She rose to fame on Dallas, take a moment to prepare yourself for her appearance today at 84

Linda Gray became a household name thanks to her role as Sue Ellen Ewing on the beloved soap opera Dallas. Over the course of more than 300 episodes, she not only showcased her incredible talent but also faced numerous personal challenges along the way. Today, at 84 years old, Gray continues to shine.

Throughout the history of film and television, we have witnessed remarkable performances by countless actors. Some portrayals resonate so deeply that it’s hard to imagine anyone else in the role. For instance, who could envision Little House on the Prairie without Michael Landon as Charles Ingalls or Mary Poppins without Dick Van Dyke as Bert? Similarly, Linda Gray’s portrayal of Sue Ellen is irreplaceable, and fans of the show are grateful she was cast in such a pivotal role.

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Gray’s life has been nothing short of extraordinary, resembling a roller coaster filled with ups and downs. She has confronted life-threatening illnesses, addiction, and a challenging marriage. Despite these adversities, she has always emerged stronger, committed to making the most of her life and career.

Starring alongside Larry Hagman and Patrick Duffy on Dallas, Gray recently opened up about her experiences working with Hagman and the dynamic chemistry they shared on set.

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Born on September 12, 1940, in Santa Monica, California, Gray faced a significant challenge in her childhood when she was diagnosed with polio. Her grandfather had also contracted the virus, leaving her family in distress. However, Linda maintained a surprisingly optimistic outlook during her own diagnosis. “They didn’t know what it was when he was 17, and he was always in a wheelchair”, she recalled. “When I was diagnosed, everyone went crazy in my family, but I wasn’t. I thought I could have a wheelchair like Grandpa.”

Growing up in Culver City, California, where her father owned a watchmaker shop, Linda was drawn to the performing arts from a young age. She often entertained her neighbors and even starred as Cinderella in a school production at Notre Dame Academy in Los Angeles.

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While her father provided a stable presence, he was emotionally distant. As Gray noted in her 2015 memoir, The Road to Happiness Is Always Under Construction, “He was just kind of there, like a piece of furniture”, and emotional discussions were off-limits. In contrast, her mother, Marge, a former artist and ballerina, struggled with alcoholism, leaving Linda and her sister to take charge of the household. “She wasn’t mean, she was just blurred, in her own world”, Gray wrote. This upbringing inspired Linda to pursue a different path, determined to avoid her mother’s fate.

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With dreams of a career in medicine initially, Gray soon shifted her focus to acting, influenced by the Hollywood landscape surrounding her. She spent her teenage years modeling for various companies and airlines.

At 21, Linda married photographer Edward Lee Thrasher, but the marriage became a struggle. Her aspirations took a backseat as she became a wife and mother, welcoming son Jeff in 1960 and daughter Kehly six years later. Linda felt emotionally neglected, describing the marriage as “cold” and ultimately deciding to leave after 21 years.

Despite her husband’s disapproval of her pursuing acting, Gray took the plunge and began landing television commercials. She had minor roles in films like Under the Yum Yum Tree and Palm Springs Weekend but hit the jackpot when, at 27, she became Anne Bancroft’s body double for The Graduate poster (1967). Ironically, she later portrayed Mrs. Robinson in a 2001 stage adaptation of the same film.

In her memoir, Gray also shared a humorous rejection letter from Glamour magazine she received in the early 1960s, which she kept as a reminder of resilience. “It kicked me from behind, and made me want to go and do something”, she said.

Though she loved motherhood, the lack of a fulfilling career frustrated her. When she finally enrolled in acting classes, her husband dismissed the idea, suggesting she wait until their children were older. At 37, she forged ahead and trained alongside younger actors. It wasn’t long before she secured her first significant role as a guest star on Marcus Welby, M.D. in 1974.

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The turning point came in 1978 when Gray was cast as Sue Ellen Ewing on Dallas. Initially meant to be a recurring role for just five episodes, her performance resonated with audiences and critics alike, leading to her becoming a series regular and turning her into a star.

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Dallas, set against the backdrop of family rivalry and scandal at Southfork Ranch, showcased Gray’s exceptional talent. Her chemistry with Larry Hagman was palpable, but she clarified that it stemmed from a sibling-like bond. “He was the bad big brother that I never had”, she explained. Their dynamic translated beautifully on-screen, captivating both the network executives and viewers alike.

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The show broke numerous viewing records, becoming one of the most-watched television series in history. The iconic episode revealing who shot J.R. Ewing drew an estimated 80 million viewers, a record that stood until surpassed by MASH*.

For her role, Gray received two Golden Globe nominations and an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Lead Actress. After divorcing Ed Thrasher in 1983, her son Jeff pursued a career in directing and earned an Emmy nomination in 2018. Tragically, he passed away in 2020 after battling leukemia. Gray honored him on Instagram, celebrating his life and the love he shared with those around him.

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Throughout her tenure on Dallas, Gray appeared in 308 episodes. Following the show’s conclusion, she continued to work in television and reprised her role as Sue Ellen in the 2012 revival of Dallas, which aired for two seasons. She received a Special Award at the 2014 USA Film Festival, further cementing her legacy.

Now, at 84, Linda Gray remains as stunning as ever. She has navigated many challenges, from her childhood struggles to her difficult marriage and the loss of her son. Through it all, she has learned to transform adversity into resilience.

We admire her strength and wish her continued success in the years to come! Feel free to share this inspiring story with your family and friends.

My Best Friend Set Me Up at Work to Get Me Fired So She Could Take My Promotion

Kera and Sam were more than best friends; they were family. They built their careers together, side by side, until a promotion turned everything into a competition. When Kera is accused of theft, she thinks her life is over… until an unexpected secret is exposed. In the end, she learns that betrayal runs deep, but karma cuts deeper.

I always thought betrayal would come with warning signs, like whispers behind my back, a shift in tone, something to tip me off before the knife slid in.

But no.

An upset woman | Source: Midjourney

An upset woman | Source: Midjourney

Instead, betrayal came with a smile. With a hug. With the promise of friendship.

My name is Kera. I’m twenty-eight years old, and everything I have now, I built from nothing.

I was left at an orphanage as a baby. There was no note, no explanation. Nothing. Just an abandoned girl who grew up bouncing between foster homes, learning that while people wanted to be nice, the only person she could truly rely on was herself.

A little girl playing with toys | Source: Midjourney

A little girl playing with toys | Source: Midjourney

That was until Sam.

We met when we were eight, two kids with no families, clinging to each other like lifelines. We learned to cook together, sneaking into the orphanage kitchen at night to steal peanut butter or test recipes that we saw on TV.

We dreamed of becoming chefs, of running our own restaurant someday.

“One day, Kera,” Sam said. “One day, we’ll have big kitchens and lots of money! And we can buy all the food we want.”

“I know,” I said, smiling.

A smiling teenage girl | Source: Midjourney

A smiling teenage girl | Source: Midjourney

It felt good to dream. It felt good to look forward to something. To see a future that was bigger than we ever thought we could have.

And we worked for it, too.

We got into culinary school on scholarships and hopes. And, surprisingly, we graduated at the top of our class. We thrived on creativity and passion. On the days we felt like giving up, we pushed through. We pushed each other, and if we fell, we fell together.

“I’ll always be here, Sammy,” I told her one day after we ended up in the ER.

A woman standing in an ER | Source: Midjourney

A woman standing in an ER | Source: Midjourney

Sam had been too enthusiastic when chopping up herbs and had an incident with a knife.

“I know, K,” she said, smiling through her painkillers. “It’s together or nothing, right, sis?”

Eventually, we landed jobs at one of the best restaurants in the city. We didn’t know how Lady Luck kept shining on us, but we were grateful that she did.

Side by side, Sam and I climbed the ranks, proving ourselves in the brutal, high-pressure world of professional kitchens.

A woman working in a professional kitchen | Source: Midjourney

A woman working in a professional kitchen | Source: Midjourney

So when the head chef position opened up, we were both the top candidates.

That day, after the announcement, Sam pulled me aside.

“No matter what happens, let’s not let this ruin our friendship, okay?” she said, squeezing my hand.

I smiled.

A woman working in a professional kitchen | Source: Midjourney

A woman working in a professional kitchen | Source: Midjourney

“Of course,” I said. “Nothing changes. But I am starving. Let’s get some food on our break. A greasy cheeseburger from that place down the road sounds like it would hit the spot.”

She smiled back, but there was something… off. A little too much relief in her voice, like she already knew how this would play out.

“Sure,” she said. “Let’s meet there. I have something to do first. A pharmacy run, you know.”

The interior of a pharmacy | Source: Midjourney

The interior of a pharmacy | Source: Midjourney

I ignored the feeling. Sam was my best friend, after all.

But I shouldn’t have ignored any of my feelings. The first worrying sign was when Sam didn’t meet me for lunch during our break. She just didn’t show up.

That evening, after the dinner service, I was cleaning up my station when our boss, Chef Reynard, stormed into the kitchen. His face was like stone, his sharp blue eyes locking onto mine.

Food on a pass in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

Food on a pass in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

“I didn’t expect this from you, Kera!” he thundered. “I thought you were better…”

Silence fell. The entire staff froze, utensils clattering, conversations dying mid-sentence.

“Chef?” I swallowed hard.

He turned to the room.

“Everyone, to the break room. Now!”

An upset chef | Source: Midjourney

An upset chef | Source: Midjourney

The weight of his words sank into my stomach like lead. Something was very, very wrong. What was Chef on about?

We filed in, confused, exchanging nervous glances. Chef Reynard stood at the front, arms crossed, his expression unreadable.

“This evening, during an inventory check, something was found,” he said. “Stolen black caviar. In Kera’s bag.”

I stopped breathing. I broke out into a sweat. I felt dizzy.

A woman's bag | Source: Midjourney

A woman’s bag | Source: Midjourney

My bag?

My stomach twisted into a hundred knots.

“That’s impossible!” I gasped.

Chef Reynard didn’t react.

“I announced earlier today that I’d be doing an inspection. Someone’s been stealing from my kitchen.”

His eyes were sharp, scanning the room.

A pantry | Source: Midjourney

A pantry | Source: Midjourney

“And tonight… I found this.”

He held up a small glass jar of caviar, the kind we only used for high-end VIP guests who ordered top-shelf alcohol like it was absolutely nothing.

I stared at Chef’s hand, looking at the glass jar like it was a snake, waiting to strike.

“I didn’t take that,” I said, my voice hoarse. “I swear on my life, Chef. I would never… I would never jeopardize my position here!”

“Then, Kera, how did it end up in your bag?” His voice was calm but firm.

A jar of caviar | Source: Midjourney

A jar of caviar | Source: Midjourney

I opened my mouth, then shut it. I didn’t have an answer. I felt dizzy.

Sam sat beside me, her hands clasped in her lap. She wouldn’t meet my eyes. She didn’t offer an encouraging smile. Or a hand squeeze.

A sick feeling curdled in my gut.

Chef Reynard exhaled.

“Tell me why I shouldn’t fire you right now.”

An angry chef | Source: Midjourney

An angry chef | Source: Midjourney

I froze.

“Come, Kera. Tell me.”

Tears burned behind my eyes.

I looked around the room, at my coworkers, at the people I had worked beside for years. Some of them looked skeptical. Some looked outright disappointed.

But Sam?

She just sat there. Silent.

A woman sitting | Source: Midjourney

A woman sitting | Source: Midjourney

That’s when I knew.

She knew about the inspection. She was the one who did it. Her eyebrows were furrowed like they always were when she was up to something.

Chef Reynard had been on the phone earlier that morning, talking about the missing inventory, saying that he planned to check bags after our shift. But I hadn’t thought anything of it. There was no reason for me to.

But Sam had overheard. When we were changing into our uniform in the locker room she smacked my arm to make me stop talking so that she could hear what Chef was saying.

A woman looking down | Source: Midjourney

A woman looking down | Source: Midjourney

But… Sam? Would she really do that to me? Or was my imagination just running wild because the thought of me losing my job was so… close?

I felt the knife twist before I even knew it was there.

I stood up, my throat closing.

“I…” I couldn’t even get the words out.

“I should go…”

An upset woman | Source: Midjourney

An upset woman | Source: Midjourney

Chef Reynard didn’t say anything. He just looked at me for a moment, his eyes softening.

I wanted to cry. I wanted to curl into a ball and just cry for a few hours. My career, everything that I had worked so hard for, was over.

I turned toward the door, my heart shattering.

“Stop, Kera,” he said.

I turned back, blinking through tears.

A door in a restaurant kitchen | Source: Midjourney

A door in a restaurant kitchen | Source: Midjourney

Chef Reynard reached into his pocket and pulled out a small ultraviolet flashlight.

The room went still again.

“There’s a security measure in place,” he said, his voice even. “I have marked all the caviar jars with an invisible, transparent ink, one that leaves residue on anyone who touches it. This is the new batch, and no one has worked with these yet, so only the person who stole the jar would have the stuff on their hands.”

A ripple of murmurs swept through the staff.

A flashlight | Source: Midjourney

A flashlight | Source: Midjourney

He held the jar under the light, and sure enough, a faint, glowing mark was smeared along the lid.

“We started doing this a few years ago when we had another case of sticky fingers. One of our waiters was walking away with our caviar and bottles of champagne, ready to sell on the internet.”

Then he turned the light to his hands. They were clean except for his fingers, where he had held the jar moments before.

His eyes met mine, and he almost smiled.

Bottles of champagne | Source: Midjourney

Bottles of champagne | Source: Midjourney

“Everyone, hands out. Now.”

One by one, we stretched our arms out as he held the light to them.

Nothing.

Nothing.

Nothing.

Dirty nails.

Nothing.

Then…

A faint glow appeared on someone’s fingertips.

Ink on a woman's hand | Source: Midjourney

Ink on a woman’s hand | Source: Midjourney

That’s when the entire world tilted.

Sam.

The soft blue stain lit up on her skin, it was unmistakable. A choked sound left my throat. My best friend, my sister, sat there, caught red-handed.

Chef Reynard stared at her in disbelief.

“I need you to explain yourself,” Chef said.

“I… Chef…” Sam tried to say, her face drained of color.

A shocked woman | Source: Midjourney

A shocked woman | Source: Midjourney

“I never thought someone would do this to their best friend,” he said quietly.

Then, his voice hardened and his face darkened, anger taking over.

“You set her up? You set Kera up? You were willing to destroy her career for a promotion?”

Her mouth opened, desperate.

“Maybe someone else touched it before me… and I touched something they touched.”

An angry chef | Source: Midjourney

An angry chef | Source: Midjourney

Chef Reynard didn’t even blink.

“Just go, Sam.”

I watched her grasp for anything to save herself. But there was nothing.

She knew it.

I knew it.

She stood abruptly, her chair scraping against the tiles. Her eyes flicked to me, just for a second.

An upset woman | Source: Midjourney

An upset woman | Source: Midjourney

And in that second, I saw something that made my blood boil.

Sam didn’t think she’d get caught.

She wasn’t sorry. She was angry.

She stormed out, and just like that, she was gone.

The room was silent.

I was still shaking. I felt betrayed and hurt, heartache worse than I’d ever felt before.

A shocked woman | Source: Midjourney

A shocked woman | Source: Midjourney

“Kera,” Chef Reynard said.

“I meant what I said,” he continued. “I don’t tolerate thieves in my kitchen. And I couldn’t believe that it was you. I just… couldn’t. Let’s go to my office.”

We went to his office. I followed him quietly, my hands still shaking.

“Kera,” he said, sitting down. “I didn’t want to believe it because I had just drawn up something for you. But I need you to know that I don’t tolerate people who betray their own.”

An office | Source: Midjourney

An office | Source: Midjourney

He placed a single piece of paper in front of me.

A contract.

“You worked your butt off for this place, my girl,” he said. “I’ve noticed it from the beginning. And you’ve earned your spot as head chef.”

I took a deep breath.

“I had nothing to do with Sam’s actions,” I said. “Absolutely nothing.”

A contract on an office desk | Source: Midjourney

A contract on an office desk | Source: Midjourney

He smiled and held a pen out for me.

And I signed my name.

After my shift, I stopped at a food truck on my way home, trying to wrap my mind around everything. How was I going to go to our apartment and face Sam?

I wanted to slap her for almost costing me my job, but I was also worried about what she was going to do next.

I had been saving over the years. Sam had not, wanting to spend everything on clothing and alcohol. I highly doubted she had any savings, or at least enough to get by until she got a new job.

People outside a food truck | Source: Midjourney

People outside a food truck | Source: Midjourney

But I shouldn’t have worried.

When I walked into our apartment, Jenna, our roommate, was sitting on the couch playing video games. Sam was nowhere to be seen.

“She’s gone,” Jenna said, pausing the game.

“What do you mean?” I asked.

“She’s gone. She packed up, and some guy named Dylan came to help her take her things. She said to tell you that she wanted more for herself and that she needs to find her happiness out of your shadow.”

A woman playing video games | Source: Midjourney

A woman playing video games | Source: Midjourney

What the actual heck?

“Thanks, Jenna,” I said, flopping down on the couch next to her.

“What happened? She got fired? She quit?”

“How about I tell you tomorrow?” I asked. “I just want to get into bed.”

I was devastated, but I had never felt the way I had before. There was so much anger and hurt. Pain that demanded to be felt.

If this is what Sam was truly capable of, then maybe I was better off without her.

An upset woman lying in her bed | Source: Midjourney

An upset woman lying in her bed | Source: Midjourney

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