At the age of 77, Pat Colbert passed away. She starred in a soap opera and DALLAS.
On the show, the actress portrayed Dora Mae.
She suffered three strokes in the last ten years.
Pat appeared in the seventh season of Dallas in 1983.
Her behavior She managed the Oil Baron’s Club and portrayed the main character in the program until its final season in 1991.
Throughout the course of the fourteenth and final season, she appeared in over sixty-five episodes.
After Dallas concluded, she appeared in episodes of Sisters (1991) and True Colors (1991).
She portrayed a model in the 1979 television series Eischiled, starring Joe Don Baker. Her first noteworthy acting role was this one.
She has appeared in two more films, Fall Guy and Capitol.
Capitol was a popular soap opera that ran from 1982 until 1987. Pat portrayed Cora Mullens in the program.
Alongside Bill Cosby, the celebrity starred in the 1987 film Leonard Part 6. Colbert portrayed Allison Parker in the spy comedy about a restaurant owner who was formerly a spy.
She would go on to star in films including Thom & Dusty Go to Mexico: The Lost Treasure (2014) and If Not for His Grace (2015).
He was born on January 16, 1947, in Los Angeles.
From 1980 to 1981, you might catch her on Flamingo Road. She also starred in the television drama “A Death in California” in 1985.
Her son Michael, two other siblings, and her sister will all miss her.
Shaun Chang of the film and TV site Hill Place said The Hollywood Reporter, “As the only recurring African-American character on the series, Dora Mae never had a storyline because Dallas never tried to be anything more than the saga of the Ewing family.” “However, she performed the part with grace and intelligence.”
“The show itself and its main characters treated her with kindness and never made fun of her.”
Despite being set in a large metropolis, Dallas featured a large cast of recurring supporting characters who contributed to the show’s sense of community. The episode included a significant amount of Dora Mae.
Texas debuted on television in 1978. The reason the program stopped in 1991, according to some, was that it was “too expensive for its own good.”