Ken kercheval actor dallas 1976
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Dallas Actors Who Have Died: A Toss Guide
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Ken Kercheval, J.R. Archrival Cliff Barnes on ‘Dallas,’ Dies at 83
Ken Kercheval, the stage-bred actor who portrayed Cliff Barnes, the oil tycoon who was repeatedly bested by Larry Hagman‘s J.R. Ewing, on the long-running CBS primetime soap opera Dallas, has died. He was 83.
A spokeswoman at the Frist Funeral Home in the actor’s hometown of Clinton, Indiana, confirmed his death in a brief conversation Wednesday with The Hollywood Reporter but would not divulge any details. His talent agent, Jeff Fisher, also confirmed the news. Messages left for two of Kercheval’s children were not immediately returned.
The Daily Clintonian newspaper reported that he died Sunday evening.
In the 1960s, Kercheval appeared in the original Broadway productions of Mike Nichols’ The Apple Tree and Harold Prince’s Cabaret after distinguishing himself as the young college professor (George Segal’s role in the movie) in a national touring production of Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
Kercheval also played one of the unorthodox cops who battles crime in New York City in the Roy Scheider-starring The Seven-Ups (1973) and showed up in other films like Pretty Poison (1968), the
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'Dallas' actor Kercheval dies at 83
LOS ANGELES — Ken Kercheval, who played perennial punching bag Cliff Barnes to Larry Hagman's scheming oil baron J.R. Ewing on the hit TV series “Dallas,” has died. He was 83.
Kercheval died Sunday in the city of Clinton in his native Indiana, said Jeff Fisher, his agent. The cause of death was being kept private by family, Fisher said Wednesday.
He was in “Dallas” for its full run, from 1978 to 1991, and returned as oilman Cliff opposite Hagman for a revival of the prime-time drama that aired from 2012-14.
He expressed fondness for his beleaguered character, also part of two TV '90s movies, in a 2012 interview with a “Dallas” fan website, The Dallas Decoder.
Cliff was a nice guy, but with brother-in-law J.R.'s constant battering he had to defend himself, Kercheval said. "If I did something that wasn't quite right, it's because I had to," he added.
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Kercheval's big-screen credits included "Pretty Poison" (1968), "The Seven-Ups" in 1973 and "Network" in 1976.
He made frequent guest appearances on TV series, stretching from "The Defenders" to "ER." His last online credit is for the film "Surviving in L.A."