Annie Lee
Annie Lee grew up in LA, straight-up surrounded by all the buzz and chaos of the city. She caught the acting bug when she was just a kid—nine years old, to be exact—messing around at UCLA’s Young Performer’s Workshop. Funny thing is, she almost went the med school route in high school (yeah, can you imagine?), but destiny had other plans. Someone scouted her, and next thing you know, she’s modeling, doing commercials, music videos, the whole nine yards. But college rolled around, and she got that itch to perform again, diving deep into children’s theatre and training with some heavy-hitter acting coaches like Brian Reise and Catlin Adams.
She graduated from UCLA with a BA and decided to get her hands dirty behind the scenes too, working at First Look Pictures and alongside producers like Doug Claybourne. Still, acting kept calling her back. You might’ve seen her in the Christian flick "Rose of Sharon" (filmed in Israel—yeah, the real deal), or maybe you caught her feature film debut in "Close Call" back in 2004.
Annie doesn’t just act—she makes stuff happen. She produced "Tomato and Eggs," a short film that snagged an Audience Award at the Big Bear Film Festival. She’s always mixing it up with indie projects, teaching at the LA Performing Arts Center, volunteering with Korean youth, and even running her own clothing store, CHIC Collection. No joke, she’s obsessed with the craft. Annie’s all in—acting, producing, directing—the works.