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RECENT CREDITS
Taking Chance (TV)  Feb. 21, 2009
Bonneville (FILM)  Feb. 29, 2008
The Hive (TV)  Feb. 17, 2008
Standoff (TV)  Sep. 5, 2006
TV Land Awards 2006 (TV)  Mar. 22, 2006

BIOGRAPHY
This handsome, brawny, blue-eyed actor went from being a television star to a country musician before embarking on his latest career as a respected Broadway actor. Not bad for a guy best known for playing Luke Duke on....
This handsome, brawny, blue-eyed actor went from being a television star to a country musician before embarking on his latest career as a respected Broadway actor. Not bad for a guy best known for playing Luke Duke on the mindless TV classic, “The Dukes of Hazzard” (CBS, 1979-1985). One of television’s bona fide guilty pleasures, “The Dukes of Hazzard” may have been silly entertainment, but it nevertheless shot the then-unknown Wopat to major stardom, paving the way for his eventual success and, ultimately, artistic legitimization on the Broadway stage.

Born on Sept. 9, 1951 in Lodi, WI, Wopat grew up on a dairy farm with his six brothers and sisters. Blessed with an excellent voice, Wopat began singing in local musical productions at the age of 12, before graduating to lead roles in his high school productions. He studied music at the University of Wisconsin, but dropped out after two years to – of course – start his own rock band. After a year of living the impoverished hand-to-mouth existence of a struggling musician, Wopat seriously re-evaluated his future before deciding to move to New York to study acting. Though one might have questioned whether a struggling actor’s employment prospects looked any better than a struggling musician’s, for Wopat, it proved the right decision. Landing on his feet, Wopat made his New York stage debut in the short-lived 1978 stage revue, “A Bistro Car on the CNR.” This swiftly led to Wopat’s next role in the hit Cy Coleman musical “I Love My Wife,” in which he made his Broadway debut.

But as every theater actor could attest, TV was where the money was and continues to be. In the late 1970’s, Wopat auditioned alongside dozens of other actors for the lead role in a television pilot – a light-weight bucolic comedy called “The Dukes of Hazzard.” While the show was dismissed as fluff by every agent in town, competition for the two lead roles was surprisingly fierce. In the end, however, Wopat won (narrowly beating out competitors Gerald McRaney and Dennis Quaid) for the coveted role of hunky, cool-headed country boy, Lucas “Luke” Duke. Paired with younger newcomer John Schneider as Luke’s cousin, Bo Duke, “The Dukes of Hazzard” was an instant and inexplicable hit. A perpetual ratings winner years before blue and red state culture divided a nation, “Dukes” ran for six seasons on CBS and became a mainstay of 1980’s television. While hardly the stuff of high-brow entertainment, “The Dukes of Hazzard” did make stars of both Wopat and Schneider – as well as their curvy cousin, Daisy Duke, played by instant pin-up, Catherine Bach. In addition, the series also spawned two made-for-TV sequels: “The Dukes of Hazzard Reunion” (CBS, 1997) and “The Dukes of Hazzard in Hollywood” (CBS, 2000).

During the height of his “Dukes” fame, Wopat began a recording career. His first album, a self-titled 1983 country album sold reasonably well and spawned several more records. Post-“Dukes,” Wopat maintained a consistent, if more understated, presence in television. In the late 1980’s, Wopat returned twice to series television – first, as a newly remarried divorcee in the short-lived family drama, “Blue Skies” (CBS, 1988); and later, as a traveling vet in the shorter-lived drama, “A Peaceable Kingdom” (CBS, 1989). In the mid-1990’s, Wopat landed his most successful post-“Dukes” television gig to date – a recurring role as Jeff Robbins, one of Cybill Shepherd’s fictional ex-husbands in the eponymous sitcom, “Cybill” (CBS, 1995-98).

At the end of the day, however, Wopat would find his greatest artistic success, not on television, but the Broadway stage. In 1999, Wopat made a triumphant return to the Great White Way opposite Bernadette Peters in a revival of Irving Berlin’s “Annie Get Your Gun.” Widely praised by critics as the best work of his career, Wopat earned a Tony nomination that year for Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical.

Having moved comfortably beyond his former Luke Duke identity, Wopat continued to expand his repertoire into the new millennium. While never approaching the level of fame he achieved during his “Hazzard” days, Wopat seemed nevertheless poised for career longevity. In 2000, Wopat released his seventh album, The Still of the Night, a compilation of classic crooner ballads. 2005 proved to be an especially good year for the actor. In addition to winning a major role in the Broadway revival of David Mamet’s “Glengarry Glen Ross” (opposite Liev Schrieber, Alan Alda, Jeffrey Tambor and Golden Clapp), later that year, Wopat guested on an episode of “Smallville” (CW, 2001- ), reuniting with former co-star John Schneider. In the fifth season episode “Exposed,” Wopat played Senator Jack Jennings; an old friend of Jonathan Kent’s (played by Schneider). In an obvious nod to “Hazzard” fans, Wopat’s and Schneider’s characters found themselves in a pulse-pounding car chase scene, driving recklessly down country dirt roads – and across the country, a generation of TV watchers screamed “YEEEE-Haw!” in unison. 2005 also saw the release of “The Dukes of Hazzard” movie, a star-studded feature remake of the beloved TV show. This time out, however, Wopat’s role of Luke Duke was filled by Johnny Knoxville.

In contrast, the following year proved soberingly unpleasant for Wopat. On March 22, 2006, Wopat was charged with DUI and reckless driving in northern New Jersey, following a near collision with a police cruiser.




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