- The film The Silence of the Lambs (1991) was dedicated to Trey Wilson.
- Appears in Pat Benatar's music video "Love Is A Battlefield" as the father who throws her out of the house.
- Was cast as Leo in Joel Coen & Ethan Coen's Miller's Crossing (1990) before his death in 1989. The role then went to Albert Finney.
- The film Welcome Home (1989) includes an "In Memoriam" to Trey Wilson in the end credits.
- Married to Judy Wilson, the former Judy Blye, a well-known New York soap opera casting agent who has continued to live in Manhattan since Trey's death. They met while both were attending the University of Houston majoring in theater and married in 1975.
- The film Miss Firecracker (1989) was dedicated to his memory.
- A popular Houston-born character player whose gravel tones and stocky build enabled him to play a variety of middle-aged, down-home tough guys, often villains.
- Best remembered roles were that of Teamster leader Jimmy Hoffa in the TV miniseries Robert Kennedy and His Times (1985); Nathan Arizona, the father of a kidnapped quintuplet in Raising Arizona (1987); and as Joe Riggins, the minor league baseball manager in Kevin Costner's Bull Durham (1988).
- The 1992 Broadway revival of "Guys and Dolls" was dedicated to the memory and spirit of Trey.
- The son of Donald Yearnsley Wilson and Irene Louise Wilson, he majored in English and theater at the University of Houston.
- American stage and film actor Trey Wilson first gained a measure of public exposure on a very short-lived satirical TV series, The News Is the News (1983), in 1983.
- Cousin is Texas Senator Kenneth "Kim" Brimer (R-Senate District 10).
- Lynne Thigpen, Mary Catherine Wilson, Jerry Zaks and he were awarded the 1981 Drama Logue Award for Outstanding Peformances for "Tintypes" at the Mark Taper Forum Theatre in Los Angeles, California.
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