery and Hagman received a liver transplant The two remained close after the death of O Connor s son Hugh and Hagman delivered a eulogy at the funeral Illness and death EditIn June 2011 Hagman said he had stage 2 throat cancer 9 He commented As J R I could get away with anything bribery blackmail and adultery but I got caught by cancer I do want everyone to know that it is a very common and treatable form of cancer I will be receiving treatment while working on the new Dallas series I could not think of a better place to be than working on a show I love with people I love 47 48 Hagman had an acorn sized tumor removed from his tongue in 2011 In June 2012 the cancer was said to be in remission 9 Then in July 2012 doctors diagnosed Hagman with myelodysplastic syndrome formerly known as preleukemia Hagman died on November 23 2012 at Medical City Dallas Hospital in Dallas following complications from acute myeloid leukemia after being interviewed for the National Geographic documentary The 80s The Decade that Made Us which aired in April 2013 49 In a statement to the Dallas Morning News Hagman s family said Larry s family and close friends had joined him in Dallas for the Thanksgiving holiday He died surrounded by loved ones It was a peaceful passing just as he had wished for 29 50 The New York Times described him as one of television s most beloved villains 51 Tributes EditActress Barbara Eden a longtime friend of Hagman s who played Jeannie on I Dream of Jeannie and Lee Ann de la Vega on Dallas said Larry was one of the most intelligent actors I ever worked with He more than hit his marks And when you re working with another actor you know immediately if the ball isn t tossed back Plus Larry was savvy about the business which I wasn t 52 In an interview with Australia s News 10 she commented that their on screen chemistry on the set of Jeannie was not work and our timing was right I can t even explain it It was wonderful 53 Actress Linda Gray who played Sue Ellen Ewing on Dallas called Hagman her best friend for 35 years and was at his bedside when he died her agent told the BBC In a statement she said He was the Pied Piper of life and brought joy to everyone he knew He was creative generous funny loving and talented and I will miss him enormously He was an original and lived life to the fullest 54 55 Actor Patrick Duffy who played Bobby Ewing on Dallas was also at his bedside when he died In a statement he said Friday I lost one of the greatest friends ever to grace my life The loneliness is only what is difficult as Larry s peace and comfort is always what is important to me now as when he was here He was a fighter in the gentlest way against his obstacles and for his friends I wear his friendship with honor 56 57 TV and filmography EditSearch for Tomorrow 1951 TV series 1957 as Curt Williams The Edge of Night 1956 TV series as Ed Gibson The West Point Story 1956 TV series Miscredited Decoy 1957 TV series as Kenneth Davidson The Outcasts of Poker Flat 1958 TV film Sea Hunt 1958 1959 TV series Once Around the Block 1960 The Play of the Week as Officer Joe Smith The Silver Burro 1963 TV film The Cavern 1964 as Capt Wilson Ensign Pulver 1964 as Billings Fail Safe 1964 as Buck The Rogues 1964 TV series In Harm s Way 1965 as Lieutenant Cline I Dream of Jeannie 1965 1970 TV series as Major Anthony Nelson Various characters The Group 1966 as Harald Peterson Three s a Crowd 1969 TV film as Jim Carson Up in the Cellar 1970 as Maurice Camber Night Gallery 1970 TV series as Cedric Acton segment The Housekeeper Vanished 1971 TV film as Jerry Freytag The Hired Hand 1971 TV film as Sheriff uncredited A Howling in the Woods 1971 TV film as Eddie Crocker The Good Life 1971 TV series as Albert Miller Getting Away from It All 1972 TV film as Fred Clark Beware The Blob 1972 as Young Hobo directorial debut No Place to Run 1972 TV film as Jay Fox Applause 1973 TV as Bill Sampson Here We Go Again 1973 TV series as Richard Evans The Toy Game 1973 as Major The Alpha Caper 1973 TV as Tudor Blood Sport 1973 TV as Coach Marshall What Are Best Friends For 1973 TV film as Frank Ross Antonio 1973 as Mark Hunter Sidekicks 1974 TV film as Quince Drew Harry and Tonto 1974 as Eddie Hurricane 1974 TV film as Paul Damon Stardust 1974 as Porter Lee Austin Sarah T Portrait of a Teenage Alcoholic 1975 TV film as Jerry Travis Police Woman 1974 TV Series Series 1 Episode 4 as Tony Bonner The Big Rip Off 1975 TV film as Frank Darnell Ellery Queen The Adventure of the Mad Tea Party 1975 TV series one episode as Paul Gardner Mother Jugs amp Speed 1976 as Murdoch The Return of the World s Greatest Detective 1976 TV film as Sherman Holmes The Big Bus 1976 as Parking Lot Doctor The Eagle Has Landed 1976 as Col Clarence E Pitts The Rhinemann Exchange 1977 TV miniseries as Col Edmund Pace Checkered Flag or Crash 1977 as Bo Cochran Intimate Strangers 1977 TV film as Mort Burns The Rockford Files 1977 TV series one episode as Richard Lessing The President s Mistress 1978 TV film as Ed Murphy Last of the Good Guys 1978 TV film as Sergeant Frank O Malley Superman 1978 as Major A Double Life 1978 TV film as Doyle Rettig Dallas 1978 1991 TV series as J R Ewing Knots Landing 1980 1982 TV series as J R Ewing S O B 1981 as Dick Benson I Am Blushing 1981 as Larry Hagman Deadly Encounter 1982 TV film as Sam Dallas The Early Years 1986 TV film as J R Ewing Lone Star 1986 TV documentary The Richest Cat in the World 1986 as Leo Kohlmeyer voice uncredited The Simpsons 1989 TV series one episode 2006 as Wallace Brady Ein Schloss am Worthersee 1992 1993 1994 German TV series as Himself Staying Afloat 1993 TV film as Alexander Hollingsworth III Nixon 1995 as Jack Jones Dallas J R Returns 1996 TV film as J R Ewing Orleans 1997 TV series as Judge Luther Charbonnet The Third Twin 1997 TV film as Berrington Jones Primary Colors 1998 as Gov Fred Picker Dallas War of the Ewings 1998 TV film as J R Ewing Dallas Reunion The Return to Southfork 2004 TV special as Himself J R Ewing Nip Tuck 2006 TV series as Burt Landau Lindenstrasse 2006 German soap opera as Himself Fuel 2008 as Himself Somos complices 2009 Spanish soap opera as Richard Slater Desperate Housewives 2010 TV series as Frank Kaminsky Das Traumschiff 2010 German TV Series as Larry Hagman The Flight of the Swan 2011 as Corporate President Ushi and the Family 2011 Dutch TV Series as Hairy Legman Dallas 2012 2013 TV series as J R Ewing I Get That a Lot 2013 released posthumously Stage EditSouth Pacific 1950 London The Taming of the Shrew 1951 Broadway Comes a Day 1958 Broadway God and Kate Murphy 1958 Broadway The Nervous Set 1959 Broadway The Warm Peninsula 1959 Broadway The Beauty Part 1962 Broadway Love Letters 2005 2006 tourReferences Edit Larry Hagman s manager shares details of actor s final days KENS5 com Archived from the original on November 30 2012 Retrieved November 28 2012 Larry Hagman Delayed Potentially Life Saving Cancer Treatment To Film Dallas radaronline com November 27 2012 Retrieved November 27 2012 Actor Larry Hagman dies at Dallas hospital Fort Worth Star Telegram November 23 2012 Retrieved November 25 2012 Larry Hagman s Southern Roots Genealogymagazine com Archived from the original on March 3 2017 Retrieved November 24 2012 Martin Mary 1976 My Heart Belongs Morrow p 34 ISBN 0688030092 Holt Georgia Quinn Phyllis Russell Sue 1988 Star mothers the moms behind the celebrities Simon amp Schuster ISBN 9780671645106 VitalSearch California USA California State Vital Records www vitalsearch ca com Retrieved November 9 2020 Kaufman David 2016 Some Enchanted Evenings The Glittering Life and Times of Mary Martin St Martin s Press p 78 ISBN 9781250031754 a b c d e f g h i j Hurt Harry III June 2012 Larry Hagman s Curtain Call Texas Monthly Archived from the original on January 5 2013 Retrieved November 26 2012 Obituary The Daily Telegraph November 25 2012 Archived from the original on January 12 2022 Retrieved April 7 2019 Kilgallen Dorothy May 3 1950 VOICE OF BROADWAY Mansfield News Journal Mansfield OH a b c Hagman Larry Gold Todd November 6 2001 Hello Darlin Tall and Absolutely True Tales About My Life 1st ed Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0743221818 Hagman Larry Martin A1C Togetherweserved com Retrieved April 7 2019 Larry Hagman Internet Broadway Database Retrieved November 26 2012 Larry Hagman IMDb Retrieved March 9 2013 CNN Chelsea J Carter and Greg Botelho November 24 2012 Larry Hagman the man behind iconic villain J R Ewing dies CNN Digital a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help Jeannie 2 Dragon Con Atlanta GA 9 05 10 retrieved November 23 2021 Lalino Andy November 7 13 2005 Chiller Thriller Oddservations Vol 6 No 45 Nolan s Pop Culture Review Retrieved November 26 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint location link Pierce Scott D July 2 1990 BARBARA EDEN IS JOINING DALLAS CAST Deseret News Retrieved November 26 2012 Righi Len June 22 2006 State Theatre lets genie out of the bottle for 2006 2007 season Morning Call Lehigh PA Archived from the original on October 18 2015 Retrieved November 26 2012 bfi Features Britain s Most Watched TV 1980s November 22 2005 Archived from the original on November 22 2005 Retrieved May 16 2021 Dallas Star Larry Hagman Recalled When the Queen Mother Asked Him to Reveal Who Shot J R Showbiz Cheat Sheet November 17 2020 Retrieved May 16 2021 14 Big Facts About Dallas www mentalfloss com May 3 2016 Retrieved May 16 2021 Richard Corliss The Dallas Shot That Was Heard Round the World Television Three hundred million viewers found out Who Shot J R 10 years ago this week on the soap opera that embodied the 80s Los Angeles Times November 23 1990 Season four going by DVD listings prior to the DVD releases the first five episodes of Dallas were a part of what was called the miniseries rather than being season one Therefore the season four DVD was originally season three Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement www achievement org American Academy of Achievement Hagman Signs Dallas Remake Deal Contactmusic com February 2 2011 Retrieved November 24 2012 Dallas Tnt tv Archived from the original on April 2 2012 Retrieved November 24 2012 a b Memmott Carol November 24 2012 Larry Hagman dead at 81 USA Today Retrieved November 24 2012 Wilker Deborah September 17 1993 Hagman quiet about new series Staying Afloat The Telegraph Herald p 19D Retrieved November 28 2012 Voorhees John November 25 1993 Hagman s Staying Afloat Is In Danger Of Sinking The Seattle Times Retrieved November 28 2012 Heldenfels R D July 29 1993 Larry Hagman Staying Afloat with Carroll O Connor s help The Daily Gazette p C12 Retrieved November 28 2012 LARRY HAGMAN l Official Site www larryhagman com Larry Hagman Ballad Of The Good Luck Charm My Favorite Sins Discogs Woody Todd July 13 2010 Is That J R Ewing Pushing Solar Energy The New York Times Massey David November 21 1980 Larry Hagman biography Ultimatedallas com Retrieved November 24 2012 Rush George October 18 2001 J R s Acid Trip Down Memory Lane New York Daily News Archived from the original on April 4 2010 Retrieved January 12 2011 Interview with Larry Hagman Star of Dallas and I Dream of Jeannie Maps org Retrieved January 12 2011 a b Larry Hagman undergoes liver transplant UPI archives United Press International Aug 23 1995 a b Heller Corinne June 13 2012 Larry Hagman 80 talks Dallas reboot J R Ewing and cancer battle On The Red Carpet Archived from the original on March 14 2014 Retrieved December 4 2012 New Chance at Life People Retrieved November 9 2020 A debutat pe Ghencea la o victorie istorică Primul meci de fotbal văzut de celebrul JR a fost Steaua West Ham 2 0 in Romanian Gazeta Sporturilor November 26 2012 Retrieved August 25 2013 West Ham Reports 1999 2000 sportinglife com Retrieved August 25 2013 Steve Lomas wants his St Johnstone players to experience the fun of European competition Daily Record April 27 2012 Retrieved August 25 2013 TV s J R goes green Video msn com Archived from the original on July 20 2010 Retrieved January 12 2011 Team Planet Green September 15 2008 Living with Ed Episode Living With Larry Hagman Planet Green Discovery Channel Retrieved December 4 2012 Dallas Star Larry Hagman Announces He Has Cancer Very Common amp Treatable Form OK October 14 2011 Archived from the original on October 15 2011 Retrieved October 14 2011 Larry Hagman diagnosed with cancer Daily Express October 15 2011 Retrieved December 4 2012 One of TV s best ever Larry Hagman mirror co uk November 24 2012 Retrieved November 24 2012 Peppard Alan November 23 2012 Actor Larry Hagman notorious as Dallas villain J R Ewing dies Dallas Morning News Archived from the original on May 28 2014 Retrieved November 24 2012 Nemy Enid Carter Bill Santora Marc November 25 2012 Larry Hagman Who Played J R Ewing in Dallas Dies at 81 The New York Times Retrieved November 24 2012 Linda Gray s Final Deathbed Conversation With Larry Hagman Hollywood Reporter www hollywoodreporter com November 28 2012 Retrieved November 9 2020 Nolasco Stephanie March 26 2019 I Dream of Jeannie star Barbara Eden recalls on screen chemistry with Larry Hagman It was wonderful Fox News Retrieved November 9 2020 Batty David November 24 2012 Larry Hagman Dallas JR Ewing dies aged 81 The Guardian UK Retrieved November 24 2012 Larry Hagman dies at 81 Los Angeles Times November 24 2012 Retrieved November 26 2012 Hibberd James November 25 2012 Patrick Duffy s heartfelt reaction to Larry Hagman s death Entertainment Weekly Retrieved November 26 2012 Dallas Actor Larry Hagman dies aged 81 Daily Telegraph UK Archived from the original on January 12 2022 Retrieved November 26 2012 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Larry Hagman Official website Larry Hagman at AllMovie Larry Hagman at Legacy com Larry Hagman at the Internet Broadway Database Larry Hagman at the Internet Off Broadway Database Larry Hagman at IMDb Larry Hagman at the TCM Movie Database Larry Hagman at The Interviews An Oral History of Television Larry Hagman at Classic Television Showbiz Works by or about Larry Hagman in libraries WorldCat catalog Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Larry Hagman amp oldid 1144000556, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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