Lee Majors

Lee Majors

Lee Major’s net worth is $15 Million. Also know about Lee Majors bio, salary, height, age weight, relationship, and more …

Lee Majors Wiki Biography

  • Lee Majors, or Harvey Lee Yeary as he was born, is a well-known name in the film industry. 
  • Lee Major’s net worth has been estimated to be in the millions of dollars. 
  • Lee Majors is best known for his roles in the television shows ‘The Big Valley,’ ‘The Six Million Dollar Man,’ and ‘The Fall Guy.’ 
  • These shows are often considered to be the primary sources of Lee’s wealth. 
  • Majors’ net worth has also increased as a result of his work as a voice actor. 
  • Harvey Lee Yeary was born in Wyandotte, Michigan, on April 23, 1939. 
  • Harvey was raised by his uncle in Middlesboro, Kentucky after both of his parents died in car accidents. 
  • He played football in high school and college before suffering an injury that prevented him from continuing to play. 
  • Lee Majors started his acting career and accumulated his net worth with a small part in William Castle’s film “Strait-Jacket.” 
  • Majors was dubbed “blond Elvis Presley” during his early acting days because he resembled the pop star. 
  • There were five seasons of ‘The Six Million Dollar Guy,’ as well as a television film in which Majors played the lead. 
  • “A Retelling of The Monkey’s Paw” “The Six-Million-Dollar Guy” is a film about a man who (1973-1978) “Trojan War” is a film about a war between the Romans and the (1997) “Weekend of Terror” is a film about a weekend of terror (1970) $15 million in 1939 (76 years old, 6 feet tall) (1.829 m) Actor Agency for ABC’s Movie of the Week (1980) Big Fat Liar will be released on April 23. 
  • (2002) Blond Bill Yeary Elvis Presley was an American singer who was best known for his Bob Odenkirk is a well-known actor. 
  • Dane is a Dane from Denmark. 
  • Majors, Luke Eastern Kentucky University is located in Richmond, Kentucky. 
  • Elvis Presley’s Showcase Majors of Faith Majors of Faith (m. 
  • 2002) Filmmaker Farrah Fawcett Larson, Glen A. Awards for Golden Apples (1982) Golden Boot Awards (Golden Boots) (1983) Best Actor in a Television Series – Drama Golden Globe Award (1974) Yeary, Harvey Lee Indiana University is a public research university in Bloomington Lee, Jason Scott Velez, Karen Karen Velez (m. 
  • 1988–1994) was a Mexican actress who lived from 1988 to 1994. 
  • Lee Majors’ net worth is unknown. 
  • Bezzerides, A.I. Yeary, Lee Louis F. Edelman is a well-known businessman. 

Lee Majors Quick Info

Full Name Lee Majors
Net Worth $15 Million
Date Of Birth April 23, 1939
Place Of Birth Wyandotte, Michigan, United States
Height 6 ft (1.829 m)
Profession Actor, Voice Actor, Film Producer, Television producer
Education Middlesboro High School, Indiana University, Eastern Kentucky University in Richmond, Estelle Harmon’s acting school at MGM
Nationality United States of America
Spouse Faith Majors (m. 2002), Karen Velez (m. 1988–1994)
Children Nikki Majors, Dane Luke Majors, Lee Majors II, Trey Kelley Majors
Parents Carl Yeary, Alice Yeary
Siblings Bill Yeary
Nicknames Harvey Lee Yeary, Lee Yeary, blond Elvis Presley
IMDB http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000516
Awards Golden Boot Awards (1983), Santa Monica Film Festival (2001), TV Land Awards (2003), Star on the Walk of Fame in television (1984)
Music Groups The Regime
Nominations The Stinkers Bad Movie Awards, Photoplay Awards – Most Promising New Star (Male, 1966), Golden Apple Awards (1982), Golden Globe Award – Best Actor in a Television Series – Drama (1974)
Movies “The Fall Guy” (1981–1986), “The Six Million Dollar Man” (1973-1978), “The Big Valley” (1965-1969), “Trojan War” (1997), “Out Cold” (2001), “Big Fat Liar” (2002), “The Brothers Solomon” (2007), “Weekend of Terror” (1970), “Agency” (1980), “Johnny” (2010)”The Ballad of Andy Crocker” (1969)
TV Shows ‘The Alfred Hitchcock Hour’, ‘Gunsmoke’, “The Monkey’s Paw – A Retelling”, “The Cowboy and the Ballerina” (1984)

Lee Majors Quotes

  • [About his recollections he had with Barbara Stanwyck]: Well, she was very tough – very tough. Off screen, she would call me Heath, and Linda Evans was Audra [our characters’ names]. I remember when we finished the show, I knew to be on time. When we finished the show, we were meeting her for lunch or dinner at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel. I’m sitting there by myself, 12:30. She comes in at 12:31. Barbara sits down. I’m there. Five minutes later, here comes Linda. She looks up and says, ‘Audra, you’re late.’ Five minutes: ‘Audra, you’re late.’ It’s like, Didn’t I teach you better?” I’ve learned that, and I’ve never forgotten it. I have been on time for everything, all my life.
  • [on learning from Barbara Stanwyck] She was okay with me, took me under her wing, and taught me discipline. She was always supportive of me. The lessons I learned from Stanwyck were be on time and know your words. She made me a disciplined actor all my life. The discipline made me ten minutes early for everything.
  • [in 1967] Actually my accent isn’t really Southern. It’s more mountaineer or hillbilly.
  • [on Elizabeth Taylor (1967)] My greatest thrill in the three years I’ve been in Hollywood was the night I went to the screening of King Rat (1965) and the party after, that Elizabeth and Richard Burton gave for George Segal. Everybody was there, Julie Andrews, Sean Connery, Lana Turner; I was like a fan. There were three big booths in the restaurant, and I was sitting in the one next to where the Burtons were sitting. Later in the evening she was standing next to me. I asked her if I could kiss her on the cheek and she said he wouldn’t like it. But then she changed her mind, and gave me one.
  • [on learning to ride and calf rope for The Big Valley (1965)] I hustled up about a hundred dollars and went out and bought a horse. I became friends with a great calf roper, just a little bitty guy. He was the world champion trick roper. I used to go out to his place all the time, and he taught me how to trick-rope calves.
  • [on The Big Valley (1965)] I remember when I first moved to Hollywood, how I used to sit on my front porch and watch everyone going to work. We lived right across the street from Four Star Studios. If anyone would have told me that one day I’d be starring along with Barbara Stanwyck in a television series . . . well, I still find it incredible.
  • [on his role as Heath Barkley in The Big Valley (1965)] That character was really very close to me. You know it isn’t all acting.
  • [on Owen Marshall, Counselor at Law (1971)] I like action, staying in shape, and all the exercise I ever got was walking from the counsel table to the judge’s bench in the courtroom on Sound Stage 27. It was basically Arthur Hill’s show. I had so little to do and so much time off that the series made a great golfer out of me.
  • In westerns, I’m right at home. When they tell me to ride that horse through that scene one more time, I say “Sure, glad to,” because I remember when I was the one doing all that running [as television’s The Six Million Dollar Man (1974)].
  • Even as a kid, I looked up to football coaches. All during junior high school, high school and college, they had the greatest influence on my life. And I never wanted to be anything but a coach. I never was a great All-American grid star at Eastern Kentucky Stage College, but I probably would have been a lot better if I didn’t get hurt during my junior year.
  • [on meeting Rock Hudson in 1958] We talked then about possibilities of my giving it a try in Hollywood, but even if he was serious I wanted to finish college and get my degree. If something developed, then I would have an insurance policy to fall back on.
  • [on his divorce from Farrah Fawcett] It seemed to happen all of a sudden. The time just went by. We probably had a good two weeks together or maybe a weekend here or there–but that just isn’t enough.
  • [on first wife Kathy] We were married June 17, 1961, in Lexington, Kentucky. I was a senior, a physical education and history major. I was going to coach football. I guess the big mistake was that we weren’t looking at it realistically. We were young and we loved each other and that seemed to make everything all right. We didn’t think about marriage involving anything more than loving each other.
  • [Of Barbara Stanwyck]: She was 60, when she started that show [when we did the pilot]; and that little lady [of course], she wasn’t very tall. I could touch my fingers around her waist, you know? She was one fiery little actress, one sweet lady, but she rode those buggies, she drove them, by herself. She did some shows where she was underground with Charles Bronson– trapped as a hostage, came out of there all muddied and everything, and she did some fights. She was a tough little girl.
  • [on his on- and off-screen chemistry with Barbara Stanwyck, who played Victoria Barkley] Barbara gave me my discipline. I’m always on the set before they need me, and I never leave the set, but I’m also the first to leave when they say, “That’s a wrap”. Barbara also taught me to learn your lines and everybody else’s. I learn the whole script before I show up. It pays, because once you’ve got the lines in your head, you can concentrate on movement or doing things with your props. I’ve tried to pass that on to other actors–make sure you know your words way ahead of time. The words are 90% of it. The other 10% is just the way you dress it up.
  • [on his most favorite television series to date] The Big Valley (1965) was the most fun at the time because it was my first and I love Westerns. All the action, horseback riding, I really loved it. The Six Million Dollar Man (1974) was so hard and so boring for me. Ironically that was the most popular. It was total work. You’re there [at the set] 16 to 17 hours a day.
  • [on Farrah Fawcett] All the stories that I was jealous of her career are just a lot of crap, I was always 110% behind her and proud of her. There are times when I think that perhaps I created a monster. But then, deep down, I know that’s just not true.
  • I don’t want to try and still be Warren Beatty or whoever. A lot of guys think they can be leading men forever. And believe me, we all can’t be.
  • [on his on- and off-relationship with Farrah Fawcett] We were together actually for 12 years. And after being in the business for awhile and so long, in one year, I think we saw each other two weeks. Two weeks in one year, that’s very tough. When you’re separated, you hear . . . things are printed in the press, this, this and this. So you think, can that be true? No, that’s not true . . . yes it is, this and this. But just the fact of not being together. Absence does not make the heart grow fonder . . . it makes you forget.
  • [on Clint Eastwood] Clint Eastwood’s a good friend, too–he and I used to play in softball games together.
  • [on his days as a football player] Even when I was young, playing college football, and I injured my knee, I bounced right back.
  • I’m from Middlesboro, Kentucky, a little town on the Tennessee and Virginia border.
  • [on playing second-fiddle to other iconic actors such as Ernest Borgnine, Danny Thomas, Eddie Albert, Michael Landon, Robert Reed, Bill Bixby, James Garner, Robert Fuller, James Brolin and Buddy Ebsen, who each have had their own successful careers: I have done a series in the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s.
  • [on the death of his ex-wife, Farrah Fawcett] She fought a tremendous battle against a terrible disease. She was an angel on earth and now an angel forever.
  • I was never into my looks. What’s important to me is my health and family.

Lee Majors Important Facts

  • $50,000 per episode (equivalent to $240,000 in 2014)
  • Credits Barbara Stanwyck as his favorite acting mentor/best friend.
  • Underwent angioplasty and heart bypass surgery in May 2003.
  • Revealed that he had a wonderful working relationship with Barbara Stanwyck on The Big Valley (1965).
  • Has appeared in the music video “When We Die” by the rock band Bowling for Soup. [March 2007]
  • The 1973 song “Midnight Train to Georgia” was inspired by Lee Majors and Farrah Fawcett.
  • His acting mentor was the late Barbara Stanwyck.
  • Friends with Robert Fuller, Randolph Mantooth, Linda Evans, James Brolin, Peter Breck and Richard Anderson.
  • Confirmed he did not attend Farrah’s funeral, explaining he had his own memories of her and did not want to be a distraction. [November 2010]
  • Changed his name to Lee Majors after Joan Crawford and others in Hollywood had difficulty pronouncing his real name of Yeary.
  • He first acted with actress Lindsay Wagner, when she guest-starred on his television series, Owen Marshall, Counselor at Law (1971) in 1971. A few years later, she guest-starred on his television series, The Six Million Dollar Man (1974), originating her best-known role as The Bionic Woman (1976). They would continue to work together on-and-off for the next twenty years, and still appear together at Bionic conventions.
  • Boyfriend of Patti Chandler during the 1960s.
  • His ex-wife Farrah Fawcett died in 2009, after a long battle against cancer.
  • Before he was an actor, he worked as a park recreational director.
  • Paul Newman and James Dean are his idols.
  • He was awarded a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6933 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California.
  • Best known by the public for his starring roles as Colonel Steve Austin on The Six Million Dollar Man (1974) and as Colt Seavers on The Fall Guy (1981).
  • He entered Indiana University on a football scholarship but was expelled two years later for his involvement in a fraternity fight. After transferring to Eastern Kentucky University, a game injury paralyzed him from the waist down for two weeks. That revealed a condition of congenital spondylolisthesis, an alignment defect of the spine, and he was forced to leave what was beginning to look like a great football career.
  • Was a star athlete at Middlesboro High School. The school named their football field Lee Majors Field in 1986 and inducted him into their Sports Hall of Fame in 1991.
  • Was one of the judges in 1981 Miss Universe pageant.
  • Graduated from Eastern Kentucky College with a degree in History and Physical Education (1962). He later received an honorary doctorate form the university in 2006.
  • In 1976, he and wife Farrah Fawcett made television history – a husband and wife each starring in separate top-rated shows.
  • His hometown is Middlesboro, Kentucky.
  • Signature exclamation as Heath Barkley in The Big Valley (1965) was “Boy, Howdy!”.
  • Lee is not related to Johnny Majors, the 1956 Heisman Trophy runner-up at Tennessee who became a great college football coach at Iowa State, Pitt and Tennessee. Lee adopted Majors’ name after meeting him and becoming friends.
  • Has starred concurrently on two television series at the same time: as Jess Brandon on Owen Marshall, Counselor at Law (1971) and Colonel Steve Austin on The Six Million Dollar Man (1973).
  • Landed the role of Joe Buck in Midnight Cowboy (1969) but The Big Valley (1965) was picked up for another year and was contractually obligated to pass on the role, which was then made famous by Jon Voight.
  • Suffered three separate whippings on The Big Valley (1965). In a Mexican jail in The Big Valley: Legend of a General: Part 1 (1966), shown 9-19-66. In a penal camp in The Big Valley: The Iron Box (1966), shown 11-28-66. At the hands of a religious sect in The Big Valley: Journey Into Violence (1967), shown 12-18-67.
  • Turned down the Mac Davis role in North Dallas Forty (1979) in favor of an independent production that never got off the ground.
  • Has three children with Karen Velez: daughter Nikki Majors and twin sons Dane and Trey.
  • Has one son with Kathy Robinson: Lee Majors II.

Lee Majors Filmography

Title Year Status Character Role
The Bionic Woman 1976 TV Series Col. Steve Austin Actor
Francis Gary Powers: The True Story of the U-2 Spy Incident 1976 TV Movie Francis Gary Powers Actor
Owen Marshall, Counselor at Law 1971-1974 TV Series Jess Brandon Actor
The Six Million Dollar Man: The Solid Gold Kidnapping 1973 TV Movie Col. Steve Austin Actor
The Six Million Dollar Man: Wine, Women and War 1973 TV Movie Col. Steve Austin Actor
The Six Million Dollar Man 1973 TV Movie Steve Austin Actor
The Sixth Sense 1972 TV Series Clayton Ross Actor
Alias Smith and Jones 1972 TV Series Joe Briggs Actor
Marcus Welby, M.D. 1971 TV Series Jess Brandon Actor
The Virginian 1970-1971 TV Series Roy Tate Actor
Weekend of Terror 1970 TV Movie Larry Actor
The Liberation of L.B. Jones 1970 Steve Mundine Actor
Bracken’s World 1970 TV Series Frank Carver Actor
The Ballad of Andy Crocker 1969 TV Movie Andy Crocker Actor
The Big Valley 1965-1969 TV Series Heath Barkley Actor
Will Penny 1967 Blue Actor
Clambake 1967 Man in Restaurant (uncredited) Actor
The Alfred Hitchcock Hour 1965 TV Series Howard White Actor
Gunsmoke 1965 TV Series Dave Lukens Actor
Strait-Jacket 1964 Frank Harbin (uncredited) Actor
Victory by Submission 2016 completed Sam Jordan Actor
Spring Break ’83 completed Carter Actor
Jean 2016 Spiritual Stone Actor
Ash vs Evil Dead 2016 TV Series Brock Williams Actor
Wild Bill Hickok: Swift Justice 2016 Actor
Almosting It 2016 Chet Actor
Toxin: 700 Days Left on Earth 2015 President Austin Actor
Do You Believe? 2015 J.D. Actor
The AXI: Avengers of eXtreme Illusions 2015 TV Series Steve the Mechanic Actor
The Mechanic 2015/III Short Steve the Mechanic Actor
The Gift 2014/XIV Short Narrator (voice) Actor
The Legend of DarkHorse County 2014 Future Sheriff McElroy Actor
Dallas 2013 TV Series Ken Richards Actor
Matt’s Chance 2013 The Figure Actor
CSI: NY 2012 TV Series Paul Burton Actor
Crash & Burn 2012 TV Movie Boss McCoy Actor
Grey’s Anatomy 2011 TV Series Chuck Cain Actor
Jerusalem Countdown 2011 Rockwell Actor
G.I. Joe: Renegades 2010-2011 TV Series General Abernathy Actor
$#*! My Dad Says 2011 TV Series Don Reger Actor
Corruption.Gov 2010 Jim Lawrence Actor
Undercovers 2010 TV Series Actor
Johnny 2010/I Dr. Miller Actor
Human Target 2010 TV Series Christopher Chance Actor
Community 2010 TV Series Admiral Slaughter Actor
According to Jim 2008-2009 TV Series God Actor
The Game 2007-2009 TV Series Coach Ross Actor
The Adventures of Umbweki 2009 Police Captain Richard Actor
Cold Case 2008 TV Series Dean London ’08 Actor
Weeds 2008 TV Series Minute-Man Leader Actor
Wainy Days 2008 TV Series David’s Dad Actor
Me & Lee? 2007 TV Movie Actor
Wapos Bay: The Series 2007 TV Series Steve From Ausin Actor
Ben 10: Race Against Time 2007 TV Movie Max Tennyson Actor
The Minor Accomplishments of Jackie Woodman 2007 TV Series Governor of California Actor
The Brothers Solomon 2007 Ed Solomon Actor
Guys Choice 2007 TV Movie Steve Austin Actor
Waitin’ to Live 2006 Bucko Cassidy Actor
Lightspeed 2006 TV Movie Tanner Actor
When I Find the Ocean 2006 Thomas Actor
TV: The Movie 2006 Dr. Lakin / Announcer / Lieutenant / … Actor
Hell to Pay 2005 Marshall Boone Actor
The Last Confederate: The Story of Robert Adams 2005 Dr. Jack Lee (scenes deleted) Actor
Will & Grace 2005 TV Series Burt Wolfe Actor
Arizona Summer 2004 Mr. Travers Actor
The Trail to Hope Rose 2004 TV Movie Marshall Toll Actor
Jake 2.0 2003 TV Series Richard Fox Actor
Fate 2003 Oscar Odgen Actor
Grand Theft Auto: Vice City 2002 Video Game Mitch Baker (voice) Actor
Son of the Beach 2002 TV Series Colonel Seymore Kooze Actor
Big Fat Liar 2002 Vince Actor
Out Cold 2001 John Majors Actor
Hard Knox 2001 TV Movie Darrell Knox Actor
Here 2001 Short Bane Actor
Hotel! 2001 TV Movie President of the U.S.A. Actor
Too Much Sun 2000 TV Series Scott Reed Actor
The War Next Door 2000 TV Series Kennedy Smith Sr. Actor
V.I.P. 2000 TV Series Jed Irons Actor
Primary Suspect 2000 Lt. Blake Actor
New Jersey Turnpikes 1999 Actor
Chapter Zero 1999 Manatee Man Actor
Soldier of Fortune, Inc. 1999 TV Series Tom Winters Actor
Walker, Texas Ranger 1998 TV Series Sheriff Bell Actor
Musketeers Forever 1998 Ben O’Connor Actor
The Protector 1998/III Austin Actor
Trojan War 1997 Officer Austin Actor
Raven: Return of the Black Dragons 1997 TV Movie Ski Actor
Lost Treasure of Dos Santos 1997 TV Movie Roy Stark Actor
Daytona Beach 1996 TV Movie Owen Travers Actor
Promised Land 1996 TV Series Jim Walker Actor
Lonesome Dove: The Series 1995 TV Series Woodrow F Call Actor
Bionic Ever After? 1994 TV Movie Steve Austin Actor
The Cover Girl Murders 1993 TV Movie Rex Kingman Actor
Raven 1992-1993 TV Series Herman ‘Ski’ Jablonski Actor
Fire: Trapped on the 37th Floor 1991 TV Movie Deputy Chief Sterling Actor
Tour of Duty 1990 TV Series ‘Pop’ Scarlet Actor
Keaton’s Cop 1990 Mike Gable Actor
CBS Summer Playhouse 1989 TV Series Jesse Pruitt Actor
Bionic Showdown: The Six Million Dollar Man and the Bionic Woman 1989 TV Movie Steve Austin Actor
Scrooged 1988 Lee Majors Actor
Reed Down Under 1988 TV Movie Reed Harris Actor
Dolly 1988 TV Series Harold ‘Chance’ Coleman Actor
The Return of the Six-Million-Dollar Man and the Bionic Woman 1987 TV Movie Col. Steve Austin Actor
A Smoky Mountain Christmas 1986 TV Movie Mountain Dan Actor
The Fall Guy 1981-1986 TV Series Colt Seavers Actor
The Cowboy and the Ballerina 1984 TV Movie Bob Clayton (aka Clay) Actor
The Love Boat 1983 TV Series Robert Richards Actor
Trauma Center 1983 TV Series Colt Seavers Actor
Starflight: The Plane That Couldn’t Land 1983 TV Movie Captain Cody Briggs Actor
Circle of Two 1981 Theatre Patron (uncredited) Actor
The Last Chase 1981 Franklyn Hart Actor
High Noon, Part II: The Return of Will Kane 1980 TV Movie Will Kane Actor
Agency 1980 Philip Morgan Actor
Killer Fish 1979 Lasky Actor
Steel 1979 Mike Catton Actor
The Norseman 1978 Thorvald Actor
The Six Million Dollar Man 1974-1978 TV Series Col. Steve Austin Actor
Just a Little Inconvenience 1977 TV Movie Frank Logan Actor
The Fall Guy 1981-1986 TV Series singer – 112 episodes Music Department
CBS Summer Playhouse 1989 TV Series executive producer – 1 episode Producer
Bionic Showdown: The Six Million Dollar Man and the Bionic Woman 1989 TV Movie co-producer Producer
Reed Down Under 1988 TV Movie executive producer Producer
The Fall Guy TV Series co-producer – 49 episodes, 1981 – 1984 co-executive producer – 23 episodes, 1985 – 1986 Producer
The Cowboy and the Ballerina 1984 TV Movie executive producer Producer
Steel 1979 executive producer Producer
The Norseman 1978 executive producer – uncredited Producer
Just a Little Inconvenience 1977 TV Movie executive producer Producer
The Fall Guy 1985 TV Series performer – 1 episode Soundtrack
The Six Million Dollar Man 1975 TV Series performer – 4 episodes Soundtrack
The Six Million Dollar Man 1975 TV Series 1 episode Director
The Time Machinists Documentary post-production Narrator (voice) Self
IMDb at San Diego Comic-Con 2016 TV Series Himself Self
The Greg Gutfeld Show 2015 TV Series Himself Self
The AXI: Avengers of eXtreme Illusions 2014 TV Series Himself – Narrator Self
The Five 2013 TV Series Himself Self
Fashion News Live 2007-2013 TV Series Himself Self
78th Annual Hollywood Christmas Parade 2009 TV Movie Himself Self
Flashback: Lee Majors Goes to Mars 2009 Video short Himself Self
When I Find the Ocean: Behind the Scenes 2008 Video documentary short Himself Self
Remembering ‘The Fall Guy’: An American Classic 2007 Video short Himself Self
Entertainment Tonight 2006 TV Series Himself Self
The Witnessing of Angels 2006 Video documentary Host Self
2005 Taurus World Stunt Awards 2005 TV Special Himself Self
Biography 2003-2005 TV Series documentary Himself / Steve Austin Self
The O’Reilly Factor 2005 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
The Best of ‘So Graham Norton’ 2004 Video Himself Self
Married to the Kellys 2004 TV Series Himself Self
Out Cold: Greetings from Bull Mountain 2004 Video documentary short Himself Self
TV Land Awards: A Celebration of Classic TV 2003 TV Special documentary Himself Self
TVography: Lee Majors – Hollywood’s Bionic Hero 2002 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Christmas with the Stars 2001 TV Movie Himself Self
Forbidden Secrets 2001 TV Series documentary Himself – Host Self
Crash Landing: Stories of Survival 2001 TV Movie documentary Narrator Self
Entertainment Tonight Presents: Whatever Happened to Your Favorite TV Action Heroes? 2001 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Headliners & Legends: Farrah Fawcett 2000 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Family Guy 2000 TV Series Himself Self
The Magic of Thailand 2000 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Friday Night’s All Wright 1999 TV Series documentary Himself – Guest Self
So Graham Norton 1999 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
P.S.I. Luv U 1991 TV Series Himself Self
The Annual Variety Club’s Big Heart Awards 1986 TV Special Himself Self
Playboy Mid Summer Night’s Dream Party 1985 1985 TV Movie Himself Self
Your Choice for the Film Awards 1984 TV Special Himself – Host Self
The 24th Annual International Broadcasting Awards 1984 TV Special Himself – Presenter Self
Salute! 1983 TV Series Himself Self
The Best of Everything 1983 TV Movie Himself Self
Battle of the Network Stars XI 1981 TV Special Himself – Host Self
The 22nd Annual Grammy Awards 1980 TV Special Himself Self
The 35th Annual Golden Globe Awards 1978 TV Movie documentary Herself – Presenter Self
Superstunt 1977 TV Special Self
The 29th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards 1977 TV Special Himself – Presenter Self
The 3rd Annual People’s Choice Awards 1977 TV Special Himself – Presenter Self
The 34th Annual Golden Globe Awards 1977 TV Special Himself – Nominee: Best Actor in a TV – Series – Drama Self
The Brady Bunch Variety Hour 1977 TV Series Himself Self
A Special Olivia Newton-John 1976 TV Special Self
Dinah! 1976 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson 1976 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Donny and Marie 1975-1976 TV Series Himself Self
The 17th Annual TV Week Logie Awards 1975 TV Special Himself Self
ABC Funshine Saturday Sneak Peek 1974 TV Movie Himself / Steve Austin (host) Self
The Hollywood Squares 1969 TV Series Himself Self
The Dating Game 1966-1967 TV Series Himself Self
Stossel 2014 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
The O’Reilly Factor 2014 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno 2011 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Pioneers of Television 2011 TV Mini-Series documentary Heath Barkley from Big Valley Archive Footage
30 for 30 2009 TV Series documentary Himself – Actor, The Fall Guy Archive Footage
Entertainment Tonight 2009 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Biography 2000 TV Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
Playboy: Farrah Fawcett, All of Me 1997 Video documentary Himself Archive Footage
Memories of 1970-1991 1991 TV Series documentary Himself Archive Footage

Lee Majors Awards

Year Award Ceremony Nomination Movie Category
2003 TV Land Award TV Land Awards Superest Super Hero The Six Million Dollar Man (1974) Won
2001 Moxie! Award Santa Monica Film Festival Best Actor Here (2001) Won
1984 Star on the Walk of Fame Walk of Fame Television At 6933 Hollywood Blvd. Won
1983 Golden Boot Golden Boot Awards Won
2003 TV Land Award TV Land Awards Superest Super Hero The Six Million Dollar Man (1974) Nominated
2001 Moxie! Award Santa Monica Film Festival Best Actor Here (2001) Nominated
1984 Star on the Walk of Fame Walk of Fame Television At 6933 Hollywood Blvd. Nominated
1983 Golden Boot Golden Boot Awards Nominated