Birthname: | Justin Garrett Whalin |
Birth Date: | 6 September 1974 |
Birth Place: | San Francisco, California, U.S. |
Alma Mater: | American Conservatory Theater |
Occupation: | Actor, teacher |
Yearsactive: | 1987–2009 |
Spouse: | [1] |
Justin Garrett Whalin (born September 6, 1974) is an American actor turned drama teacher and administrator. He portrayed the teenage Andy Barclay in Child's Play 3, Ridley Freeborn in Dungeons & Dragons, and Jimmy Olsen in the American television series .[2]
Whalin was born in the Sunset District of San Francisco, California. His mother, Terry Villanueva, is a teacher and school administrator who owns and operates two L.A. area schools: The Learning Castle and La Cañada Preparatory. His father, Craig Whalin, is a real estate appraiser.[3] His parents divorced when he was seven years old and both remarried. He has a younger half-brother and an older stepbrother and stepsister.
He studied acting at the American Conservatory Theater (A.C.T.) in San Francisco, and attended Lowell High School. After years of commuting between Los Angeles and San Francisco, he and his mother relocated to L.A. permanently when he was fifteen years old. He completed his high school education through U.C. Berkeley's homeschooling program.
Whalin worked as an actor from the age of eleven, when he appeared in a production of the play The Little Prince at San Francisco's Victoria Theatre.[4] His first TV role was on General Hospital, after he caught the attention of a casting director who was giving an acting class.[4] He starred in the 1993 CBS Schoolbreak Special production Other Mothers, for which he won a Daytime Emmy.[4] He went on to star in Miracle at Midnight opposite Mia Farrow and Sam Waterston. He also auditioned to play Billy Loomis in Scream.
Whalin was cast as the young Daily Planet photographer Jimmy Olsen in the TV series from 1994 to 1997. Whalin said that initially the only fan mail he got on the show was from people complaining that he was not as good as Michael Landes (who played Olsen during the show's first season), and that it was not until around his fifth episode that he began to see an even mix of positive and negative fan reactions.[5] He enjoyed the role, though he said it often seemed limited to delivering exposition; a reoccurring motif of the series was that Lois and/or Clark would ask Jimmy to research a suspicious person or organization, and in a later scene Jimmy would rattle off the requested names, dates, addresses, and backstory.[6] When Whalin was first cast, the producers had planned a Jimmy Olsen-centric episode in which Jimmy heads to South America to look for his long-lost father,[4] but it was never produced, though the show did get Olsen-centric episodes in season 3 ("The Dad Who Came in From the Cold") and 4 ("AKA Superman").
Whalin quit acting in 2009 to work as a social studies/drama[7] teacher and administrator at The Learning Castle and La Cañada Preparatory, his mother's exclusive schools in the Los Angeles area.
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1988 | The Dead Pool | Jason | ||
1990 | Denial | Jason | ||
1991 | Child's Play 3 | |||
1993 | Murder of Innocence | Phil Andrew | ||
1994 | Serial Mom | Scotty Barnhill | ||
1995 | Jeff | |||
1996 | Susie Q | Zach Sands | ||
1996 | Jimmy Zip | Billy | Short | |
1997 | Academy Boyz | Jeffrey Wagner | ||
2000 | For the Cause | Sutherland | ||
2000 | Dungeons & Dragons | Ridley Freeborn | ||
2003 | Roulette | Bobby | Short | |
2003 | Slammed | Jeff | ||
2005 | Blood of Beasts | Eric | ||
2006 | National Lampoon's Dorm Daze 2 | Foosball | Direct-to-video | |
2009 | Super Capers | Ed Gruberman | ||
2009 | The House That Jack Built | Father Joe | ||
2009 | Off the Ledge | Hopper Jackson |
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1988–1989 | General Hospital | |||
1988 | CBS Summer Playhouse | Johnny | Episode: "Silent Whisper" | |
1989 | One of the Boys | Nick Lukowski | 6 episodes | |
1989 | Charles in Charge | Anthony | 6 episodes | |
1989 | Mr. Belvedere | Eric | Episode: "Big" | |
1989–1990 | The Wonder Years | Henchman / Mark Kovinsky | Episode: "Fate" Episode: "The Cost of Living" | |
1990–1991 | Blossom | William Zimmerman / Jordan Taylor / Jimmy | Episode: "Pilot" Episode: "The Geek" Episode: "Second Base" | |
1991 | Santa Barbara | |||
1991 | Perfect Harmony | Taylor Bradshaw | TV movie | |
1992 | The Young Riders | Adrian Dawkins | Episode: "The Sacrifice" | |
1993 | The Fire Next Time | Paul Morgan | 2 episodes | |
1993 | CBS Schoolbreak Special | Chaz Havelik / Will Jurgenson | Episode: "Crosses on the Lawn" Episode: "Other Mothers" | |
1993 | It Had to Be You | David Quinn | 6 episodes | |
1994–1997 | 65 episodes | |||
1998 | The Wonderful World of Disney | Henrik Koster | Episode "Miracle at Midnight" |
1991 | Young Artist Award | Best Young Actor in a Daytime Series | Santa Barbara | ||
Best Young Actor Guest Starring or Recurring Role in a TV Series | Blossom | ||||
Best Young Actor Starring in a Cable Special | Perfect Harmony | ||||
Saturn Award | Best Performance by a Younger Actor | Child's Play 3 | |||
1994 | Daytime Emmy Award | Outstanding Performer in a Children's Special | CBS Schoolbreak Special (Episode: "Other Mothers") | ||
1996 | ALMA Award | Outstanding Television Series Actor in a Crossover Role |