Actor
Chad Allen's career has been on the ascent recently, and we
intruded into some of his rare time off to catch up with his
activities. Having just arrived home in California after
months away, he was in great spirits, playing with his dog
and finally getting to enjoy his new house.
"It is so wonderful to be home again, I can't tell you how
much I missed my partner and being able to just fix a
snack." Chad, who is openly gay, is in the fourth year of a
very happy relationship, and excused himself for a moment to
see if his mate (who had received a notice earlier) would
actually have to serve on a jury. "Sorry but I was worried.
I have a lot of catching up to do. Now that I'm back I don't
want to have to share him with twelve strangers," he joked.
Chad and
his partner, also an actor, live basic, uncomplicated lives,
and for all the attention he gets, he far prefers his
bicycle and open air to a limousine and the red carpet.
Their idea of fun is a hike in the Santa Monica Mountains.
"There are some amazing trails up there, and my dog - partly
Korean Jindo and partly Akita - just loves it. We both get
to release a huge amount of pent up energy."
Of course it is amazing that he has any energy left. Chad is
a triple threat actor - meaning he does acting in all its
forms - stage, film and tv.
On the Other Hand Death,
the
latest in his series of Donald Strachey Mystery films is
due out on DVD February 24. It is the third in a six-part
series he is committed to. Allen plays a gay private
investigator and the movie co-stars screen legend Margot
Kidder (Superman). Directed by Emmy® award nominated Ron
Oliver (“Degrassi: The Next Generation,” “Queer as Folk”)
On the Other Hand, Death
delves into gay hate crimes and the difficulties faced by
the LGBT community. So far, four episodes have been filmed
in Vancouver, with two more still due. The fourth
installment in the franchise is titled
Ice Blues is
scheduled for release in the fall and co-stars Sherry Miller
who was also in Queer as
Folk.
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Chad Allen stars as detective Donald Strachey in "On the Other Hand Death" |
Asked to give a plot synopsis, he said: "It begins with Dorothy (Kidder) and Edith (Gabrielle Rose) sleeping in each other’s arms on the second floor of their long-time farmhouse. Downstairs, a shadowy figure breaks through the glass door. When Edith goes to investigate the noise, she discovers graffiti sprawled across the walls. The hateful message reads “DYKES GO HOME.”
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| As with all the Strachey films, On the Other Hand, Death premiered on gay cable network here! TV July 25, 2008. |
I mentioned that the first two Strachey films seemed more made for tv than his latest, that his character of Donald seems to have evolved and deepened. "When we first started the series, we had a limited amount of time to shoot, and not a lot of time for development. So I am glad you think that my character is becoming more complex." I noted that he has an on-screen lover, too. "I love the relationship between the character Tim played by Sebastian Spence and myself in the series. That too has deepened as the series has matured." The film also has a film noir style, with some shaken, not stirred, James Bond references. It is fun to see the mini-tributes to adventure films scattered throughout the story.
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Dorothy (Margot Kidder) and Edith (Gabrielle Rose) are victims of hate crimes in "On the Other Hand Death" |
One of the delightful pairings in the film is Strachey's sidekick, Kenny Kwon - played hilariously by Nelson Wong - who finally gets a chance to do some real detective footwork. "You know, that's funny, because his part was deliberately added in to the third film since his role worked so well the last time." Will we see more of him in the future?" I wondered. "Well, episodes five and six have not yet been written, so who knows. I'd love to see him as a recurring character." Me too. The two played off each other very nicely.
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| Det. Donald Strachey (Chad Allen) gets rough with Larry (Shawn Roberts) in "A Shock to the System" |
We talked about the setting for the film, Albany, New York, and whether there had been any discussion about shooting the series there rather than simply using some static "establishing shots" as fill-in. "I would love to see it filmed on location," he enthused, "and we came close once, when the Canadian-US dollar ratio was more favorable." I suggested that with the Berkshires so close, he would be within striking distance of some great hiking and scenery, plus four resident professional theatre companies.
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Chad Allen seen with Jeremy Jordan (r) in The Little Dog Laughed at TheatreWorks in Hartford, CT. Photo by Lanny Nagler Photography |
"The closest I have ever gotten is TheatreWorks in Hartford where I was performing The Little Dog Laughed early last year. But to tell the truth, I love going to Vancouver, too."
The
conversation turned to his current stage work in the play
Looped in which he
co-stars with Valerie Harper as the legendary Tallulah
Bankhead. It kept him in Palm Beach during early 2009, and
will continue in Washington, DC at Arena Stage in May and
June.
Arena Stage currently has two of its productions going
to Broadway (Next to Normal and 33 variations) , and there
is talk of Looped heading
to Broadway as well. Chad and I hope to talk about that in a
few months when we meet up in DC. Berkshire note: Looped
is directed by Rob Ruggiero (Make
Me a Song: The Music of William Finn and
The Dog Who Talked
at TheatreWorks). Rob is well known here in the Berkshires
having worked frequently with Julie Boyd's Barrington Stage
Company. Chad clued me in: "I just love working with Rob, he
is just a fantastic director. More than that, he's a
wonderful person, one who I have come to appreciate as an
artist and a friend." Ruggiero often directs at TheatreWorks
in Hartford, and we are thinking of adding that innovative
company to our regular beat for Berkshire Fine Arts.
Ruggiero also has a revival of the musical
Camelot in the
works, slated for late summer at The Goodspeed Opera House
in East Haddam, Connecticut.

Chad
Allen's current project is the stage play about Tallulah
Bankhead, "Looped" which stars Valerie Harper.
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Chad Allen is a triple threat performer. |
Chad Allen has had several careers already, and seems about
to make yet another breakthrough. His earliest work on
television was when he was 11 on
Webster, Our House, My Two
Dads and St.
Elsewhere. (1985-1990) He stopped acting and went to
a real high school, facing plenty of slings and arrows along
the way, and surviving. It was perhaps because of this break
that he never became consigned to that dreaded lot in life
of being a teen idol. His Tiger Beat exposure was all when
he was a pre-pubescent star.
Returning to TV, he became well known on
Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman,
which kept him busy for six seasons from 1993-97.
In 2001 he appeared in
Corpus Christi, Terrence McNally's story of a gay
Texas boy considered by many critics to be a stand-in for
Jesus. Chad produced and starred in the Los Angeles premiere
of this controversial show.
And so, 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. One of the most impressive things
about him is that he has dealt with each issue simply and
honestly. This quality also comes through in his acting,
there is a Nicholson quality to it. His acting is so honest
that his role of Donald Strachey does not come through as an
actor's creation, but simply as another extension of an
already diverse and interesting career. Chad is Donald and
Donald is Chad. The role and the actor have melded into one
organic whole. Only the best actors can do that.
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| Chad Allen in Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman |
Since that announcement, his personal development has
accelerated, his acting career blossomed, and his home life
greatly enriched with a loving relationship. He is not only
known for being out and gay, but also for being Christian
and gay. Indeed, he has taken principled stands as part of
Soulforce, taking part in a demonstration outside the Focus
on the Family headquarters in Colorado Springs. One of his
most deeply held hopes is a reconciliation between
Christians and gays, that the two are not mutually
exclusive. To this end, he produced and starred in another
film, Save Me,
about the ex-gay movement
which I wrote about last month. It is a tough film for
the two polarized sides of the God-Gay continuum to see, but
it attempts to build a bridge of understanding between the
two camps. As such, it is a breakthrough film.
Clearly, Chad Allen is no simple actor, but a complicated
guy just trying to find and keep his voice, Hollywood
machinery be damned. Early in his career some well meaning
studio types tried to remake him: "There was a time when it
was actually said to me, “You know, we can get you a
girlfriend. We can make that happen.” But that's not in me.
I can't live a lie."
I commented that he seemed to have survived the transition
from the closet to a fully out actor. "It's no big deal," he
said, "you just keep doing the same things you always did,
only they pay you less for it."









