
Victoria Principal
Acting
Born 1950-01-03 · Fukuoka, Japan
Victoria Principal (born January 3, 1950) is an American actress, producer, entrepreneur, and author, best known for her role as Pamela Barnes Ewing on the American primetime television soap opera series Dallas. After her debut in John Huston's The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean (1972) (opposite Paul Newman), she earned a Golden Globe nomination as Most Promising Newcomer. After a few disappointing films, Principal decided to leave acting and became a Hollywood talent agent and booking agent, which was her profession from 1975 to late 1977. She then had ambitions to study at law school, and would support herself if needed through small acting roles on television, rather than in feature films, so as to fund her future college tuition. In 1977, she made a return to acting in a guest appearance on the pilot of the television series Fantasy Island which aired on the ABC network, and in the 1977 television film The Night They Took Miss Beautiful on the NBC network. The initial offer to return to acting came when television producer Aaron Spelling directly offered Principal a role in the pilot of his television series Fantasy Island, which she accepted on the condition that the contract stipulated for her role to be written out of the ongoing series, as she was reportedly planning to attend law school. When Principal obtained the pilot audition script for Dallas, her academic career ambitions changed, and she decided to return to the full-time acting profession.
Known for

Dallas
1978 · TV

The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson
1962 · TV

Titans
2000 · TV

Family Guy
1999 · TV

Providence
1999 · TV

Greatest Heroes of the Bible
1978 · TV

The Mike Douglas Show
1961 · TV

Hawaii Five-O
1968 · TV

The Practice
1997 · TV

Chicago Hope
1994 · TV

Home Improvement
1991 · TV

The Burden of Proof
1992 · TV

The Larry Sanders Show
1992 · TV

Banacek
1972 · TV

Just Shoot Me!
1997 · TV

Jack & Jill
1999 · TV

Intimate Portrait
1993 · TV

Fridays
1980 · TV

Wogan
1982 · TV

The Rosie O'Donnell Show
1996 · TV