James Patrick Duffy

James Patrick Duffy net worth is $14 Million. Also know about James Patrick Duffy bio, salary, height, age weight, relationship and more …

James Patrick Duffy Wiki Biography

Patrick Duffy was born on 17 March 1949, in Townsend, Montana USA, and is an actor, best known for being part of the television show “Dallas” as Bobby Ewing. He reprised his role in the continuation of the show in 2012, and also appeared in “The Bold and the Beautiful”. All of his efforts have helped put his net worth to where it is today.

How rich is Patrick Duffy? As of mid-2016, authoritative sources estimate a net worth that is at $14 million, mostly earned through a successful career as an actor. He reportedly earns around $50,000 per episode for most shows that he appears in. He’s also been involved in numerous films, and all of these ensured the position of his wealth.

Patrick attended Cascade High School and during his time there became part of the Drama Club. After matriculating, he attended the University of Washington and graduated in 1971 with a degree in drama. Due to his vocal cords being ruptured during his senior year, he became an actor-in-residence, helping various orchestra, opera, and ballet companies in Washington; he also taught classes during this time. He then found opportunities to act in a few productions in New York, before deciding to move to Los Angeles, where he worked as a driver before finally landing his first television role.

In 1976, Duffy was in the short-lived “Man of Atlantis”, and it wasn’t until two years later that he found his big break in the worldwide hit “Dallas”. His character was killed off in 1985, but returned the following season rendering his death as just a dream. He was eventually in “Dallas” for 13 years, even directing several episodes as well. Afterwards, he appeared in a few episodes of the spin-off “Knots Landing”. In 1991, he was cast in the sitcom “Step by Step” alongside Suzanne Somers, which would run until 1998, and he then appeared in “Dallas” reunion television films entitled “J.R. Returns” and “War of the Ewings”. He also made an appearance in the television special “Dallas Reunion: Return to Southfork” in 2004. Aside from these, Patrick did voice work in “Family Guy”, and “Justice League”. He also had a recurring role in “The Bold and the Beautiful” and would go on to host “Bingo America” for a short period. In 2012, he returned as Bobby Ewing in the remake “Dallas” which lasted until 2014. One of his latest works is the experimental documentary “Hotel Dallas”.

For his personal life, it is known that Patrick married professional ballerina Carlyn Rosser who is 10 years older than him, in 1974 with a Buddhist ceremony, and they have two sons. They currently reside in Eagle Point, Oregon. Duffy is also known to be a collector of children’s books, and antique dolls, and practices Nichiren Buddhism. Aside from this, Patrick’s parents were murdered by two men during an armed robbery in the tavern that his parents owned. The two men were sentenced to 75 years in prison, though one was released in 2007 after the other admitted that he was the sole gunman.

IMDB Wikipedia $14 Million 1.87 m 1949 1949-03-17 Actor American Bobby Ewing Carlyn Duffy Carlyn Rosser Conor Duffy James Patrick Duffy March 17 Marie Duffy Montana Nichiren Buddhism Padraic Terrence Duffy Patrick Duffy Net Worth Suzanne Somers Terence Duffy Townsend United States University of Washington

James Patrick Duffy Quick Info

Full Name Patrick Duffy
Net Worth $14 Million
Salary $50 Thousand Per Episode
Date Of Birth March 17, 1949
Place Of Birth Townsend, Montana, United States
Height 1.87 m
Profession Actor
Education University of Washington
Nationality American
Spouse Carlyn Rosser
Children Padraic Terrence Duffy, Conor Duffy
Parents Terence Duffy, Marie Duffy
Twitter https://twitter.com/therealpduffy
IMDB http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001155/
Awards TV Land Pop Culture Award
Movies Dallas: J.R. Returns, You Again, Desolation Canyon, Falling in Love with the Girl Next Door, Love Takes Wing, Working Miracles, Dallas: War of the Ewings, Daddy, Cry for the Strangers, He’s Such a Girl, Too Good to Be True, Children of the Bride, Murder C.O.D., 14 Going on 30, Perfect Game, Hotel Da…
TV Shows Bingo America, Step by Step, Dallas, Man from Atlantis, Round the corner

James Patrick Duffy Trademarks

  1. Curly hair.
  2. Thick, gravelly voice.
  3. Very muscular physique.
  4. Patrick always plays the good guy

James Patrick Duffy Quotes

  • [on Hotel Dallas (2016)] For years, Larry Hagman would tell me how he took personal credit for defeating communism [in Romania]. I used to take that with a grain of salt, but over the years, I had the strangest series of coincidences. I was at the Washington correspondents’ dinner, and the Romanian ambassador ran over to shake my hand and tell me how important Dallas (1978) was to defeating the communist regime. Then, just last June, I was in Monte Carlo with my wife and the same thing happened: The Romanian ambassador there came over, his eyes welled up with tears, and he took his pin – of the Romanian flag – and pinned it on my jacket. (…) I admit, at first I didn’t understand it [the “Hotel Dallas” project]. It wasn’t the kind of movie I’m used to seeing. So I showed it to my sons, who said, ‘This is brilliant, you have to get involved.’ [2016]
  • [on Larry Hagman and the revival series] His character was such a larger-than-life-being that we still reference him on the show. And a lot of the plot devices that we’re dealing with, we attribute to the character of J.R. ‘Oh, my God!If it hadn’t been for that, then this thing wouldn’t have happened. Damn him.’ But there he is. He’s omnipresent and that’s good. [2014]
  • [on the death of Larry Hagman] These two are two of my closest friends, and I actually knew somewhere in my heart that we would never work together again because the three of us couldn’t come into a scene without everybody saying, ‘Oh, there’s J.R., Sue Ellen and Bobby.’ And that hurt me. I really wanted to work with them again. So this is the best thing that could happen in my career life.
  • [when co-starring in the revamp Dallas (2012) series, the show along with himself needed to go on without Barbara Bel Geddes, who died in 2005] Barbara is a big piece of our history, and it’s important to me to honor her. To come back with Linda Gray as Sue Ellen and Larry [Larry Hagman] in his J.R. hat, and then see the words ‘Ellie Southworth Ewing Farlow’ on the gravestone made me think, ‘Oh, that’s right — she’s gone.’ It was hard to get through the dialogue.
  • [along with Jim Davis, he said his deceased co-star Barbara Bel Geddes will be together on an elegant painting portrait of his TV parents]: That painting is actually alive and gives me a nice feeling that they’re always there. Through the whole first season, I don’t think an episode goes by that Mama is not mentioned in reference to Southfork and the land.
  • [on the death of Barbara Bel Geddes]: On Dallas, she made ‘Mama,’ more than just a character phrase.
  • [on his on- and off-screen chemistry with Barbara Bel Geddes, who played Miss Ellie Ewing]: Oh, the best. First of all, I have a great history with Barbara by virtue of my wife. My wife’s father worked with Barbara’s father. He was a very famous American architect, Norman Bel Geddes in New York. My wife saw Barbara Bel Geddes in her first Broadway play, when she played in The Moon is Blue, which was a sin: S.I.N sational play because the word virgin was used for the first time on stage which you know, caused a fury in this country. So by the time I got on the soundstage for the first time with Barbara, I had all this common ground that we could discuss and she’s the great American film star. She’s right up there with Julie Harris and people like that. She added a weight to the show, an anchor that essentially everything pivoted around. It was a patriarchal show that we all tried to please Daddy, but in terms of Daddy trying to please Momma. So, if you look at it, it was Barbara’s show and working with her all those years was brilliant.
  • [on Barbara Bel Geddes] When Barbara joined the cast of Dallas (1978), as Miss Ellie, I considered her to be like Helen Hayes, Katherine Cornell, and Ethel Barrymore – a real ‘name’ in American theater. But you’d never have known it. She exhibited no large ego because of her history. She’d schlepp in and drop your jaw with every performance – whether it was drinking a cup of coffee, having a mastectomy, or losing Jock Ewing. It was remarkable, her ordinariness despite that pedigree. We called Barbara ‘BBG’ on the set. She was the mama figure. Larry Hagman was obviously the prow of the boat, but he couldn’t have functioned without a strong mother, and I don’t think there’s been a mother like her on dramatic television since then. People related to her because she was the epitome of compassion despite her own pain. Off-screen, she was a pistol. She cussed like a mule skinner, and she really liked to have her drinks. But she also had an endless capacity to include everybody that she loved, and that was the entire cast.
  • [on Larry Hagman] Larry was the ringleader, who started the family feeling in the cast from the very first day of the reading. It was sort of like, ‘Follow the Pied Piper,’ Follow the corks! But it was that kind of thing. We’d all gather after every shot in Larry’s little converted bread van and have this best time and it never ended for 13 years.
  • [on his on- and off-screen relationship with Larry Hagman, who played JR Ewing]: I think it literally changed when Larry Hagman walked into the first scene he was in. He had whatever it was that JR needed to be the instigator in a show that was sorely sorely missing that. I don’t know when we realized it but I know that’s when it happened. You couldn’t take your eyes off Hagman in any scene he was in. Someone like Leonard Katzman who had been in the business as long as he had recognized that stroke of fortune and luck. It’s like having Henry Winkler as the Fonz, it was never intended that Henry Winkler was going to be the keystone of Happy Days, it was going to be Ron Howard – the boy next door. Our show would never have gone beyond three or four years if it had been just a love story of Bobby and Pam. That’s why Larry Hagman is the dearest friend I have in the world for the past thirty years. Because I have nothing but 100% appreciation and love for not only him as a person but for what he did that created the rest of my life.
  • [on being born on St. Patrick’s Day]: Good luck happens to people who work hard for it. Sometimes people just fall into the honey pot, but I’ve consistently strived to create whatever good fortune I can get in my life – and consistently strive just as hard not to screw it up once I have it! It’s great to be able to do shows like Falling in Love with the Girl Next Door, which I think is entirely too long of a title.
  • With a new house, you can pick everything. It’s the ability to create what you have in your mind as the perfect house.
  • I miss regular television. I miss the work ethic of those 5 day a week things. So, eventually, I’d like to get back to that. [2000]
  • [when asked if he would write his autobiography] No. I lead a normal life and I don’t assume there is anything I can impart to people. The only reason to write a book would be to make money, and I don’t want to do that. To write a book would be going against how I’ve lived.
  • I’m one of the lucky actors in television. I don’t make a lot of big waves, but there’s constant activity, and that’s the way I prefer to live my life.

James Patrick Duffy Important Facts

  • Credits Larry Hagman and Barbara Bel Geddes as his favorite acting mentors/best friends.
  • Surrogate son of Barbara Bel Geddes.
  • Like his Dallas (1978) co-star, Barbara Bel Geddes, Duffy is also known to be a very private man.
  • Beat out Steve Kanaly for the role of Bobby Ewing in Dallas (1978). Kanaly would play Ray Krebbs.
  • He was good friends with Robert Fuller’s son, Rob.
  • His wife and her father, both had a long association with Barbara Bel Geddes, before she met the young actor on Dallas (1978).
  • Revealed that he had a wonderful chemistry with both Barbara Bel Geddes and Larry Hagman on Dallas (1978).
  • Coincidental to his Irish heritage, he was born on St. Patrick’s Day.
  • Barbara Bel Geddes, his television mother from Dallas (1978), was referred to as ‘Mama,’ by him.
  • Just began a 10 week arc playing “Stephen Logan” on The Bold and the Beautiful (1987). [April 2006]
  • Is being mentioned as a possible candidate for the recast role of “Clint Buchanan” on One Life to Live (1968). [August 2005]
  • Patrick is currently writing a script with Larry Hagman for a third and final Dallas (1978) Reunion. [July 2002]
  • Lives in Eagle Point, Oregon. [2005]
  • Was close to Barbara Bel Geddes, up until Bel Geddes’s death in 2005.
  • Best friend of Larry Hagman, up until Hagman’s death in 2012.
  • Friends with: Suzanne Somers, Joan Van Ark, Susan Sullivan, Lorenzo Lamas, Linda Gray and Larry Manetti.
  • When Duffy was a kid, his future wife’s (Carolyn Rosser) father used to work with Barbara Bel Geddes, in her first Broadway play, ‘The Moon is Blue,’ years before he got the role on Dallas (1978) as her youngest son.
  • His acting mentors were the late Barbara Bel Geddes, who was his family friend, and the late Larry Hagman.
  • He has played the same character (Bobby Ewing) in four different series: Dallas (1978), Knots Landing (1979), Family Guy (1999) and Dallas (2012).
  • While trying to make it as an actor he worked over a year as a grocery delivery man, among other positions.
  • Stated that he was unhappy with the final episode of Dallas (1978) because it broke away from the format that defined the show.
  • Grandson, Maxwell Robert Duffy, born summer 2008.
  • Best known by the public for his role as Bobby James Ewing on Dallas (1978).
  • Granddaughter Fiona Lee Duffy born summer 2006.
  • Father-in-law of Emily Cutler.
  • Cheerleader in High School.
  • Patrick’s nephew is San Francisco Giant’s Cy Young winning pitcher Barry Zito. Patrick’s wife is the sister of Barry’s mother.
  • Plays the piano.
  • On November 18, 1986, teenagers Kenneth Miller and Sean Wentz murdered Patrick’s parents, Terrence and Marie Duffy, during a robbery at the couple’s Boulder Bar in Montana. Wentz and Miller each named the other as the one who fired the shots that killed the Duffys, but both men were convicted of double murder and were each sentenced to 180 years in prison. Later, Wentz recanted his testimony and told prosecutors he was the one who murdered the couple, but Miller’s November 2000 appeal of clemency was denied.
  • His last name means “black” in Irish, probably referring to black hair.
  • Son, Padraic Duffy, graduated from Princeton University in 1996.
  • Son, Conor Duffy, graduated from the University of Washington, Seattle in June 2001 with a degree in Drama.
  • He and his wife first met on a bus.
  • Wears a medical alert bracelet on his right wrist to draw attention to his potentially fatal penicillin allergy.
  • Earned $75,000 per episode of Dallas (1978), plus $1 million signing bonus (1986-1991).
  • Dallas (1978) producer Leonard Katzman hired a non-Dallas (1978) crew to film what the crew believed to be an Irish Spring commercial with Patrick Duffy. The crew spent hours filming the commercial, which was then superimposed into a scene from Dallas (1978). The result is the famous shower scene where Duffy’s character, “Bobby Ewing”, returns from the dead and says “Good Morning” to his TV wife, played by Victoria Principal. Principal did not know that Duffy was returning to the show until she saw that cliffhanger on TV, and then phoned Duffy.
  • Patrick’s wife is the one who suggested the “dream season” to explain Bobby Ewing’s return from the dead on Dallas (1978).
  • Son Conor Duffy played “Little J.R.” on the final episode of Dallas (1978) in 1991.
  • Two sons Padraic Duffy (b. 1974) and Conor Duffy (b. January 16, 1980).
  • Patrick collects antique toys and childrens’ books.
  • Patrick could hold his breath underwater for 3 minutes during his Man from Atlantis (1977) days.
  • Son Padraic Duffy played “Mark Harris” on Dallas (1978). “Mark Harris’ was the name of Patrick’s character on Man from Atlantis (1977).
  • Graduated from Cascade High School in Everett, Washington in 1967.
  • Loves golf and has played in celebrity tournaments.
  • In 22 years in show business, he’s only been out of work a total of 3 weeks (as of January 2000).
  • He attended the University of Washington, Seattle, where he was an actor-in-residence in UW’s theatre program.
  • Named 1 of the 100 Alumni of the Century by the University of Washington.

James Patrick Duffy Filmography

Title Year Status Character Role
Trafficked 2016/I completed Christian Actor
Welcome to Sweden 2014-2015 TV Series Wayne Actor
The Fosters 2015 TV Series Robert Quinn Sr. Actor
Dallas 2012-2014 TV Series Bobby Ewing Actor
Lovin’ Lakin 2012 TV Mini-Series Patrick Duffy Actor
The Bold and the Beautiful 2006-2011 TV Series Stephen Logan Actor
30 for 30 2010 TV Series documentary Narrator Actor
You Again 2010 Richie Actor
Party Down 2010 TV Series Patrick Duffy Actor
Healing Hands 2010 TV Movie Uncle Norman Actor
Love Takes Wing 2009 TV Movie Mayor Evans Actor
He’s Such a Girl 2009 Whitney’s Dad Actor
Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story 2007 Patrick Duffy (uncredited) Actor
Falling in Love with the Girl Next Door 2006 TV Movie James Connolly Actor
Desolation Canyon 2006 TV Movie Sheriff Tomas ‘Swede’ Lundstrom Actor
Reba 2004 TV Series Dr. Joe Baker Actor
Touched by an Angel 2003 TV Series Mike Actor
Justice League 2002 TV Series Steve Trevor / Flagship Pilot #1 Actor
Family Guy 1999-2001 TV Series Jack / Salesman / Teacher / … Actor
The Secret Adventures of Jules Verne 2000 TV Series Duke Angelo Rimini Actor
Perfect Game 2000 Video Coach Bobby Geiser Actor
Twice in a Lifetime 1999 TV Series Peter Hogan / Father Daniel Morrissey Actor
Don’t Look Behind You 1999 TV Movie Jeff Corrigan Actor
Dead Man’s Gun 1999 TV Series Lyman Gage Actor
Diagnosis Murder 1998 TV Series Wayde Garrett Actor
Rusty: A Dog’s Tale 1998 Cap the Dog (voice) Actor
Step by Step 1991-1998 TV Series Frank Lambert / Yo-Yo Actor
Dallas: War of the Ewings 1998 TV Movie Bobby Ewing Actor
Heart of Fire 1997 TV Movie Max Tucker Actor
Dallas: J.R. Returns 1996 TV Movie Bobby Ewing Actor
Texas 1994 TV Movie Stephen Austin Actor
ABC Sneak Peek with Step by Step 1994 TV Movie Frank Lambert Actor
Goof Troop 1992 TV Series Harold Hatchback Actor
Daddy 1991 TV Movie Oliver Watson Actor
Dallas 1978-1991 TV Series Bobby Ewing Actor
Children of the Bride 1990 TV Movie John Actor
Murder C.O.D. 1990 TV Movie Steve Murtaugh Actor
Newhart 1990 TV Series Patrick Duffy Actor
ABC TGIF 1990 TV Series Frank Actor
Too Good to Be True 1988 TV Movie Richard Harland Actor
Unholy Matrimony 1988 TV Movie John Dillman Actor
14 Going on 30 1988 TV Movie Actor in black and white movie Actor
Our House 1987 TV Series Johnny Witherspoon Actor
Strong Medicine 1986 TV Movie Dr. Andrew Jordan Actor
Captain Eo Grand Opening 1986 TV Movie Host Actor
From Here to Maternity 1985 TV Short Henderson Actor
Alice in Wonderland 1985 TV Movie The Goat Actor
George Burns Comedy Week 1985 TV Series Actor
Hotel 1985 TV Series Richard Martin Actor
Vamping 1984 Harry Baranski Actor
Knots Landing 1979-1982 TV Series Bobby Ewing Actor
Cry for the Strangers 1982 TV Movie Dr. Brad Russell Actor
The Love Boat 1981 TV Series Ralph Sutton Actor
Enola Gay: The Men, the Mission, the Atomic Bomb 1980 TV Movie Colonel Paul Tibbets Actor
Charlie’s Angels 1980 TV Series William Cord Actor
Man from Atlantis 1977-1978 TV Series Mark Harris Actor
The Last of Mrs. Lincoln 1976 TV Movie Lewis Baker Actor
Switch 1976 TV Series Sgt. Musial Actor
Hurricane 1974 TV Movie Jim Actor
The Stranger Who Looks Like Me 1974 TV Movie Adoptee #3 Actor
Major Crimes 2016 TV Series 2 episodes Director
Dallas 2014 TV Series 1 episode Director
Step by Step 1992-1998 TV Series 49 episodes Director
Dallas 1981-1991 TV Series 29 episodes Director
Dallas: War of the Ewings 1998 TV Movie executive producer Producer
Dallas: J.R. Returns 1996 TV Movie co-executive producer Producer
Vamping 1984 producer Producer
Inside TNT’s Dallas 2011 TV Short Himself Self
The Price Is Right 2010 TV Series Himself Self
Dallas VIP: 30 Year Reunion at Southfork Ranch 2010 Video documentary Self
Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job! 2010 TV Series Himself Self
The 36th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards 2009 TV Special Himself Self
TV Land Moguls 2009 TV Mini-Series documentary Himself Self
Xposé 2009 TV Series Himself Self
De schuld van VTM 2009 TV Series Himself Self
Guinness World Records – Die größten Weltrekorde 2008 TV Series Himself Self
The British Academy Television Awards 2008 TV Special Himself Self
Bingo America 2008 TV Series Himself – Host Self
TV Land Confidential 2007 TV Series documentary Himself – Interviewee Self
20 heures le journal 2007 TV Series Himself Self
Bring Back… Dallas 2007 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
All*Star Cup 2006 2006 TV Movie Himself – Team USA Self
A Hero’s Welcome 2006 TV Special Host Self
The 4th Annual TV Land Awards 2006 TV Special Himself Self
The 100 Most Unexpected TV Moments 2005 TV Mini-Series documentary Himself Self
All-Star Cup 2005 2005 TV Series Himself Self
Dallas Reunion: Return to Southfork 2004 TV Movie documentary Himself / Bobby Ewing Self
GMTV 2004 TV Series Himself Self
Good Day Live 2004 TV Series Himself Self
Biography 2004 TV Series documentary Himself Self
SoapTalk 2003 TV Series Himself / Bobby Ewing Self
CBS at 75 2003 TV Special documentary Himself Self
After Dallas 2002 TV Movie Himself / Bobby Ewing Self
After They Were Famous 2002 TV Series documentary Himself Self
TVography: Suzanne Somers – Mastering Success 2002 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Top Ten 2002 TV Series documentary Himself Self
E! True Hollywood Story 2000-2002 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Intimate Portrait 1998-2002 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Cameras Rolling: 20 Days on Set 2000 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
So Graham Norton 2000 TV Series Himself Self
To Tell the Truth 2000 TV Series Himself / Guest Panelist Self
Doing Dallas 2000 TV Special Himself / Bobby Ewing Self
Dale’s All Stars 2000 TV Series Himself Self
Late Lunch 1998 TV Series Himself Self
The Rosie O’Donnell Show 1997 TV Series Himself Self
Jeopardy! 1997 TV Series Himself – Celebrity Contestant Self
The Mrs. Merton Show 1997 TV Series Himself Self
The Clive James Show 1997 TV Series Himself Self
Talk Soup 1996 TV Series Himself Self
The Hunchback of Notre Dame Festival of Fun Musical Spectacular 1996 TV Movie Himself – Host Self
The Ultimate TV Trivia Challenge 1995 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Will You Marry Me? 1994 TV Movie Himself Self
1993 Environmental Media Awards 1993 TV Special Himself Self
Sisters 1993 TV Series Himself Self
Circus of the Stars and Sideshow 1992 TV Special documentary Himself – Performer Self
One on One with John Tesh 1991-1992 TV Series Himself Self
The 18th Annual People’s Choice Awards 1992 TV Special Himself Self
Showbiz Today 1991 TV Series Himself Self
The 17th Annual People’s Choice Awards 1991 TV Special Himself – Co-Presenter: Favourite Television Dramatic Show Self
The Annual National Jewish Fund Awards Dinner 1989 TV Special Himself Self
All-Star Tribute to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar 1989 TV Movie Himself Self
The 45th Annual Golden Globe Awards 1988 TV Special Himself – Host Self
Your Alcohol I.Q. 1988 Video documentary short Himself Self
CBS All-American Thanksgiving Day Parade 1987 TV Special Himself Self
Dolly 1987 TV Series Himself Self
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson 1978-1987 TV Series Himself / Himself – Guest Host Self
Hour Magazine 1986-1987 TV Series Himself Self
The Morning Program 1987 TV Series Himself Self
This Is Your Life 1987 TV Special Himself Self
The 22nd Annual Academy of Country Music Awards 1987 TV Special Himself Self
The 13th Annual People’s Choice Awards 1987 TV Special Himself – Co-Presenter: Favourite New Television Drama Program and Accepting Favourite Television Night Time Dramatic Series Self
The Beach Boys: 25 Years Together 1987 TV Movie Himself Self
Kraft Salutes Super Night at the Super Bowl 1987 TV Movie Himself – Host Self
Lou Rawls Parade of Stars 1986 TV Series Himself Self
Yearbook: Class of 1967 1985 TV Special Himself – Host Self
Auf los geht’s los 1983 TV Series Himself – Singer Self
exclusiv 1983 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Formule 1 1983 TV Series Himself Self
Estudio abierto 1982 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
An Evening at the Improv 1982 TV Series Guest host Self
Barbara Mandrell and the Mandrell Sisters 1981 TV Series Himself Self
The 7th Annual People’s Choice Awards 1981 TV Special Himself – Accepting Award for Favourite Television Dramatic Program Self
The Mike Douglas Show 1977-1980 TV Series Himself – Actor / Himself – Co-Host / Himself Self
The Hollywood Squares 1977-1979 TV Series Himself Self
Battle of the Network Stars VI 1979 TV Special Herself – CBS Team Self
The Merv Griffin Show 1977-1979 TV Series Himself Self
The Jim Nabors Show 1978 TV Series Himself Self
Battle of the Network Stars III 1977 TV Special Himself – NBC Team Self
The Eighties 2016 TV Mini-Series documentary Actor, ‘Dallas’ Self
Hotel Dallas 2016 Documentary Mr. Here Self
The British Soap Awards 2015 2015 TV Special Himself – Presenter: Best British Soap Self
The Insider 2014 TV Series Himself Self
The View 2004-2014 TV Series Himself Self
The Queen Latifah Show 2014 TV Series Himself Self
The Talk 2014 TV Series Himself Self
Live with Kelly and Michael 1990-2014 TV Series Himself / Himself – Guest Self
Oprah: Where Are They Now? 2013 TV Series Himself Self
Pioneers of Television 2013 TV Mini-Series documentary Himself Self
Daybreak 2011-2012 TV Series Himself Self
This Morning 2012 TV Series Himself Self
Late Night with Jimmy Fallon 2012 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Piers Morgan Tonight 2012 TV Series Himself Self
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno 1992-2012 TV Series Himself Self
18th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards 2012 TV Special Himself Self
Loose Women 2006-2011 TV Series Himself Self
51st International Montecarlo TV Festival 2011 TV Movie Himself Self
Geschichten aus der Salzburger Altstadt 2016 TV Movie documentary Himself (uncredited) Archive Footage
The Wright Stuff 2012 TV Series Himself – Actor Archive Footage
Breakfast 2011 TV Series Himself – Actor Archive Footage
Everything Is Terrible: The Movie 2009 Video Himself Archive Footage
La rentadora 2007 TV Series Bobby Ewing Archive Footage
Ein Leben wie im Flug 2007 TV Movie Himself Archive Footage
La imagen de tu vida 2006 TV Series Bobby Ewing Archive Footage
Dallas 1986 TV Series Bobby Ewing Archive Footage

James Patrick Duffy Awards

Year Award Ceremony Nomination Movie Category
2006 Pop Culture Award TV Land Awards Dallas (1978) Won
1987 Bambi Bambi Awards Jubilee Dallas (1978) Won
1985 Soap Opera Digest Award Soap Opera Digest Awards Outstanding Actor in a Prime Time Serial Dallas (1978) Won
1982 Bravo Otto Germany Bravo Otto Best Male TV Star (TV-Star m) Won
1981 Bravo Otto Germany Bravo Otto Best Male TV Star (TV-Star m) Won
2006 Pop Culture Award TV Land Awards Dallas (1978) Nominated
1987 Bambi Bambi Awards Jubilee Dallas (1978) Nominated
1985 Soap Opera Digest Award Soap Opera Digest Awards Outstanding Actor in a Prime Time Serial Dallas (1978) Nominated
1982 Bravo Otto Germany Bravo Otto Best Male TV Star (TV-Star m) Nominated
1981 Bravo Otto Germany Bravo Otto Best Male TV Star (TV-Star m) Nominated