Pat Colbert died at the age of 77. She was in DALLAS and a soap opera.
The actress played Dora Mae on the show.
In the past ten years, she had three strokes.
In 1983, Pat was in the seventh season of Dallas.
The way she acts She played the lead role in the show until the last season in 1991 and was the manager of the Oil Baron’s Club.
She went on to be in more than 65 episodes, all the way through the 14th and final season.
She was in episodes of Sisters (1991) and True Colors (1991) after Dallas ended.

In 1979, she played a model in the TV show Eischiled, which also starred Joe Don Baker. This was her first creditable acting job.
Fall Guy and Capitol are two more movies she has been in.
From 1982 to 1987, Capitol was a soap opera that people watched. In the show, Pat played Cora Mullens.
The star was also in the 1987 movie Leonard Part 6 with Bill Cosby. Allison Parker was played by Colbert in the spy comedy about a former spy who runs a restaurant.
She would go on to be in movies like If Not for His Grace (2015) and Thom & Dusty Go to Mexico: The Lost Treasure (2014).
He was born in Los Angeles on January 16, 1947.
You could see her on Flamingo Road from 1980 to 1981, and she also had a part in the 1985 TV miniseries “A Death in California.”
Three people will miss her: her sister, two other siblings, and her son Michael.
“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,” Shaun Chang of the movie and TV blog Hill Place told The Hollywood Reporter. “But she played the role with elegance and intelligence.”
“The main characters and the show itself were kind to her and didn’t talk down to her at all.”

“Dallas had a lot of recurring supporting characters who helped make the show feel like a community, even though it was set in a big city. Dora Mae was an important part of the show.”
Dallas first aired in 1978. People said that the show ended in 1991 because it was “too expensive for its own good.”