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This page is run by Chad's webmaster for Chad Allen Online: the official fan site . Chad does pop in on occassion.
Born June 5, 1974 in
Cerritos, California, Chad Allen, whose full name is Chad Allen Lazzari,
grew up in Long Beach, CA. He's the youngest of four boys, and his parents
were hoping for a girl. They got one, in the shape of Chad's twin sister,
Charity. Chad was the "extra change", as he puts it.
Chad got his start in show business when his mother started entering him
and his twin sister Charity in "twin contests" at fairs, and they won quite
a few times. People kept telling his mother how cute the twins looked
together, and that she should try to get the them into acting.
Charity didn't much like show business at all, but Chad was bitten by the
acting bug. It was decided that Chad Lazzari sounded like a name for a
dark-haired Italian, not a blond, blue-eyed boy, and he started out on his
acting career as Chad Allen instead. His first job was in a McDonalds
television commercial, at age four. His first dramatic work came at age six,
in a pilot for a television series that never went into production, Cutter
to Houston.
His first big break in a television series happened when he was eight and
joined the cast of " St.
Elsewhere " as Tommy Westphall, an autistic boy. He played that
character literally until the very end, when he was the last actor on-screen
in the final scene of the final episode of St. Elsewhere in 1988. During
that period, he worked continuously (and sometimes simultaneously) on a
succession of other successful TV shows:
Webste r (1985-1986),
Our House (1986-1988) and
My
Two Dads (1989-1990).
Chad filled his "spare time" by guest-starring in a whole host of other
television shows, such as
Airwolf ,
Hunter ,
The Wonder Years ,
Star Trek:
The Next
Generation ,
In
the Heat of the Night , Highway to Heaven, Simon and Simon, and
appeared in ten television movies. He also appeared in several stage
productions, as a guest on TV game shows and in a series of public service
anti-drug programs.
During these years, he became one of the biggest and most popular teen idols
of the day, thanks to, as he later said, "a mega publicist, who put out an
image of me that seemed ideal." He couldn't go anywhere in public without
being pursued by his numerous fans. As Chad later put it, "It was difficult
going to the malls, or trying to do the things I wanted to do. I felt bad in
that the teen magazines portrayed me as a perfect teenager." Elsewhere he
commented, "I was in teen magazines all the time and in reality, what was I?
A 13-year-old who's as fucked up as every other 13-year-old across the
country."
By the time My Two Dads ended in 1990, Chad was unsure about whether he
wanted to go on with acting. He was 16 years old, and even though he had
gone to a normal primary school, he hadn't been to a regular school since
age 12, instead being taught by private tutors on the set. He felt he was
missing out on a lot of normal life. "I left the business, went back to high
school, joined the swim team, became vice-president of my class, did
everything. I tried to be a normal teenager." He now describes it as
"probably one of the best decisions I ever made", even though his fame
initially made life difficult for him in school. "In high school I was
sneered at a lot. I was the teen magazine guy, half the kids followed me
around like disciples and the other half were going to kick my ass".
After high school, Chad was accepted as a student at New York University,
however he decided to put off college when he was offered the part of
Matthew Cooper on
Dr. Quinn: Medicine Woman . With this new role he became one
of the few former child stars to successfully make the transition to a
career as an adult.
When Dr. Quinn was canceled after its sixth season, Chad said, "When we
shut down I wasn't so sure that we were going to come back, I wasn't so sure
I was wanting to come back. In six years, we had done ten months out of
every year -- which is a lot of work -- in a remote location with a lot of
dirt. But over the course of our hiatus everybody had been planning on it.
They'd been writing scripts and stuff. So it was just a surprise. I'll miss
the people. It was a fun part for me.
I had a great damn time. We put so much into it for so long, and to not have
the opportunity, as actors, to say good-bye to each other has been really
gut wrenching. And to not be able to say good-bye to the fans has been hard,
too."
Despite being busy on Dr.
Quinn, Chad was one of the co-founders of The Creative Outlet theater
company in 1995, and has appeared in several theater productions during the
summer breaks. He considers theater to be "my first love, without a doubt".
Chad has continued focusing his career on the theater since the end of Dr.
Quinn, appearing in well received theatrical productions of
*Change at Babylon , in Los Angeles,
Temporary Help , in Seattle and Westport, Connecticut and
Sons of Lincoln , in L.A.
Courageously, in the October 9, 2001 issue of The Advocate, Chad came out as
a gay man. He also acknowledged past problems with drugs and alcohol.
He has also lent his support to a large number of charities over the years, including The American Diabetes Association, The March of Dimes, Project Angel Food, the Autistic Children's Foundation, the American Cancer Society, the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund, AIDS Project Arizona, and AIDS Project Los Angeles.
In 2001, the same year as he came out in the Advocate issue, Chad proved to all the critics that said he would have a hard time finding work as actor wrong. Three movies followed that year – A Mother’s Testimony (co-starring with Kate Jackson) the horror movie Do You Wanna Know a Secret and the critical acclaimed independent movie What Matters Most . The latter one earning him several nominations in the best actor category. In addition to the movies he made that year he also stepped back on stage in two theatre productions; Mike Ambrose's play Dearboy’s War – which addressed the treatment of gay soldiers and the meaning of freedom and the controversial Corpus Christi in which he starred and produced for it’s Los Angeles premiere. In 2002, Chad packed his bags and moved to New York City. He went back to college to pursue a psychology degree as well as teaching in one of his long time passions - oceanography. While in NYC, he took on the character of Vincent Castelnouvo-Tedesco in Temporary Help for the third time. This time it was on off-Broadway Revelation Theatre. Chad joined their creative board, and the reviews from such respected sources as Variety, The Hollywood Reporter and NY Times all agreed, that this actor was to keep an eye on. On the movie scene Chad starred in two movies that year. One feature film - Downtown: A Street Tale and one short film – Getting Out for which Chad won Best Supporting Actor in a short film, at the NY International Independent Film and Video Festival, Las Vegas.
In 2003 Chad moved back to Los Angeles and started to focus and a dream he had harboured for a long time – an own production company. While in New York, he and fellow actor Robert Gant had come across a play called Save Me. They read it for a theatre benefit, and fell in love with the story of a gay and lesbian rehab center in Texas, where men and women go to become straight. Chad contacted producer Chris Racster and together with Robert Gant they formed the production company Mythgarden. On explaining the vision behind Mythgarden, Chad said, â€Our company is entirely dedicated to turning the page on gay and lesbian storytelling in film, television, and theatre. We believe that it's time that our stories can be told fully: good relationships, real relationships, honest characters, in all of the genres of storytelling-fantasy, fiction, fairy tales, great mysteries, adventure films, and honest drama.â€
In addition to starting a production company, Chad kept busy on the acting scene. He starred in Paris, a gritty modern noir, about a doomed love story of two people from very different worlds. The film premiered in New York on the Tribecca Film Festival.
In 2004/2005 Chad continues to focus on his acting, and landed two very important roles in his career. One dual part in the highly anticipated film End of the Spear, which brought Chad on location all the way to South America, to film one of the greatest stories of forgiveness. The story was born from the death of five missionaries, led by Jim Elliot and Nate Saint. In January 2006, 50 years after the spearing, the feature length movie will release in theaters nationwide.
The other part was as Donald Strachey, in Third Man Out. Here TV a gay and lesbian television network approached Chad with the detective story written by Richard Stevenson, and Chad signed on to do 6 movies in the Donald Strachey Mystery Series.
My life experience has become so great, and I think that really fuels the acting," says Allen. "You know, I've been working on my craft since I was five years-old, and now that I'm another 10 years into it, I have the experience of being open, and I can truly put all my experience into a character without any hesitation or supplementation - ËœThird Man' is perhaps one of the most honest portrayals I've ever been able to give as an actor. Stage experience has been right up there, but creating Donald Strachey was just oozing out of me."
In addition to these important roles, Chad has managed to squeeze in some interesting guest parts on television as well. In 2004 he stepped back on the set of NYPD Blue for a second time, and delivered a powerful performance of a robber who picks up gay men, and ends up murdering one of his victims. Another interesting role came in 2005 where he guest starred in the CBS series Cold Case. The episode entitled “Kensington†evolves around a small town, and the murder of a young mill worker.