| • | Did a few advertisement's for Virginia Slims |
| • | "[In a production of 'The Graduate'] I'm doing the female role that just happens to include things I don't normally do like smoking and stripping. I've never done nudity before, but it's such a delicious part", Evening Standard (UK), Sep. 19, '01 | |
| • | "Gray isn't worried about stripping off for her role in The Graduate on London's West End stage - she's more concerned about the smoking involved. The former Dallas star is following in the footsteps of Jerry Hall and Kathleen Turner in the role of the seductive, chain-smoking Mrs. Robinson, but Gray says she terrified, because she doesn't smoke. 'My homeopathic doctor in Los Angeles was aghast when I told him. I'm the first actress to play the role who doesn't smoke. My doctor gave me some herbs to take each night to cancel out the effects of the cigarettes. I've already developed a smokers cough'", World Entertainment News Network, Sep. 23, '01 | |
| • | "[in the production of 'The Graduate'] she has to chain smoke through the play for the next 18 weeks", Express (UK), Sep. 24, '01 | |
| • | appeared, Salem ads, when? |
| • | no - on acting in The Graduate: "I don't smoke, but I think its a very integral part of who Mrs. Robinson is.", Reuters, Sep. 14, '01 | |
| • | no - same, Calgary Sun, Sep. 14, '01 | |
| • | no - "Her greatest fear, says the Californian, is that she will have to smoke. Can't she just avoid inhaling? Apparently not. 'Britain is a smoking country; they'd notice immediately' ", Sunday Express (UK), Sep. 30, '01 | |
| • | no - "You know, I couldn't care less about the nudity aspect...I'm finding it tougher having to learn how to smoke" [of her London stage role as Mrs Robinson in The Graduate], Daily Mail (UK), Oct. 4, '01 | |
| • | no - "I don't smoke either. I have to smoke in the role ('The Graduate'). I hate the smell. I hate it in my mouth. I hate it in my hands. I can't wait to be backstage and be over with it.", Cincinnati Post, Dec. 15, '03 | |
| • | quit - "KING: Did you smoke, too, Linda? GRAY: Yes, I did. KING: And you stopped one day, too. GRAY: I stopped when I was 20, I think. I smoked for two years, because I was doing cigarette commercials and I felt like I had instant lung cancer. So I said that's it, finished", Larry King Show, when? |