Jed Allan
American actor

Jed Allan

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American actor
Gender:
Male
Birth:
1 March 1937(New York City, New York, U.S.A.)
Death:
9 March 2019(Palm Desert, Riverside County, California, U.S.A.)
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The details
Biography

Introduction

Jed Allan (born Jed Allan Brown; March 1, 1935 – March 9, 2019) was an American actor and television host, best known as C.C. Capwell on Santa Barbara, Don Craig on Days of Our Lives,Rush Sanders on Beverly Hills, 90210, Scott Turner on Lassie, Harold Johnson on The Bay, and the host of Celebrity Bowling.

Life and career

Education and early career

Allan attended University of Washington where he majored in Drama. While in college, he supported himself working as a radio and television announcer and sportscaster. In the 1960s, he appeared in several Broadway productions such as Viva Madison Avenue!, Oliver!,Barefoot in the Park.

Daytime television roles

Allan has starred in several soap operas. He made his debut as trouble-making Ace Hubbard on Love of Life in 1964. From 1964-65, he was one of many actors to play college professor Paul Britton on The Secret Storm who was involved with the show's leading heroine, Amy Ames. Allan replaced his future Santa Barbara co-star Nicolas Coster in the part. He may be best known for his role as Don Craig in Days of Our Lives, which he played from 1971 to 1985, his exit taking place as many of the show's veteran cast members were being written out so the show could focus on younger characters. In 1973 Allan was a featured character in an episode of Adam-12 titled "Capture." His departure from Days of our Lives was controversial, as his character was abruptly written out with no further explanation. He gained a new audience when he took over the role of C.C. Capwell in Santa Barbara from 1986 to 1993. After his time on Santa Barbara, Allan had a recurring role in Beverly Hills, 90210 playing Rush Sanders.

In 2004, he started playing the role of Edward Quartermaine in General Hospital. This was in some ways unusual casting, as the actor who played Edward's son Alan, Stuart Damon, is only 2 years younger than Jed Allan himself. Prior to starring on General Hospital he starred in its spinoff Port Charles. In 2006, it was announced that John Ingle, the actor who had played Edward before Allan, was returning, and Allan would relinquish the role. Ingle returned to the role in spring 2006.

Other projects

Allan's most notable TV role outside of soap operas was when he starred on Lassie from 1968–70 as Forest Ranger Scott Turner, who (along with another ranger) served as the iconic collie's main human companion during that time frame. He was a pitchman in commercial spots in 1980-1981 for McDade's, a local catalog department store chain in the Chicago area, as well as for Two Guys Department stores.

Allan appeared in numerous made for TV movies, hosted Celebrity Bowling during the 1970s, and wrote a book, Please, Spell the Name Right, in reference tohis name often being spelled incorrectly. The book is about his experiences of 50 years as an actor working with other actors and was released in November 2004.

He also hosted a game show pilot, Temptation, in 1981 for Ralph Andrews and Columbia Pictures Television.

Personal life

Allan was married to Toby Brown from September 21, 1958 until her death in 2001. The couple had three sons, Mitch, Dean, and Rick. Allan lived in Palm Desert, California.

Death

He died on March 9, 2019, eight days after his 84th birthday.

Filmography

Film
Year Film Role Notes
1968 Ice Station Zebra Peter Costigan
1974 The Man from Clover Grove The Hippie
1974 The Photographer Joe Hennesey
1994 Zero Tolerance George Wells
1997 Arlette Wide
2001 Carman: The Champion Larracco
Television
Year Title Role Notes
1954 The Secret Storm Professor Paul Britton #2 1964-1965
1963 General Hospital Edward Quartermaine (#3) Unknown episodes
1968–1970 Lassie Ranger Scott Turner 26 episodes
1971–1977 Celebrity Bowling Himself Entire series
1971–1985 Days of Our Lives Don Craig 102 episodes
1986–1993 Santa Barbara C.C. Capwell (#4) 1,089 episodes
1994–1999 Beverly Hills, 90210 Rush Sanders 18 episodes