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  1. William Smithers (born July 10, 1927) is an American actor, perhaps best known for his recurring role as Jeremy Wendell in the television series Dallas. He appeared in the series in 1981 and from 1984 to 1989.

  2. A smart, articulate, well-groomed actor with noticeably premature gray hair, Smithers is probably best remembered for his on-again, off-again role as arch-villain Jeremy Wendell who frequently crossed paths with J.R. Ewing on Dallas (1978) from 1981-1985.

  3. A smart, articulate, well-groomed actor with noticeably premature gray hair, Smithers is probably best remembered for his on-again, off-again role as arch-villain Jeremy Wendell who frequently crossed paths with J.R. Ewing on Dallas (1978) from 1981-1985.

  4. William Smithers was born July 10, 1927 in Richmond, VA (as Marion Wilkinson Smithers, Jr.) to father Marion Wilkinson Smithers and mother Marion Thompson Smithers. (Three Marions? Despite this, I was always called Bill.)

  5. Access to “Just Between Us!” : 32 TV Interviews on significant issues. Autobiography: Parts 1 and 2. Artist for a Day. Access to signed Star Trek cards by the host. Op-Eds & Other Thoughts.

  6. We ask William Smithers (now celebrating his 94th year) about his role as Jeremy Wendell on #Dallas. Were you a fan of Wendell on Dallas? See less. Comments.

  7. Feb 11, 2019 · We talk to William Smithers about his career and playing Jeremy Wendell on #Dallas. William Smithers will celebrate his 92nd Birthday this coming July.

  8. William Smithers was an American film and television actor.

  9. William Smithers. Highest Rated: 100% Attack! (1956) Lowest Rated: 72% Papillon (1973) Birthday: Jul 10, 1927. Birthplace: Richmond, Virginia, USA.

  10. BILL’S PHOTO ALBUMWilliam Smithers. As Thomas Jefferson in the first year of Paul Green’s “symphonic drama” “The Common Glory,” Williamsburg, Virgina. 1947. Bill, 20 years old, soon-to-be sophomore at Hampden-Sydney College, VA. As Tybalt ( center) in Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet,” starring Olivia de Havilland, Broadway, 1951.

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