Dallas (1978 TV series, season 11)
The eleventh season of the television series Dallas aired on CBS during the 1987–88 TV season.
Dallas | |
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Season 11 | |
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Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 30 |
Release | |
Original network | CBS |
Original release | September 25, 1987 – May 13, 1988 |
Season chronology | |
Cast
Starring
In alphabetical order:
- Barbara Bel Geddes as Miss Ellie Ewing Farlow (30 episodes)
- Patrick Duffy as Bobby Ewing (30 episodes)
- Linda Gray as Sue Ellen Ewing (30 episodes)
- Larry Hagman as J.R. Ewing (30 episodes)
- Steve Kanaly as Ray Krebbs (30 episodes)
- Howard Keel as Clayton Farlow (30 episodes)
- Ken Kercheval as Cliff Barnes (30 episodes)
- Priscilla Beaulieu Presley as Jenna Wade Krebbs (27 episodes)
Also Starring
- Jack Scalia as Nicholas Pearce (28 episodes)
- Sheree J. Wilson as April Stevens (28 episodes)
- Andrew Stevens as Casey Denault (26 episodes)
- Leigh Taylor-Young as Kimberly Cryder (19 episodes)
- Bert Remsen as Harrison "Dandy" Dandridge (10 episodes)
- Karen Kopins as Kay Lloyd (9 episodes)
- William Smithers as Jeremy Wendell (4 episodes)
- Morgan Brittany as Katherine Wentworth (2 episodes)
- Charlene Tilton as Lucy Ewing Cooper (2 episodes)
Special Guest Stars
- Annabel Schofield as Laurel Ellis (11 episodes)
- John Anderson as Dr. Herbert Styles (7 episodes)
- Howard Duff as Senator Henry Harrison O'Dell (2 episodes)
Notable guest stars
Minor recurring actors Deborah Marie Taylor (Oil Baron's Club waitress Debbie) and Linda Gray's daughter Kehly Sloane (Sue Ellen's secretary Kelly) join the cast. Amy Stoch (Lisa Alden) appears in a major story-arc, but won't appear in later seasons.
Also - future series star Kimberly Foster, who will portray Michelle Stevens for the final two seasons of the show, makes a minor appearance as an unnamed character in one episode.
A young Brad Pitt appears as a co-star in four episodes of the series playing the role of Randy, the boyfriend of Jenna's daughter Charlie.
Crew
Unlike previous two seasons, season eleven doesn't bring any major changes among the production team. Executive producer Leonard Katzman remains, as do producer David Paulsen, associate producer Cliff Fenneman, story editor Mitchell Wayne Katzman and story consultant Leah Markus. Arthur Bernard Lewis, who departed at the end of season 8, returns to his former position as supervising producer.
Most of the season's writers are as per the previous season: showrunner Leonard Katzman, David Paulsen, Mitchell Wayne Katzman, Leah Markus and Louella Lee Caraway are joined by the returning Arthur Bernard Lewis.
DVD release
The eleventh season of Dallas' was released by Warner Bros. Home Video, on a Region 1 DVD box set of three double-sided DVDs, on April 21, 2009. Like the other DVD sets of the show's last five seasons, it does not include any extras.[1]
Episodes
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
252 | 1 | "After the Fall: Ewing Rise" | Leonard Katzman | Arthur Bernard Lewis | September 25, 1987 |
253 | 2 | "After the Fall: Digger Redux" | Michael Preece | David Paulsen | September 25, 1987 |
254 | 3 | "The Son Also Rises" | Leonard Katzman | Leah Markus | October 2, 1987 |
255 | 4 | "Gone with the Wind" | Michael Preece | Mitchell Wayne Katzman | October 9, 1987 |
256 | 5 | "The Lady Vanishes" | Leonard Katzman | Leonard Katzman | October 16, 1987 |
257 | 6 | "Tough Love" | Michael Preece | Arthur Bernard Lewis | October 23, 1987 |
258 | 7 | "Last Tango in Dallas" | Jerry Jameson | David Paulsen | October 30, 1987 |
259 | 8 | "Mummy's Revenge" | Michael Preece | Mitchell Wayne Katzman | November 6, 1987 |
260 | 9 | "Hustling" | Jerry Jameson | Leah Markus | November 13, 1987 |
261 | 10 | "Bedtime Stories" | Michael Preece | Leonard Katzman | November 20, 1987 |
262 | 11 | "Lovers and Other Liars" | Jerry Jameson | Arthur Bernard Lewis | November 27, 1987 |
263 | 12 | "Brothers and Sons" | Michael Preece | David Paulsen | December 4, 1987 |
264 | 13 | "Brother, Can You Spare a Child?" | Patrick Duffy | Leah Markus | December 11, 1987 |
265 | 14 | "Daddy's Little Darlin" | Larry Hagman | Mitchell Wayne Katzman | December 18, 1987 |
266 | 15 | "It's Me Again" | Leonard Katzman | Leonard Katzman | January 8, 1988 |
267 | 16 | "Marriage on the Rocks" | Larry Hagman | Arthur Bernard Lewis | January 15, 1988 |
268 | 17 | "Anniversary Waltz" | David Paulsen | David Paulsen | January 22, 1988 |
269 | 18 | "Brotherly Love" | Linda Gray | Leah Markus | February 5, 1988 |
270 | 19 | "The Best Laid Plans" | Patrick Duffy | Mitchell Wayne Katzman | February 12, 1988 |
271 | 20 | "Farlow's Follies" | Steve Kanaly | Louella Lee Caraway | February 19, 1988 |
272 | 21 | "Malice in Dallas" | Larry Hagman | Arthur Bernard Lewis | February 26, 1988 |
273 | 22 | "Crime Story" | Patrick Duffy | David Paulsen | March 4, 1988 |
274 | 23 | "To Have and to Hold" | Larry Hagman | Leah Markus | March 11, 1988 |
275 | 24 | "Dead Reckoning" | David Paulsen | Mitchell Wayne Katzman | March 18, 1988 |
276 | 25 | "Never Say Never" | Cliff Fenneman | Leonard Katzman | April 1, 1988 |
277 | 26 | "Last of the Good Guys" | Michael Preece | Arthur Bernard Lewis | April 8, 1988 |
278 | 27 | "Top Gun" | Michael Preece | David Paulsen | April 15, 1988 |
279 | 28 | "Pillow Talk" | Dwight Adair | Leah Markus | April 29, 1988 |
280 | 29 | "Things Ain't Goin' Too Good at Southfork, Again" | Linda Gray | Mitchell Wayne Katzman | May 6, 1988 |
281 | 30 | "The Fat Lady Singeth" | Leonard Katzman | Leonard Katzman | May 13, 1988 (US) June 29, 1988 (UK) |
References
- TVshowsonDVD.com: Dallas Season 11 Archived 2011-09-16 at the Wayback Machine
General references
- "Dallas Episodes on CBS". TV Guide. Retrieved July 4, 2012.
- "Dallas - Episode Guide". MSN TV. Archived from the original on October 3, 2012. Retrieved July 4, 2012.
External links
- List of Dallas episodes at TV.com