Thursday, March 11, 2010


Having taught acting school in Los Angeles for young people over twenty years, it has been one of my main focuses to try and prevent them from following the same path I took as a young actor . On the face of it this may sound a bit odd, coming from someone who had his own series on Tevision at the young age of 9 and spent a very successful period of life through the age of 16. I appeared on commercials, performing radio voice-overs, advertisements, and generally acted with a degree of success designed to make any parents proud.

However my main problem would not become obvious until it was almost too late, when I realized I had to hang on to my earlier success. The problem was that being attractive and photogenic will only take a person so far and more specifically to a certain age. Beyond that no career could expect any sustained success without a solid foundation of acting skills and training.

On of the more important thing that a parent of any young aspiring actor, is to remind the young actor not to get hurt along the way from either becoming an adult actor, or along the way to discovering that this isn’t really what they want to do.

The firsts steps we take is to lead the child to understand that their value as an artist is in no way linked to thefame and fortune of an acting career. There are of-course, several people in the entertainment industry who’s business it is to market and sell your talent, to sell profitable actors and not to focus on what they see as unprofitable. An aspareing young actor will need to understand that their worth as an artist and as an individual is absolutely unrelated to what may be interpreted as ‘worth’ to any agent.


Jeff Alan-Lee wanted to be an actor his entire life and began bugging his mother at the age of 7. At the age of nine he auditioned for a role in a local Detroit TV series in entitled JERRY IN THE CIRCUS. He got the role. He continued to act in a television special called THE MAGIC BALLOON, and soon after booked an agent in New York City. As a child actor he flew back and forth from New York and Detroit to audition and to appear in commercials, acted in theater, film and on television.

After his career as a young actor, he began teaching acting to kids and teens at various schools in New York City. Jeff-Alan Lee produced tv shows on Manhattan Cable and was invited to teach at The Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute in New York City. One of the more notable sudented he trained was young Scarlett Johanson among many others.

Jeff’s Los Angeles acting school, CLASS ACT...THE YOUNG ACTOR’S STUDIO, is one of the foremost schools for acting in Los Angeles, that teaches method acting to kids and teens. The studio teaches young people to use their traits, personalities and mannerisms in the scripted role and therefore to stand out.

Author's Bio
JEFF ALAN-LEE (Artistic director, Acting and Acting on Camera)
has taught and directed young people for over 20 years, both in New York and Los Angeles. Jeff was a former child actor himself and began acting with his own television series at age 9. He was Andrew McCarthy's co-star in Warner's feature, The Beniker Gang, featured in Whispers In The Dark, co-starred with Andrea McArdle in the Broadway tour of Snoopy and in Huck Finn (directed by Broadway legend Joshua Logan). Television includes guest-star roles on As The World Turns, The Street (Universal TV), Could it Be a Miracle and many others. Other leading roles in professional regional theatres include: Brighton Beach Memoirs, The Lion In Winter, Orphans King Lear, and Losing It (Directed by Home Improvement's Andy Cadiff), and most recently critical acclaim for the lead role in The Zoo Story with Mark Taper Foundation and Deaf West. Jeff has a BFA from New York University and has taught and directed at private schools, public schools, youth shelters as well as teaching and directing children and teens at The Lee Strasberg Theatre Institutes in New York and Los Angeles. Some of his students include Shia LaBeouf and Scarlett Johansson among many other great actors.

1 comment:

  1. This was a great article about acting classes. My nephew has been wanting to take acting classes. I wonder if he has convinced his parents yet. The next time I see him I will have to ask.
    Emily Smith | http://www.actortrainingcast.com/schoolinfo.asp

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