Listed in the opening credits: •
James Garner is
Jim Rockford. •
Noah Beery Jr. as Joseph "Rocky" Rockford, is Jim's father, a retired truck driver. (The role was played by Robert Donley in the pilot episode.) •
Joe Santos as Sergeant Dennis Becker, is Jim's friend in the
Los Angeles Police Department; he was promoted to lieutenant in season five. Frequently recurring cast: •
Stuart Margolin as Evelyn Angelo "Angel" Martin, is Jim's former prison friend. Angel is an untrustworthy, pathologically lying, con artist whose schemes constantly get Jim in trouble, yet Jim remains his friend. •
Gretchen Corbett as Elizabeth "Beth" Davenport, Jim's lawyer and sometime girlfriend (seasons one-four). •
James Luisi as Lieutenant Douglas J. "Doug" Chapman (seasons three–six), is Becker's superior officer (until Becker's promotion). Chapman and Rockford despise one another, although in later episodes, Chapman grudgingly acknowledges Rockford's street smarts. •
Tom Atkins as Lieutenant Alex/Thomas Diehl, Becker's superior officer (seasons one-two and four) who has an antagonistic relationship with Rockford. Seen in multiple episodes: •
Pat Finley as Peggy Becker is Sergeant Becker's wife (six episodes). •
Isaac Hayes is Gandolph "Gandy" Fitch, a brutal, violent acquaintance of Rockford's from his prison days. He almost always calls Jim "Rockfish". Jim helps prove Fitch did not commit the crime for which he was imprisoned. The two become friendly. In later episodes, Fitch tags along with an unscrupulous investigator Marcus Hayes (
Louis Gossett Jr.) trying to cash in on one of Rockford's cases, and needs Jim's help dealing with mobsters connected to the ex-husband of his new girlfriend (played by
Dionne Warwick). Jim remains on good terms with Fitch, towards whom he seems to display an almost naive blind spot despite Fitch's refusal to ever take Jim's "no" for an answer, and his lack of compunction about using violence, including occasionally on a recalcitrant Jim himself (three episodes). •
Bo Hopkins is John "Coop" Cooper, Jim's disbarred attorney friend in season five (four episodes). •
Tom Selleck is Lance White, a successful and glamorous private investigator with an uncynical approach to the business. Lance is liked and admired by everyone, and Jim is a bit jealous and considers him naive, lucky, and likely to cause others to get hurt (two episodes). According to Stephen J. Cannell's
Archive of American Television interview, Lance White was based on "Waco Williams", a similarly polished character in
Maverick appearing in the
episode "The Saga of Waco Williams". Williams was portrayed in
Maverick by
Wayde Preston, who in 1958 resembled Tom Selleck two decades later. Selleck later became famous as Thomas Magnum in the 1980s detective series
Magnum, P.I. •
Dennis Dugan is Richie Brockelman, a young, idealistic, and seemingly naive private investigator who seeks Jim's help from time to time. Bereft of Jim's cynicism and physical toughness, Richie is nevertheless a sharp operator who used his outwardly trusting
gee whiz persona to mask his dogged cleverness. This character was initially introduced in the short-lived
Richie Brockelman, Private Eye (two two-part episodes). •
Kathryn Harrold is Dr. Megan Dougherty, a blind psychiatrist who hires Jim. Their relationship eventually blossoms into a romance. Jim is upset in a later episode to learn that she has become engaged to another man (two episodes). •
Simon Oakland is Vern St. Cloud, a blustery, arrogant, and often untrustworthy fellow private investigator. St. Cloud and Rockford grudgingly accept each other's assistance from time to time, trading insults along the way (Oakland appeared in a sixth-season episode playing an unrelated character, three episodes). •
Louis Gossett Jr. as Marcus Aurelius "Gabby" Hayes, an impeccably dressed, chauffeur-driven, boastful P.I. who is nearly always on a hustle, usually to Rockford's misfortune. Gossett appeared first in
Foul on the First Play wearing a full wig with
sideburns, appearing the following season in
Just Another Polish Wedding without it (two episodes). •
Rita Moreno as Rita Capkovic, is a
call girl and occasional
police informant, who is targeted by a millionaire businessman because of her friendship with an elderly widow. In later episodes, she gets accused of the murder of a client; when she tries to leave her profession and hides out with Rockford, it enrages her sadistic former pimp. Whether Jim and Rita are ever romantically involved, beyond their close friendship (three episodes), is unclear. •
James Whitmore Jr. is Fred Beamer, an auto mechanic who aspires to be a private investigator, and involves himself in Jim's affairs. In his first appearance, Beamer assumed Jim's identity, living in his trailer, making numerous purchases on credit for detection equipment of questionable efficacy, driving (and heavily damaging) his Firebird, and taking on clients, plunging Jim into trouble. (Whitmore later directed the TV movie
The Rockford Files: I Still Love L.A.) (two episodes). • Al Stevenson is L.J., a friend of Rocky's, who often performs odd jobs for Rocky and Jim (in one episode, Jim discovers him alone at Rocky's house repairing a shower faucet). L.J. is closer to Jim's age than Rocky's, and they likely met during the latter's career as a trucker (four episodes). • Luis Delgado as Officer Todd Billings, is seen frequently at the precinct or at crime scenes. Delgado played a number of other bit roles in early
Rockford seasons before settling into the recurring minor role of Billings starting in season three. Delgado was the brother-in-law of series co-creator Roy Huggins, and James Garner's long-time stand-in. • Bucklind Beery as Officer Al Mazursky, is another recurring bit-part officer very occasionally seen at the precinct during seasons two-five. Bucklind Beery is the son of Noah Beery Jr. •
Hunter von Leer (credited as Hunter Von Leer) as Skip Spence, is a libidinous, money-seeking lifeguard stationed on the beach near Jim's trailer. Jim finds Skip distasteful, but Skip occasionally provides information helpful to him. In one episode Skip gives information to gangsters searching for Jim (two episodes). •
Jack Garner (James Garner's real-life brother) was seen in numerous bit parts including a policeman, a gas station attendant, and a stranger in a bathroom. He then assumed the role of the fence-sitting, ineffectual Captain McEnroe (Becker's superior officer) in season six.
Supporting characters Dennis Becker: Rockford's pursuit of cases often leads to difficulties with his friend in the LAPD, Sgt. Dennis Becker (Joe Santos), a homicide detective struggling to advance in the department under a series of overbearing lieutenants. The two most notable are Alex/Thomas Diehl (Tom Atkins) during the first, second, and fourth seasons and Doug Chapman (James Luisi) in the third to sixth seasons. Those higher-ups invariably dislike Rockford (and private investigators generally) because of their perception that either he is meddling in open cases or is trying to make the LAPD look incompetent in its handling of closed cases. Further, Rockford often calls Becker asking for favors, such as running license plates through the California Department of Motor Vehicles computer system, often annoying the already overworked cop. By the fifth season, Becker is promoted to lieutenant; the episode where Becker is promoted stated that Becker's association with Rockford, considered by LAPD brass to be a shifty ex-con, had hampered Becker's chances for promotion. Chapman was irritated when Becker became his "equal". In season-six episode "The Big Cheese", the third-to-last of the series, Rockford gets a degree of revenge when Chapman inadvertently makes incriminating statements about his tax evasion before an undercover IRS agent who is with Rockford. Becker appears in 89 of the 123 episodes. as Joseph "Rocky" Rockford, Jim's father
Joseph "Rocky" Rockford: Rockford's father, Joseph "Rocky" Rockford, is an ex-
Seabee, semi-retired, truck driver who nags his son to find stable (and less dangerous) employment, often urging him to follow in his footsteps as a truck driver (especially in early seasons), and often wishing Jim would get married. The relationship of father and son was an integral part of the show. Rocky appears in 101 episodes, and usually becomes involved (like it or not) in his son's cases. Occasionally, he hires Jim himself. Jim Rockford's mother is never shown or named, and is very seldom referred to; though never stated directly, she apparently died some years ago. Rocky was portrayed by Noah Beery Jr. except in the 1974 pilot film, where he was portrayed by Robert Donley. Although much of the character's backstory is the same, in the pilot, Rocky is portrayed as more of a small-time grifter and operator — at one point, working with a partner, Rocky unsuccessfully tries to run a minor scam on Jim, his own son. This element of Rocky's character would largely be dropped as the series started. Beery's version of Rocky was generally honest and reliable, though not above working an unreported job
under the table to supplement his pension income, or eating the most expensive food in Jim's refrigerator if he dropped by while Jim was out. as Beth Davenport in 1975
Beth Davenport: Rockford has a close relationship with his attorney, the idealistic, tenacious Elizabeth "Beth" Davenport (Gretchen Corbett). In second-season episode "A Portrait of Elizabeth", it is explained that Beth and Rockford had dated for a time (prior to the beginning of the series), but she soon became aware of his emotional unavailability and lack of interest in a long-term relationship, and realized that they would be better off as friends (although the two do seem to still casually date on occasion during early seasons).
Angel Martin: Rockford's scheming former San Quentin cellmate, Evelyn "Angel" Martin was something of a
comic relief character played by Stuart Margolin. Jim employs Angel as an operative from time to time, often to gather street-level information, or to help him access the files of the newspaper where Angel works as a low-level filing clerk. Keeping this job is a condition of Angel's parole; even so, the ever-shifty Angel would be unlikely to be capable of doing so, except that his brother-in-law owns the paper. Jim also uses Angel on a few occasions to play a supporting role in con games that he sets up to sting especially difficult adversaries. Angel is himself forever running some sort of (usually very bottom-of-the-barrel) con game, and is consistently ready to sell anyone out at a moment's notice for his own benefit — and often does. In doing so, Angel almost always gets Rockford in trouble, usually by involving him in hare-brained scams ... often without Jim's knowledge, and never with his consent. As often as not, Angel's antics result in his, Jim's and/or others' arrests, and/or being placed on somebody's hit list. In spite of this, Jim considers Angel as one of his best, if most exasperating, pals. Towards the end of the series, a noticeable cooling occurs in Jim's attitude toward Angel in their often-fractious relationship; however, the rift seems to have been repaired by the time of the reunion movies.
Others: After Corbett was dropped from the show following the fourth season (allegedly due to contract disputes between Universal, which owned her contract, and Cherokee Productions, Garner's company), John Cooper (
Bo Hopkins), a disbarred attorney, was added as a new adviser for the frequent legal problems in which Rockford would become entangled. A new romantic interest, Dr. Megan Dougherty (
Kathryn Harrold), a blind but highly independent psychiatrist, appears in two episodes in seasons five and six ("Black Mirror" and "Love Is the Word", respectively) and the 1996 television movie
The Rockford Files: Punishment and Crime. ==Credits==