}
Main characters •
Lucas K. "Luke" Duke (portrayed by
Tom Wopat) is the dark-haired, older Duke boy. He is typically the one who thinks of the plan that will get himself and his cousin Bo out of whatever trouble they have gotten into. Luke wears a checked blue shirt (a plain blue shirt in most, though not all, second-season episodes) and a denim jacket over it in first season and a few later second-season episodes. He is a veteran of the
United States Marine Corps and a former boxer. Luke acted hypocritically on occasion, most prominently in season 1 episode 6 "Swamp Molly". Luke was the first Duke to perform the "hood slide" across the
General Lee, which is seen in the opening credits of the show (a shot taken from the second episode, "Daisy's Song"). According to Wopat the slide was an accident, because his foot got caught on the side of the
General Lee when he attempted to jump across the hood; he also caught his arm on the hood's radio antenna, resulting in such antennas being removed from later versions of the
General Lee. However, the "hood slide" quickly proved popular and became a regular staple of the rest of the episodes. The only episode to directly refer to the age difference between Luke and Bo is in the seventh-season opener, the "flashback" episode "Happy Birthday, General Lee", where it is stated that Luke had already been in the Marines while Bo was in his last year at high school. Though Bo and Luke share the CB call sign "Lost Sheep", in the season-one episode "Money to Burn", Luke refers to himself (singularly) as "Sittin' Duck". •
Beauregard "Bo" Duke (portrayed by
John Schneider) is the blond-haired, younger Duke boy. He is more of the "shoot first, ask questions later" type than Luke. In the first-season episode "High Octane", his actual first name is revealed to be Beauregard. Bo had his eye, or heart, distracted by a pretty girl at times, leading the Dukes into trouble in a few episodes. Bo usually wears a cream-yellow shirt; for the first two seasons he wears a blue T-shirt underneath (brown in the first episode). This was slowly phased out during the third season. An ex-
stock car driver, Bo is the one who drives the
General Lee most of the time, with Luke
riding shotgun. Bo was also the first Duke to jump the
General Lee. and "Share and Share Alike". The Duke boys share the
CB call sign or handle "Lost Sheep". •
Daisy Duke (portrayed by
Catherine Bach) is Bo, Luke, Coy, and Vance's cousin. She is beautiful, honest, and kind, although she can be slightly over-trusting and naïve, which has led the Duke family into trouble on a number of occasions. She sometimes aspires to be a songwriter and singer, and at other times, a reporter. Daisy races around Hazzard with her cousins, first in a yellow and black 1974
Plymouth Road Runner (later a 1971 Plymouth Satellite was used) and then, from mid-season 2 on, in her trademark white 1980
Jeep CJ-7, christened
Dixie with a golden eagle emblem on the hood (and the name "Dixie" on the hood sides). Daisy works as a
waitress at the Boar's Nest, the local bar and
pub owned by Boss Hogg, as part of an agreement with Boss Hogg so that he would give Uncle Jesse and the boys a loan for a lower interest rate so the boys could purchase the entry fee for a race in which they wished to race the
General Lee. The arrangement was supposed to be for an indefinite time, but there are several times throughout the series when Hogg fires her. However, he always ends up rehiring her at the end of each episode because of various circumstances. Although Hogg is a nemesis to Daisy and her family, she is friends with Hogg's wife Lulu. Daisy often uses her charming personality and sex appeal to influence male policemen or henchmen into going easier on other Duke family members and/or cause them to become too distracted to carry out their assigned duties or evil plans. Daisy also utilizes her position at the restaurant to get insider information to help the Dukes in foiling Hogg's various schemes. She also has the distinction of having her trademark high-cut jean shorts. The character was originally intended to wear ruffled skirts, but on the first day of filming Bach brought a costume that she had designed based on a pair of jean shirts, a T-shirt, and high heels. It was inspired by the actual clothes that Bach had seen waitresses wear at roadhouses in Georgia. This style of shorts became colloquially called "
daisy dukes" in American culture. Her CB handle is "Bo Peep". Occasionally, the variant "Country Cousin" is used. •
Jesse Duke (portrayed by
Denver Pyle), referred to by just about everyone in Hazzard other than Boss Hogg as "Uncle Jesse", is a
farmer, the patriarch of the Duke clan, and the father figure to all of the Dukes who stay with him on the Duke farm. Jesse apparently has at least five siblings but no children of his own and he happily provides for his nephews and niece in the unexplained absence of all of their parents. Gy Waldron, the creator of the show, states on the DVDs that their parents were killed in a car wreck, but it was never mentioned in the show. In the third broadcast episode titled "Mary Kaye's Baby", Jesse says that he has delivered many babies, including Bo and Luke. Jesse Duke, in his youth, had been a
ridgerunner in direct competition with Boss Hogg, whom he always calls "J.D.". However, while both Boss Hogg and Uncle Jesse would scowl at the mention of the other's name, the two enjoyed a lifelong "friendship" of sorts, with one helping the other when in desperate need. Jesse educated his nephews against Hogg, and often provides the cousins with inspirational sage advice. Uncle Jesse drives a white 1973
Ford F-100 pickup truck. In the barn, he also has his old moonshine-running car, called
Sweet Tillie in its first appearance (in the first-season episode "High Octane"), but referred to as
Black Tillie in subsequent appearances. In the second-season episode "Follow That Still" and the sixth-season episode "The Boar's Nest Bears", the marriage to, and death of, his wife is mentioned; he also mentions marrying her in the first-season episode "Luke's Love Story". His CB handle is "Shepherd", a reference to his always seeking out and saving his "lost sheep"—Bo and Luke—from their various mishaps. •
Sheriff Rosco P. Coltrane (portrayed by
James Best) is the bumbling and corrupt
sheriff of Hazzard County and right-hand man/brother-in-law of its corrupt county administrator Jefferson Davis "J.D." Hogg ("Boss Hogg") whom Rosco calls his "little fat buddy", "Little Chrome Dome", "Little Meadow-Muffin", and several other names. In the early episodes, it is mentioned that Rosco spent the first 20 years of his career as a mostly honest lawman, but after the county voted away his pension, Rosco joined Hogg in an effort to fund his retirement in his last couple of years as sheriff. Early episodes also portray him as a fairly hard-nosed, somewhat darker policeman character, who even shoots a criminal during the first season. As the series progressed and producers recognized how popular it had become with children, Best altered his portrayal into a more bumbling, comical character. By the end of the first season, his origin had been virtually forgotten (and his job as sheriff appeared to become open-ended). Rosco is also the younger brother of Lulu Coltrane Hogg (Boss Hogg's wife). Rosco frequently initiates car chases with Bo and Luke Duke, but the Duke boys usually elude Rosco by outwitting him, with Rosco typically wrecking his patrol car as a result from which he would nearly always escape unscathed. Only two episodes—the fourth season's "Coltrane vs. Duke" and the sixth season's "Too Many Roscos"—toy with the concept of him being injured. The first episode has him faking injury so that the Duke boys would lose the
General Lee while the latter has Best playing two characters. His normal character, Rosco, is presumed drowned while a criminal that looks like Rosco has a headache. These chases are often the result of Rosco setting up illegal speed traps such as false or changing speed limit signs and various other trickery, which became increasingly cartoonish and far-fetched as the seasons passed. While he enjoys "hot pursuit" he seemingly never intends for anyone to get seriously hurt. His middle initial, "P", was added at the start of the second season, and only one episode (the third season's "Mrs. Rosco P. Coltrane", in which he is subjected to a scam marriage) reveals his middle name, "Purvis". Rosco also has a soft spot for his
Basset Hound Flash, introduced at the start of the third season. His radio codename is "Red Dog". When Best briefly boycotted the show during the mid-second season because of the bad changing room conditions, he was temporarily replaced by several "one-off" sheriffs, the longest standing being Sheriff Grady Bird, played by
Dick Sargent, who appeared in two episodes ("Officer Daisy Duke" and "Jude Emery"). Best returned after the changing room conditions were taken care of. •
Boss Jefferson Davis "J.D." Hogg (portrayed by
Sorrell Booke) is the wealthiest man in Hazzard County, and owns most of its property and businesses—whether directly or by holding the
mortgages over the land. Usually dressed in an all-white suit, he is the fat, greedy, corrupt
county commissioner with visions of grandeur and a voracious appetite for food, who constantly orders Rosco to "Get them Duke boys!" He is also Bo and Luke's probation officer for when Bo and Luke need to leave Hazzard, they always get permission from him. Boss Hogg is also married to (and dominated by) Rosco's "fat sister" Lulu Coltrane Hogg, a point that does not always sit well with either Boss Hogg or Rosco; Hogg sometimes claims that Rosco is indebted to him because of it, though his on-screen interactions with Lulu typically show him loving her deeply (and giving in to her stronger personality). In addition to his role as county commissioner, he is also the
police commissioner,
land commissioner, and bank president. Boss is also the
fire chief of the Hazzard Fire Department and the owner of, or primary mortgage holder on, most of the places in the county, including the Boar's Nest, Rhubottem's Store, Cooter's garage and the Duke farm. It is implied in some episodes that he is the
justice of the peace, but in others Hazzard relies on a
circuit judge. In the episode "Coltrane vs. Duke", Hogg represents Rosco when he sues the Dukes, implying that he is a licensed
attorney. His vehicle is a white 1970
Cadillac Coupe de Ville convertible, with bull horns mounted on the hood. In the first few seasons, he is almost always driven around by a
chauffeur. His old moonshine-running car was called
The Gray Ghost. Every morning, Boss Hogg would drink coffee and eat raw liver (Booke, a
method actor, actually ate the raw liver). Booke based the voice of Boss Hogg off of South Carolina senator
Strom Thurmond. Boss Hogg is described in one analysis as "an ineffectual bad guy—hence amusing". Booke also plays Boss Hogg's benevolent identical twin brother
Abraham Lincoln Hogg in one episode. •
Cooter Davenport (portayed by
Ben Jones) is the Hazzard County
mechanic, nicknamed "Crazy Cooter" (a "
cooter" is a large freshwater turtle, common in the southeastern U.S.). In the early episodes, he is a wild man, often breaking the law. By the end of the first season, he has settled down and become an easygoing good ol' boy. Although not mentioned in the first couple of episodes, by the mid-first season, he owns "Cooter's Garage" in Hazzard County Square, directly across from the Sheriff's Department. Cooter is an "honorary Duke" as he shares the same values and often assists the Dukes in escaping Rosco's clutches or helps them to foil Boss Hogg's schemes. During the second season, Jones left the series for a few episodes due to a dispute over whether the character should be clean-shaven or have a full beard. In his absence, Cooter's place was filled by several of Cooter's supposed cousins who were never mentioned before or since. Jones returned when the dispute was solved—Cooter would be clean-shaven (although, for continuity reasons, with the episodes being broadcast in a different order to that which they were filmed, he was not clean-shaven until the third season onwards). Cooter drives a variety of trucks, including
Fords,
Chevys, and
GMCs. His CB handle is "Crazy Cooter" and he often starts his CB transmissions with "Breaker one, Breaker one, I might be crazy but I ain't dumb, Craaaazy Cooter comin' atcha, come on." •
Deputy Enos Strate (portayed by
Sonny Shroyer) is a friend of the Dukes but, while working for Rosco and Boss, he is often forced into pursuing the Dukes and/or arresting them on trumped-up charges. In the early episodes, Enos is shown to be a rather good driver (and respected as such by Bo and Luke) but, by the end of the first season, he is shown to be as incompetent a driver as Rosco. His common catchphrase is "Possum on a gumbush!" When he returns from
his stint in Los Angeles, he seems to be able to stand up to Boss and Rosco slightly more, and sometimes refuses to participate in their schemes. In the early episodes, Rosco frequently calls him "jackass", which soon evolved into the more family-friendly "dipstick" as the show became a hit with younger viewers (though Boss Hogg, who also used the term "jackass" to berate Sheriff Rosco, occasionally returned to calling Enos this in later seasons). Enos has a crush on Daisy Duke that she often uses to the Dukes' advantage in unraveling Hogg and Rosco's schemes. Enos is very much in love with Daisy, and although Daisy seems to love him back, it is supposedly only as a close friend. In the penultimate episode, "Enos and Daisy's Wedding", the two plan on getting married, only to have Enos call it off at the last minute due to an attack of
hives, brought on by the excitement of possibly being married to Daisy. Later, in the
first reunion movie, Enos and Daisy become a pair again and plan to get married, but this time Daisy backs out at the last minute upon the unexpected sight of her ex-husband. •
Deputy Cletus Hogg (portayed by
Rick Hurst) is Boss Hogg's second cousin-twice-removed who is generally friendly and dim-witted. Like Enos, Cletus is often forced by Rosco and Hogg to chase the Dukes on trumped up charges. While Cletus is good-hearted, and sometimes resentful of having to treat the Dukes in such a way, he is somewhat more willing to go along with Hogg and Rosco than Enos. Cletus has a crush (though not as bad as Enos' crush) on Daisy and is even convinced she wants to marry him. Like Enos and Rosco, Cletus frequently ends up landing in a pond when pursuing the Duke boys in a
car chase. Cletus makes his first appearance as the driver of a bank truck, part of Hogg's latest get-rich-quick scheme, in the first-season episode "Money To Burn", and becomes temporary deputy while Enos is away in the second-season episodes "The Meeting" and "Road Pirates". Leaving a job at the local junkyard, he becomes permanent deputy in the third season's "Enos Strate to the Top". After Enos' return, the pair both serve as deputies and share the same patrol car until the end of season five. Each of the Hazzard County Sheriff's Department officers drives various mid- to late-1970s Chrysler mid-size
B body patrol cars, most often a
Dodge Monaco or
Plymouth Fury. •
Coy Duke (portayed by
Byron Cherry) is another blond-haired cousin who moves to Uncle Jesse's farm along with his cousin Vance after Bo and Luke left Hazzard to join the
NASCAR circuit in season 5. Like his cousin Bo, he often drives the
General Lee, is a bit wilder than Vance and chases women; he and Vance are only in the first 19 episodes of season 5 and Coy and Vance are in only one episode with their cousins Bo and Luke when they return from the NASCAR circuit. Supposedly, with cousin Vance, Coy had previously lived on the Duke farm until 1976, before the series had started. •
Vance Duke (portrayed by
Christopher Mayer), an obvious replacement for Luke, filled the void of a dark-haired Duke on the show. Like Luke, Vance is more the thinker and the planner of the duo, along with being more mature than Coy. He is also a former
Merchant Mariner. •
The Balladeer (voiced by
Waylon Jennings) sings and plays the
Dukes of Hazzard theme song, "Good Ol' Boys", and serves as the show's narrator. During each episode, he provides an
omniscient viewpoint of the situations presented, and regularly interjects comical
asides during crucial plot points (often, during a freeze frame of a
cliffhanger scene right before a commercial break) and "down home" aphorisms (these freeze-frame cliffhangers were often abridged in showings in some countries, such as the commercial-free
BBC in the United Kingdom). After numerous requests from fans to see the Balladeer on-screen, Jennings finally appeared in one episode, the seventh season's aptly titled "Welcome, Waylon Jennings" in which he was presented as an old friend of the Dukes. •
Flash (portrayed by Sandy and other dog actors) is a slow-paced
basset hound and Rosco's loyal companion who hates Boss Hogg, but loves the Dukes. She first appeared in the first official third-season episode "Enos Strate to the Top" (the two-part third-season opener "Carnival of Thrills" was held over from the previous season), although the dog was not formally "introduced" in that episode. Initially referred to as a boy, Flash is later regularly a girl (despite an occasional male reference afterwards). Flash was added at the start of the third season after James Best suggested to the producers that Rosco have a dog. Rosco doted on Flash, often calling her "Velvet Ears". Flash was portrayed by several Basset Hounds during the series (distinguishable by different facial colors), the most regular being Sandy. James Best bought a share of Sandy, who was rescued from an
animal shelter and was trained by Alvin Mears of Alvin Animal Rentals. Sandy lived to age 14. A
stuffed dog named Flush was used for dangerous stunt work in a few episodes. The pilot episode was to include a barber modeled after
Floyd Lawson on
The Andy Griffith Show as a regular character, but was eliminated when the final draft of the pilot's script was written and before the show was cast.
Recurring characters Notable guest appearances Throughout its network television run,
The Dukes of Hazzard had a consistent mix of up-and-comers and established stars make guest appearances with some of them having more than one role. •
Robert Alda as C.J. Holmes in "The Runaway" •
Carlos Brown/Alan Autry as • Hurley in "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Duke" under his real name • Dawson in "10 Million Dollar Sheriff" Pt. 1 and Pt. 2 under the alias of "Carlos Brown" •
Anthony De Longis as: • Norton in "The Hazzardgate Tape" • Slade in "Enos and Daisy's Wedding" •
James Avery as Charlie in "Cool Hands, Luke & Bo" •
Norman Alden as Chief Lacey in "Deputy Dukes" •
Rayford Barnes as Ken Collins, a U.S. Marshall who appears in "New Deputy in Town". •
Clancy Brown as Kelly in "Too Many Roscoes" •
Pat Buttram as Sam in "Days of Shine and Roses" •
Dennis Burkley as Mickey Larson in "Strange Visitor to Hazzard" •
Regis Cordic as Reynolds in "10 Million Dillar Sheriff" Pt. 1 and 2 •
Ji-Tu Cumbuka as Bubba Malone in "Opening Night at the Boar's Nest" •
Charles Cyphers as: • Bumper in "Limo One Is Missing" • Phil in "Dead and Alive" •
Ben Davidson as Patch in "Jude Emery" •
Elinor Donahue as Marjorie Dane in "The Sound of Music - Hazzard Style" •
Jason Evers as Larson in "The Haunting of J.D. Hogg" •
Jonathan Frakes as Jamie Lee Hog, the nephew of Boss Hogg who appears in "Mrs. Daisy Hogg". •
Janie Fricke as Ginny in "Happy Birthday, General Lee" •
Michael Fairman as the Deputy Attorney General in "Enos and Daisy's Wedding" •
Donna Fargo as herself in "Double Dukes" •
David Gale as Collins in "Cooter's Girl" •
M. C. Gainey as Peters in "Bad Day in Hazzard" •
Joy Garrett as Big Billie Tucker in "Hazzard Hustle" •
Henry Gibson as Squirt in "Find Loretta Lynn" •
Burton Gilliam as: • Tom Colt in "Double Sting" • Heep in "The Sound of Music - Hazzard Style" •
David Graf as Maury in "The Canterbury Crock" •
Kevin Peter Hall as Floyd Malone in "Opening Night at the Boar's Nest" •
Linda Hart as Lisa in "Diamonds in the Rough" •
Dennis Haskins as: • Moss in "One Armred Bandits" • A customer in "The Late J.D. Hogg" • Elmo in "Cale Yarborough Comes to Hazzard" •
Bob Hastings as: • Barnes in "Witness for the Persecution" • Slick in "Coltrane vs. Duke" • Taylor in "Sky Bandits Over Hazzard" •
Ernie Hudson as Avery in "Dear Diary" •
Brion James: • Jenkins in "Big Daddy" • Captain Slater in "Cool Hands, Luke & Bo" •
Waylon Jennings as himself in "Welcome, Waylon Jennings" - See above. •
Arte Johnson as Irving in "Double Sting" •
L. Q. Jones as: • Warren in "Witness for the Persecution" • Morton in "The Sound of Music - Hazzard Style" •
Roz Kelly as Amy Creavy in "Luke's Love Story" •
Stepfanie Kramer as Anna Louise in "Undercover Dukes" Pt. 1 and 2 •
Lance LeGault as Les Sloane in "The Runaway" •
Britt Leach as Buck Simmons in "Strange Visitor to Hazzard" •
Jon Locke as Murkin in "Share and Share Alike" •
Loretta Lynn as herself in "Find Loretta Lynn" •
Frank Marth as Agent Caldwell in "Diamonds in the Rough" •
Robin Mattson as Diane Benson in "Carnival of Thrills" •
John Matuszak as Stoney in "No More Mr. Nice Guy" •
Donald May as Petey in "Welcome Back, Bo 'n' Luke" •
Gerald McRaney as the First Workman in "Hazzard Condition" •
Richard Moll as Milo Beaudry in "Daisy's Shotgun" and "Behind Bars" •
Chris Mulkey as: • Billy Rae in "Lulu's Gone Away" • Sharp in "The Haunting of J.D. Hogg" •
Charles Napier as: • Digger in "Bye, Bye, Boss" • Pete in "Targets: Daisy and Lulu" •
Tim O'Connor as Mr. Thackery in "Bad Day in Hazzard" •
Roy Orbison as himself in "The Great Hazzard Hijack" •
Johnny Paycheck as himself in "The Fugitive" •
Hari Rhodes as Ben Jordan in "The Sound of Music - Hazzard Style" •
Kim Richards as Nancylou Nelson in "Cooter's Girl" •
Roger Robinson as Landy in "Mrs. Daisy Hogg" •
Dick Sargent as Sheriff Grady Byrd in "Officer Daisy Duke" and "Jude Emery" •
Ronnie Schell as Lester Starr in "Daisy's Song" •
Avery Schreiber as Wendel in "Double Sting" •
Judson Scott as: • Parker in "Witness: Jesse Duke" • Lee Benson in "Sittin' Dukes" •
William Smith as Jesse Steele in "10 Million Dollar Sheriff" Pt. 1 and 2 •
Don Stroud as Carl in "Carnival of Thrills" •
Mel Tillis as Burt Tolliver in "The Rustlers" •
Mary Treen as Aunt Clara Coltrane in "Sadie Hogg Day" •
Les Tremayne as Big Daddy in "Big Daddy" •
Lurene Tuttle as Granny Annie in "Granny Annie" •
Lewis Van Bergen as Eddie in "Lulu's Gone Away" •
Dottie West as herself in "By-Line, Daisy Duke" •
Joseph Whipp as: • Mason in "Diamonds in the Rough" • Eddie Hollis in "The Ransom of Hazzard Country" •
Hal Williams as Jonas Jones in "Cooter's Confession" •
Steven Williams as: • Leeman in "Dukes in Danger" • Percy in "High Flyin' Dukes" •
Terry Wilson as Norman Scroggs in "10 Million Dollar Sheriff" Pt. 1 •
Morgan Woodward as: • Dempsey in "Mason Dixon's Girls" • Cassius Claibourne in "Cool Hand's Luke & Bo" •
Tammy Wynette as herself in "The Hazzardville Horror" •
Cale Yarborough as himself in "Dukes Meet Cale Yarborough" and "Cale Yarborough Comes to Hazzard"
Others NASCAR driver
Terry Labonte makes a brief, uncredited appearance as a crewman in the episode "Undercover Dukes Part 1". The race cars supplied for both "Part 1" and "Part 2" of "Undercover Dukes" were supplied by Labonte's racing team owner,
Billy Hagan. However, the emblems of the sponsors of the cars (at that time Labonte was sponsored by
Budweiser) were covered to avoid paying royalties.
The celebrity speed trap During the show's second season, the show's writers began incorporating a "celebrity speed trap" into some of the episodes, as a means to feature top
country stars of the day performing their hits. On its first couple of instances, the "speed trap" was featured early in the story, but for most of the cases, it was featured in the last few minutes of an episode, often used when the main story was running too short to fill episode time. The "celebrity speed trap" feature was essentially the same each time: Aware that a big-name country star was passing through the area, Boss Hogg would order Rosco to lower the speed limit on a particular road to an unreasonable level (using a reversible sign, with one speed limit on one side and another, far lower, on the back), so that the targeted singer would be in violation of the posted limit. The singer would be required to give a free performance at the Boar's Nest in exchange for having their citations forgiven; the performer would then perform one of their best-known hits or other popular country music standard, while the Dukes, Boss, Rosco, Enos, Cletus, Cooter, and other patrons whooped and hollered in enjoyment of the performance. More often than not, the performer would give a sarcastic parting shot to Boss and Rosco. Singers who were featured in the "speed trap" segments were: •
Hoyt Axton •
Donna Fargo - See above •
Freddy Fender •
Waylon Jennings (the show's narrator) - See above •
Doug Kershaw (on the original soundtrack) •
The Oak Ridge Boys (twice) •
Roy Orbison - See above •
Buck Owens •
Johnny Paycheck (lip-syncing an original recording) - See above •
Mel Tillis - See above •
Dottie West - See above •
Tammy Wynette - See above
Honorable mentions:
Mickey Gilley,
Loretta Lynn Gilley's and Lynn's appearances were not solely for the celebrity speed trap. After performing a concert in Hazzard, Gilley was nabbed while leaving and forced to do a second show to nullify his citation. Loretta Lynn was kidnapped by criminals wanting to break into the music business. Lynn was the very first country music guest star on the show in 1979 and had an entire episode dedicated to her titled "Find Loretta Lynn".
Janie Fricke was the only country music guest star who did not perform a song, celebrity speed trap or otherwise. She played an accomplice to a robber who hid money in the dashboard of the car that was to become the
General Lee. ==Casting of Coy and Vance==