Devon Alan

About Devon Alan

Who is it?: Actor, Writer, Producer
Birth Day: March 28, 1972
Birth Place:  Los Angeles, California, United States
Birth Sign: Leo

Devon Alan Net Worth

Devon Alan was born on March 28, 1972 in  Los Angeles, California, United States, is Actor, Writer, Producer. At six years old Devon won a role in the feature film Simon Birch (1998). The following year, he was cast in his first major role playing Reba McEntire's son in the CBS Movie Special Secret of Giving (1999). Some of his credits include the role of "Max" in Stephen King's miniseries, Firestarter 2: Rekindled (2002); guest-starring in Doi Dieu Tra Hien Truong (2000), Blind Justice (2005), Family Law (1999), and General Hospital (1963) plus roles in ER (1994) and Dharma & Greg (1997). At the age of nine, Devon was cast in an independent film, Throttle (2002), and shortly thereafter, he won the lead role in It's Better to Be Wanted for Murder Than Not to Be Wanted at All (2003), a 20th Century-Fox Searchlab's short film, for which he received a Young Artists Award nomination for "Best Actor in a Short Film". At eleven, he flew to Russia, where he played opposite Anne Archer, as a mysterious Russian street boy, in the dramatic thriller, The Iris Effect (2005). Six months later, Devon was cast from a nationwide search, to co-star as Tim Munn in United Artists' suspense-thriller, Undertow (2004), winning the 2005 Young Artists Award for his amazing performance as a sickly Southern boy with eating disorders.Devon is a Film major in college. When not studying or working, Devon enjoys outdoor sports, such as backpacking, hiking, archery, and river rafting.
Devon Alan is a member of Actor

💰 Net worth: Under Review

Some Devon Alan images

Famous Quotes:

I think the hardest time was coming to terms with my bisexuality. That was probably the hardest thing. I was brought up that I was going to burn for it. Once I got over that and realized I didn't have to live under my family's thumb any more and that I was an adult and made my own decisions, I sought out the adult industry, being a natural exhibitionist. It just seemed like the right thing.

Biography/Timeline

1990

Lane became pregnant at 16 and began stripping to support herself and her child in 1990. In 1996, while still dancing, she was offered work posing in hard-core men's magazines.

1999

She made her hardcore film debut in 1999, performing in only lesbian or girl/girl scenes. She signed an exclusive contract for the production company Wicked Pictures in December 1999. She has directed many films, notably all five installments of The Devinn Lane Show. In 2003, she began performing with men, starting with the final scene in The Devinn Lane Show 5: Save The Best For Last. Over the next two years she performed scenes with men in Kink, Lovestruck, Space Nuts, Improper Conduct, Wicked Sex Party 6, Beautiful, Stiletto, Tuff Chick, two Road Trixx movies (which she also directed), and Lovers Lane.

2002

Her first Producer credit is on the film Beautiful/Nasty which was nominated for the AVN Award Best All-Girl Feature in 2002.

2005

As of 2005, she went on indefinite hiatus from on-screen work, focusing on directing for the production company Shane's World.

2007

In addition to hardcore work, Lane also hosted Playboy TV's mock reality show 7 Lives Exposed, which ran for six seasons until 2007, and has appeared in several softcore films which appear on DVD and on the Cinemax channels.

2008

In October 2008, Lane filed a copyright infringement lawsuit against Digital Playground, Vivid Entertainment Group, and Moniker Online Services among other entities, alleging that they profited from domain names similar to her performer name and did not compensate her. The defendants in the litigation say it is a frivolous lawsuit and a retaliation action prompted by the ebbing of her career as a contract girl due to her age and diminishing public demand for her services. In February 2009, she dismissed her claims against most of the companies she was suing, leaving only Privacy Protect and Pixel named in the suit. Her attorney declined comment at the time on why she was dropping those firms.