Lee got his first supporting role in
Hotel (1967) after reading a scene
opposite a friend as a favor in an audition for the film. His first
screen test was a love scene with
Karen Black which led him to become an
actor under contract with MGM Studios, where he co-starred in
Ice Station Zebra (1968)
with
Rock Hudson as well as various
Aaron Spelling productions. After years of
acting, Lee found a passion for working behind the camera and, in 1971,
directed his first feature film,
On the Line (1971). His son,
Shane Stanley, was the
youngest to ever receive an Emmy Award when he was 16 years old for his
work on
Desperate Passage (1987), which Lee directed and won two Emmys for. That special
launched The Desperate Passage Series, which was nominated for
thirty-three Emmys and won thirteen over a six year period. Daughter
Quinn Kaufman, from Lee's first marriage, is the granddaughter of legendary
songwriter
Johnny Burke of the Burke & Van Heusen team, (Misty, Pennies From
Heaven, Swingin' on a Star). His film
Street Pirates (1994) won him a CINE Golden
Eagle Award for Best Documentary. Lee received The Christopher Award as
well as many other top humanitarian honors for his work with America's
probated youth, which were the theme for many of his TV specials. Lee
wrote and directed
Held for Ransom (2000) starring
Dennis Hopper based on the novel by
Lois Duncan I Know What You Did Last Summer (1997) as well as co-writing and directing
Carman: The Champion (2001) which
starred
Michael Nouri Patricia Manterola and long time friend
Jed Allan.
Lee just completed working with his Emmy Award winning son,
Shane Stanley on Break Even, a feature film to be
released in 2020.