Jamie Luner
Jamie Luner (born May 12, 1971) is an American actress, producer, and life coach best known for her prominent roles in 1990s prime-time television dramas and sitcoms, including Cindy Lubbock on Just the Ten of Us (1988–1990), Peyton Richards on Savannah (1996–1997), Lexi Sterling on Melrose Place (1997–1999), and Rachel Burke on Profiler (1999–2000).[1][2] Born Jamie Michelle Luner in Palo Alto, California, to parents Stuart and Susan Luner, she grew up alongside her older brother, David, and entered the entertainment industry at the age of three, appearing in television commercials and later modeling in print ads by age four.[1] Her passion for acting deepened at 15 when she won first prize in the monologue category at the Los Angeles Shakespeare Festival, leading to her breakout role as the bubbly teenager Cindy Lubbock on the ABC sitcom Just the Ten of Us, a spin-off of Growing Pains.[3][2] Following high school graduation from Beverly Hills High in 1989, Luner balanced acting with brief breaks, transitioning to more dramatic roles in the mid-1990s under producer Aaron Spelling, whose projects like Savannah and Melrose Place showcased her as a versatile performer capable of portraying scheming socialites and ambitious professionals.[1][3] In the early 2000s, Luner took over the lead in the NBC crime drama Profiler midway through its run, earning a reputation as a reliable television presence.[3] She expanded into guest-starring roles on acclaimed series such as CSI, NCIS, Supernatural, True Blood, Better Call Saul, All My Children, Two and a Half Men, and Murder in the First, while appearing in over a dozen made-for-television films, including Moment of Truth: Why My Daughter? (1993) and Friends & Lovers (1999).[3][2] Transitioning into producing in the late 2010s, Luner executive produced holiday-themed movies like The Christmas High Note (2020), My Adventures with Santa (2019), and A Lover Betrayed (2017), and continued this work with projects such as Valley of Love (2023) and I'm with Me (2023), often filming in Bulgaria.[1][3] Beyond acting, Luner has pursued personal development, earning a culinary degree from the Epicurean Cooking School and a master's degree in spiritual psychology from the University of Santa Monica, which informs her current role as a life coach offering one-on-one sessions.[3] Her career spans more than three decades, encompassing over 60 television shows and films, with a focus on empowering female characters and behind-the-scenes contributions to independent productions.[1][2]Early life
Childhood
Jamie Luner was born on May 12, 1971, in Palo Alto, California, to parents Susan Luner and Stuart Luner, a sales representative and businessman.[4][1] She was raised in a Jewish family alongside her older brother, David Luner, who later pursued a career in the ceramics industry.[4][5] Her parents divorced when she was three years old, after which she primarily lived with her mother.[4] During her early years, Luner's family relocated to Los Angeles, where she spent much of her childhood in the affluent community of Beverly Hills.[4][6] This move placed her in close proximity to the entertainment industry, fostering an environment conducive to her budding interests in performing arts.[7] Influenced by her mother's work in the entertainment industry, Luner developed an early fascination with performance, participating in local theater productions and school-related dramatic activities that honed her skills before her professional start.[4] At the age of four, Luner's mother signed her with a talent agency, leading to her debut in a tissues commercial where she portrayed the daughter of Suzanne Somers.[8][7] This 1975 appearance marked her first professional acting experience and received initial encouragement from her family, who supported her aspirations in the field despite her young age.[8]Education
Jamie Luner attended Beverly Hills High School, where she was actively involved in the drama department and graduated in 1989.[9][4] At age 15, she won the Los Angeles Shakespeare Festival award in the category of individual monologues.[8][3] During her early career pursuits in 1986–1987, Luner enrolled at the Professional Children's School in New York City, an institution designed for working youth in the entertainment industry, where she studied acting.[8] Luner furthered her performance training at HB Studio in New York, studying dance under Ann Reinking.[10] In 1994, following a break from acting, Luner briefly attended the Epicurean School of Culinary Arts in Los Angeles to pursue her interest in cooking, ultimately earning a culinary degree there.[9][3] Later in her career, Luner earned a master's degree in Spiritual Psychology from the University of Santa Monica.[3][4]Career
1975–1994
Luner's entry into the entertainment industry occurred at the age of three, when she began appearing in television commercials and modeling for print advertisements.[9] This early exposure to performing arts fueled her interest, leading to regular work in child modeling and additional commercials throughout her pre-teen years. By age 15, she had won first prize at the Los Angeles Shakespeare Festival for a dramatic monologue, further honing her skills and confirming her commitment to acting.[8] Her television debut came in 1987 at age 16, with a guest role as Sheena Berkowitz in the episode "Some Enchanted Evening" of the ABC sitcom Growing Pains. She returned to the series in subsequent years, appearing in a total of four episodes between 1987 and 1990, portraying characters including Cindy Lubbock in crossover episodes and Kara Daye in another. These roles marked her transition into scripted television while she balanced acting with her studies at Beverly Hills High School.[1] Luner's breakthrough arrived soon after with the lead role of the ditzy yet endearing Cindy Lubbock, the eldest daughter in a large Catholic family, on Just the Ten of Us, a spin-off of Growing Pains that premiered on ABC in 1988. She appeared in all 47 episodes of the series, which ran for three seasons until 1990, earning praise for her comedic timing and chemistry with the ensemble cast. The show followed the Lubbock family's relocation to California, where Cindy navigated teenage life, school, and family dynamics alongside her siblings. Filming the series overlapped with her high school years, as she graduated in 1989 while continuing to work.[11][3] Following the conclusion of Just the Ten of Us, Luner briefly paused her career to travel and reflect, a common step for young actors navigating the shift from child-oriented roles to more mature teen parts amid the competitive landscape of 1990s television. She resumed with select guest spots, including portraying Gerri, a sorority girl, in the 1992 episode "Frat Chance" of Fox's Married... with Children. That same year, she appeared as Lisa in an episode of Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventures. In 1993, she took on her first substantial TV movie role as Diana Moffitt, a troubled teenager drawn into prostitution and later murdered, in NBC's Moment of Truth: Why My Daughter?, a fact-based drama opposite Linda Gray that explored themes of parental loss and urban dangers.[1][12][13] Luner's early film work culminated in 1994 with the lead role of Sabrina Masterson, a manipulative and rebellious newcomer to a 1950s sorority house, in the Showtime original movie Confessions of a Sorority Girl. Directed by Uli Edel as part of the Rebel Highway anthology series, the film highlighted her ability to portray complex, antagonistic characters, blending drama with period flair alongside co-star Alyssa Milano. This role signified her growing versatility as she moved beyond sitcom confines into edgier, narrative-driven projects.[14][15]1994–2000
In 1996, Jamie Luner landed her first leading role in a prime-time soap opera as Peyton Richards Massick on the WB series Savannah, portraying a cunning Southern socialite entangled in family secrets, romantic rivalries, and corporate intrigue among lifelong friends in Georgia.[16] The show, which aired from January 1996 to February 1997, featured Luner in all 34 episodes, establishing her as a breakout talent in serialized drama after years in supporting television roles.[17] Her performance as the ambitious and manipulative Peyton drew comparisons to classic soap vixens, helping to boost the series' appeal during its single season run.[18] Following the cancellation of Savannah, Luner transitioned seamlessly to another Spelling-produced soap, joining Melrose Place in 1997 as Lexi Sterling, a sharp-tongued interior designer and ex-wife of Dr. Brett Cooper (Linden Ashby).[19] Introduced in season 6, episode 4, her character quickly became a central antagonist, scheming against Amanda Woodward (Heather Locklear) and navigating tumultuous relationships, including a volatile marriage to Cooper and an affair with plastic surgeon Peter Burns (Jack Wagner). Over the course of 62 episodes across seasons 6 and 7 (1997–1999), Lexi's arc evolved from a one-dimensional schemer to a multifaceted lead, assuming control of Sterling Conway Enterprises and grappling with themes of redemption and vulnerability amid the show's signature betrayals and bedroom farces.[20] Luner's portrayal injected fresh energy into the aging series, with her chemistry opposite Locklear and Ashby fueling key plotlines like corporate takeovers and love triangles.[21] In 1999, Luner shifted genres by replacing Ally Walker on NBC's crime procedural Profiler, debuting as Dr. Rachel Burke, a former prosecutor turned behavioral analyst for the FBI's Violent Crimes Task Force.[22] Airing from September 1999 to February 2000, her 20-episode stint in season 4 showcased Burke as a determined expert profiling serial killers while confronting personal demons, such as her brother's substance abuse issues. The role highlighted Luner's versatility in a more grounded, ensemble-driven format compared to the melodramatic soaps, though the series ended shortly after her introduction amid declining ratings.[23] Luner's television momentum carried into film with her supporting role as Naomi Cohen, a resourceful former call girl aiding a fugitive father in the 2000 thriller TV movie Sacrifice, directed by Mark L. Lester.[24] Starring opposite Michael Madsen, the film explored themes of vengeance and redemption as Cohen helps uncover a serial killer's motives behind the protagonist's daughter's murder, marking an early foray into independent thriller territory.[25] Luner's tenure on Melrose Place generated significant media attention, positioning her as a rising sex symbol and tabloid staple in the late 1990s, with outlets covering her on-set dynamics, including rumored tensions with co-stars like Heather Locklear and the buzz around Lexi's provocative storylines.[19] Her arrival as the "new vixen" revitalized the show's publicity, leading to features in entertainment magazines that dissected her character's rivalries and the series' escalating soap opera excess, contributing to its cultural peak before its 1999 finale.[26]2000–2020
Following the end of her run on Profiler in 2000, Jamie Luner transitioned to a mix of television series and made-for-TV films, seeking to expand beyond her established prime-time soap persona. In 2003, she joined the cast of the ABC police drama 10-8: Officers on Duty as Senior Deputy Ryan Layne, a tough and resourceful officer navigating departmental politics and street-level cases; she appeared in 8 episodes before the series was canceled after one season.[27] Throughout the mid-2000s, Luner took on guest roles and lead parts in Lifetime original movies, often portraying complex women in suspenseful thrillers that highlighted her dramatic range. Notable examples include her role as a woman uncovering a deadly affair in The Perfect Marriage (2006), where she played Marianne "Annie" Grayson, a character entangled in a scheme to murder her husband for insurance money. Other projects from this period, such as Blind Injustice (2005) and Stranger in My Bed (2005), showcased her in stories of betrayal and psychological tension, allowing her to explore genres outside the soap opera format she had dominated in the 1990s.[28] In 2009, Luner returned to daytime television with a high-profile recast as Liza Colby on the ABC soap opera All My Children, stepping into a role previously played by Marcy Walker and others; she portrayed the ambitious attorney and media mogul in 312 episodes until the show's conclusion in 2011. This stint marked a deliberate pivot back to soaps, leveraging her earlier experience on shows like Savannah while incorporating more mature storylines involving corporate intrigue and family drama. During career transitions in the 2010s, Luner continued with Lifetime productions, including A Mother's Revenge (2016), where she starred as a grieving parent seeking justice, and limited voice acting opportunities that supplemented her on-screen work. Luner addressed typecasting concerns from her 1990s roles by pursuing varied characters in procedural dramas, culminating in her portrayal of Cassie Siletti, the supportive yet strained wife of a district attorney, on the TNT series Murder in the First from 2015 to 2016; she appeared in 10 episodes across the third season, contributing to narratives of corruption and personal turmoil. These efforts helped diversify her portfolio amid fluctuating series opportunities.[29]2020–present
In 2020, Jamie Luner transitioned into producing while continuing to act, marking her debut as a producer with the Lifetime holiday film The Christmas High Note, in which she also starred as Rachel, a vocal coach who helps a teenager prepare for a Christmas pageant.[30] The project, directed by Brian Skiba, highlighted her multifaceted involvement in independent filmmaking during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic.[31] Luner expanded her production work with Lost & Found in Rome (2021), a romantic comedy where she served as producer and appeared as Diana Jensen, a supporting character aiding the protagonist's journey in Italy.[32] By 2023, amid ongoing pandemic challenges, she returned to Bulgaria to produce several low-budget features, including Valley of Love, I'm with Me, and For Better or Worse. These films were shot under strict COVID-19 protocols in Sofia, reflecting her pivot to behind-the-camera roles as on-set acting opportunities diminished due to industry shutdowns and health restrictions.[33] In For Better or Worse, she also took a lead acting role as Jessa Putman, a woman navigating divorce and home renovation with her ex-husband.[34] The global health crisis significantly influenced Luner's career trajectory, prompting a greater focus on production to maintain creative output when traditional acting gigs were limited by travel bans and production halts.[1] This shift allowed her to collaborate with international crews in safer, controlled environments like Bulgaria, fostering her interest in indie cinema. Post-2023, Luner has not taken major on-screen roles but has expressed continued enthusiasm for independent projects. In September 2024, Luner joined fellow Melrose Place cast members at 90s Con in Daytona Beach, Florida, for a reunion panel that teased a potential revival series revisiting the original characters decades later.[35] The event, featuring discussions on the soap's enduring legacy, highlighted ongoing talks for the reboot, with Luner contributing to nostalgic reflections tied to her iconic role as Lexi Sterling.[35] However, as of August 2025, Heather Locklear indicated that the project has stalled, with no significant progress reported.[36]Personal life
Relationships
Jamie Luner was in a long-term relationship with personal trainer John Braz from 1995 to 1999.[4] Following the cancellation of her series Savannah, the couple embarked on a cross-country journey across the United States in an Airstream motorhome.[4] Details of other romantic involvements, including any rumored connections with co-stars during her time on Melrose Place in the late 1990s, remain largely private and unconfirmed in public records.[37] In 2018, Luner was accused by Anthony Oliver of drugging and sexually assaulting him in 1998 when he was 16 years old.[38] The Los Angeles Police Department investigated the allegation but declined to file charges in September 2018, citing insufficient evidence.[39] Oliver later filed a $250 million lawsuit against her, which was dismissed, and he was declared a vexatious litigant by the court.[40] Luner has no children and has consistently emphasized her close-knit family bonds, particularly with her mother, Susan Luner, an actress, and her older brother, David Luner, who owns ceramic stores.[4] In February 2025, she shared a public tribute to her mother's 80th birthday, highlighting the enduring influence of Susan's love, strength, and compassion on her life.[41] As of 2025, Luner is single and has maintained a deliberate focus on privacy in her personal affairs following her relationship with Braz.[37]Interests and philanthropy
Jamie Luner earned a master's degree in spiritual psychology from the University of Santa Monica, a pursuit that underscores her interest in spiritual practices and personal growth.[3] This educational background complements her role as a life coach, where she focuses on empowering others through psychological and spiritual insights.[42] Her passion for wellness extends to fitness and mindfulness, as evidenced by her advocacy for practices that foster grounding and inner clarity. Luner has also demonstrated a commitment to physical health through activities like yoga, which she credits with awakening the mind, body, and spirit.[43] In the realm of culinary interests, Luner obtained a degree from the Epicurean School of Culinary Arts in the early 1990s, reflecting her longstanding hobby of cooking and her brief career as a chef at a French restaurant in Los Angeles.[3] Luner's philanthropic efforts center on health and community support, including work with Project Angel Food, which delivers meals to individuals with critical illnesses; the Pediatric AIDS Foundation, addressing pediatric HIV/AIDS; Feeding America, combating hunger; and Music for Our Seniors, providing musical entertainment to elderly residents. She has shown particular dedication to the Pediatric AIDS cause.[8]Other work
Theater
Jamie Luner's involvement in theater has been limited compared to her extensive television and film career, serving primarily as a means to hone her craft and explore live performance. During her time at Beverly Hills High School, where she graduated in 1989, Luner was actively engaged in the school's drama department, participating in various productions that sparked her passion for acting. At the age of 15, she achieved early recognition by winning first prize in the individual monologues category at the Los Angeles Shakespeare Festival in 1988, an accomplishment that solidified her commitment to performing arts.[8] In the mid-2000s, Luner returned to the stage for select engagements to maintain her skills amid her busy screen schedule. She portrayed Susan in the comedy Black and Bluestein at the Other Space at Santa Monica Playhouse in 2007, marking a rare theatrical outing that highlighted her comedic timing in an intimate setting.[9] The following year, she took on the lead role of Appassionata Von Climax in the musical Li'l Abner, a Reprise! production based on Al Capp's comic strip, performed at UCLA's Freud Playhouse from February 6 to 17, 2008; critics praised the show's corny charm and Luner's sultry interpretation of the voluptuous villainess.[44][45] Luner's stage work also included appearances in the Young Playwrights Festival in Los Angeles during her early career, though details on specific dates and roles remain sparse.[9] Overall, she has no major Broadway or long-running credits, positioning theater as a supplementary pursuit rather than a primary focus.Guest appearances
Luner made her first notable talk show appearance as a guest on The Rosie O'Donnell Show on October 27, 1997, discussing her role on Melrose Place.[46] She later appeared on The View on April 24, 2009, promoting her new role as Liza Colby on All My Children, with guest co-host Meghan McCain.[47] At the 36th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards on August 30, 2009, Luner attended the ceremony at the Orpheum Theatre in Los Angeles.[48] Throughout the 2010s, Luner engaged in various radio interviews and podcasts to promote her soap opera roles, particularly her tenure on All My Children from 2009 to 2011. For instance, in 2019, she appeared on The Dannie De Novo Podcast, reflecting on her career transitions and experiences in the industry.[49] In recent years, Luner has embraced fan conventions and social media engagements, including an appearance at 90s Con Florida in September 2024, where she reunited onstage with Melrose Place castmates such as Heather Locklear, Josie Bissett, and Laura Leighton to discuss the show's legacy and tease a potential revival (as of August 2025, the project remains in early development with no further progress reported).[35][36]Filmography
Film
Jamie Luner has appeared in over 25 films, primarily television movies and direct-to-video releases, with a predominant focus on thriller and romance genres that often feature strong female leads navigating suspenseful or emotional narratives.[2] Her early film roles established her in dramatic TV movies, while later works include independent features and holiday-themed productions. Below is a chronological selection of 10 major films, highlighting key credits with roles, directors, and brief production notes.| Year | Title | Role | Director | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1993 | Moment of Truth: Why My Daughter? | Diana Moffitt | Chuck Bowman | NBC TV movie based on the true story of a mother's advocacy after her daughter's involvement in prostitution; Luner's debut lead role.[13] |
| 1994 | Confessions of a Sorority Girl | Sabrina Masterson | Uli Edel | Showtime original set in a 1950s sorority, portraying a manipulative newcomer; part of the Rebel Highway anthology series.[14] |
| 1999 | Friends & Lovers | Model | George Haas | Independent romantic comedy about intertwining relationships; Luner's first theatrical feature credit.[50] |
| 2000 | Sacrifice | Naomi Cohen | Mark L. Lester | USA Network thriller TV movie involving an escaped convict and a serial killer targeting abortion clinic patients.[25] |
| 2003 | Threshold | Dr. Savannah Bailey | Chuck Bowman | Sci-fi thriller TV movie about a meteor-induced plague; Luner as a CDC virologist. |
| 2006 | The Suspect | Beth James | Keoni Waxman | Lifetime thriller where Luner plays a woman framed for murder by her husband.[51] |
| 2006 | The Perfect Marriage | Marianne Danforth / Annie Grayson | Douglas Jackson | Lifetime romantic thriller about identity swap and deception in a troubled marriage.[28] |
| 2013 | The Perfect Boss | Jessica Slate | Curtis Crawford | Lifetime thriller depicting workplace harassment and revenge. |
| 2017 | A Lover Betrayed | Tess Nolans | Jeff Hare | Lifetime drama based on real events, with Luner as a mother seeking justice after her son's murder.[52] |
| 2020 | The Christmas High Note | Rachel Carter | Brian Skiba | Hallmark-style holiday romance TV movie; Luner also served as producer, focusing on a singer overcoming stage fright.[53] |