Lee Majors II: A Son, a Shadow, and a Career That Quietly Disappeared

His birth name was Harvey Lee Yeary III.

Not Lee Majors II. Not Junior. Not “the son of.” Just a kid born in 1962 with a name that matched his grandfather’s — and a father who was about to become one of the biggest TV stars in America.

That gap — between who he was and what everyone else called him — tells you most of what you need to know about this man’s life.

Bio at a Glance

DetailInfo
Full Birth NameHarvey Lee Yeary III
Known AsLee Majors II
BornApril 8, 1962, USA
FatherLee Majors (Harvey Lee Yeary II)
MotherKathy Robinson (first wife of Lee Majors)
Parents Divorced1964–1965
Height6 ft 2 in (188 cm)
Stepmother (current)Faith Majors
Half-siblingsNikki, Dane, Trey Majors
SonCody Majors (USAC sprint car driver)
Known Film/TV work1984–1995 (approximately)
Post-acting careerLighting technician/electrician in film production
Estimated net worth$1–$2 million (unverified estimates)

Who Is He, Exactly? What the Record Shows

Lee Majors II doesn’t have a Wikipedia page of his own. Think about that.

His father has a detailed Wikipedia entry spanning decades. Lee II gets a single-line mention. That’s the clearest signal about his public footprint: it’s small, and largely defined by someone else.

What we know for certain: He was born on April 8, 1962. His parents split when he was around two or three years old. He grew up without his father under the same roof. He later became an actor, took TV roles, appeared alongside his famous father several times, then quietly stepped out of the entertainment business.

What we don’t know: Almost everything about his personal life. His marriage details are not public. His post-Hollywood life is largely private. Most online bios repeat the same small set of facts, often pulling from each other.

That’s a red flag worth noting. When sources cite no primary interviews and no original reporting, you’re reading recycled information — not reporting.

Growing Up as “The Son Of”

Lee Majors II

His parents’ marriage lasted three years, from 1961 to 1964.

Lee Majors (the father) was still a nobody then. He hadn’t landed The Big Valley yet. He was a kid from Kentucky trying to make it in Hollywood. The marriage ended before the fame started.

That timing matters. Lee II grew up after the divorce, raised by his mother Kathy Robinson. But his father wasn’t absent. When his dad married Farrah Fawcett in 1973 at the Hotel Bel-Air in Los Angeles, Lee II was there as a child — in the room, watching.

By then, his father was The Six Million Dollar Man. That title hit TV screens in 1974 and turned into an international phenomenon. The show aired in over 71 countries.

What was it like to be that man’s kid? No one has publicly asked Lee II, and he hasn’t said. That silence is consistent throughout his adult life.

The Career: What He Did, and What He Didn’t Do

Let’s be clear about the scope here. Lee Majors II had a real but limited acting career. It ran roughly from 1984 to 1995, with a few pieces outside that window.

His first confirmed credit is The Love Boat in 1984, where he played a character named Jimmy Adams. Not exactly a launching pad.

His most significant work came directly tied to his father’s shows. In 1986, he appeared in a Fall Guy episode called “In His Shadow” — and here’s the detail worth pausing on. In that episode, he played a character named Dustin Seavers who discovers that Colt Seavers (his father’s character) is his long-lost dad. He played an angry son confronting an absent father. On screen. With his actual father. Whether that was casting irony or intentional, nobody has ever publicly explained it.

He appeared in all three Six Million Dollar Man reunion TV movies:

  • The Return of the Six-Million-Dollar Man and the Bionic Woman (1987)
  • Bionic Showdown: The Six Million Dollar Man and the Bionic Woman (1989)
  • Bionic Ever After? (1994)

In each one, he played a character named Jim Castillian — an OSI agent. His father played Steve Austin. Father and son, side by side, in the same fictional universe his father built. It looks coordinated. Whether he got those parts on merit, connection, or both is a fair question — and one nobody seems to have pressed.

He also appeared in Tour of Duty in 1990, the Vietnam War drama. He played SP4 Robby Scarlet. His father had a recurring role in the same series. Again, they played father and son on screen.

One episode: Raven in 1993. One film: Ice Cream Man in 1995, a low-budget horror movie where he played Detective Maldwyn. That’s the last acting credit available in public records.

The commercial work is worth noting, too. In the mid-1980s, father and son appeared together in a series of Diet Rite soda ads. That’s the kind of gig that pays but doesn’t build a career.

The Hidden Career Nobody Talks About

Here’s the part of Lee Majors II’s story that almost never gets mentioned in celebrity profiles about him.

After acting dried up, he didn’t disappear. He went to work in the film industry — behind the camera.

Public records show him working as a lighting technician and electrician on multiple major productions:

  • Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2013) — electric lighting technician
  • Live Free or Die Hard (2006–2007) — electric lighting technician
  • It’s Complicated (2006–2007) — electric lighting technician
  • The Lincoln Lawyer (2009) — electric lighting technician
  • Playing It Cool (2013–2014) — lighting technician
  • How to Make Love Like an Englishman (2014) — lighting technician

This is real, skilled, union work on major productions. It’s not a footnote. It’s a second career.

But almost no profile of Lee Majors II covers this in depth. Why? Possibly because it doesn’t fit the “son follows famous father” angle that drives clicks. Possibly because the people writing about him didn’t look past IMDb’s acting credits page.

That gap in coverage is worth pointing out. A man working on Captain America deserves more than a passing sentence.

The Divorce, Farrah, and the Family He Navigated

Lee Majors II

Lee II was three when his parents split. His father was on the rise. His mother is described in records only as Kathy Robinson — there’s no public profile of her, no interview record, nothing. She appears in genealogy records and divorce mentions only.

This matters because it shapes a question: who actually raised Lee II? The answer, based on available information, appears to be his mother. His father was working non-stop through the late 1960s and all of the 1970s.

The Farrah Fawcett element is complicated. She became his stepmother in 1973 when he was eleven years old. The marriage lasted — officially — until the divorce in 1982. Farrah died of cancer in 2009. Lee II is listed in records as her ex-stepson. There are no known public comments from him about her.

His father’s third wife, Karen Velez, gave Lee II three half-siblings: Nikki and twins Dane and Trey. Karen Velez died on July 2, 2023. Lee II has a current stepmother in Faith Majors, his father’s fourth wife since 2002.

That’s a lot of family change across one lifetime. Whether that was stable or chaotic from the inside, only Lee II knows — and he hasn’t said.

His Son Cody: The Third Generation

Lee Majors II has one known child: Cody Majors.

Cody didn’t go into acting. He chose sprint car racing under the United States Auto Club (USAC). He competes in 360 Sprint Cars along the West Coast and has goals to move up to 410 Sprint Cars and Midget car racing.

When Cody won his first race in Ventura, California, in 2018, he posted publicly on Instagram: “Want to thank my pops for all the support over the years whether it’s racing or life in general! Thank you for always being there.”

That’s a pointed phrase — “always being there.” Lee II grew up with a father who wasn’t always physically present. It reads like a conscious contrast. Whether it was intentional or not is unknown, but the pattern across generations is visible: Lee Majors (the original) was often on set or traveling. Lee Majors II made a point of being at his son’s races.

Lee II’s wife — Cody’s mother — is not named in any public record this reporter could find. That’s a genuine gap.

What’s Unclear, What’s Missing

Any honest account of Lee Majors II has to flag what we simply don’t know:

  • No confirmed details about his personal life before or during his marriage
  • No known interviews where he speaks in his own words at length
  • His mother Kathy Robinson has no public profile at all
  • The year of his marriage is not in any public record
  • Why he stopped acting after 1995 is not documented anywhere
  • Whether his behind-camera work (lighting, electrical) was a deliberate career pivot or just survival income is unknown

Most bio articles about him are copy-paste jobs recycling the same four or five facts. Anyone claiming a “full biography” without primary source interviews is filling in gaps with assumptions.

This article won’t do that.

The Name Problem: Is It an Asset or a Cage?

Here’s the core tension in Lee Majors II’s story. His professional name was always a marketing device and a limitation at the same time.

“Lee Majors II” signals a connection to a famous person. It gets you the audition. It gets you cast alongside your father in reunion movies. It gets you the Diet Rite commercial.

But it also caps your ceiling. You’re always the “son of.” Reviews mention your father before they mention your performance. Casting directors see the name and think “novelty hire,” not “serious actor.”

His behind-the-camera career — under his real name, presumably — was built on skill, not surname. That’s a significant shift. And it’s the chapter of his life that most people who write about him either ignore or don’t know exists.

Current Life: What We Know for 2025

As of early 2025, Lee Majors II is 63 years old. He lives privately. He is not on any major social media platform with a verified presence. No interviews have surfaced from recent years.

His son Cody is actively racing. His father Lee Majors, now 86, appeared in the 2024 Fall Guy film in a cameo alongside Heather Thomas. Lee II did not appear in that film.

His estimated net worth sits at $1–$2 million based on multiple estimates, but none of these are sourced to tax records, verified financial disclosures, or direct reporting. Treat those numbers with appropriate skepticism.

What’s clear: He left Hollywood. He built a second career in production. He raised a son who thanks him publicly for showing up. By any ordinary measure, that’s a life that worked out.

It just doesn’t fit the celebrity biography template — and that might be exactly why he chose it.

FAQ: 12 Real Questions

1. What is Lee Majors II’s real name?

His birth name is Harvey Lee Yeary III. He was given his grandfather’s name. He uses “Lee Majors II” as his professional and public name, matching his father’s stage name.

2. Who is Lee Majors II’s mother?

His mother is Thelma Kathleen Robinson, known as Kathy Robinson. She was Lee Majors’ first wife. They married in 1961 and divorced around 1964–1965. There is no public profile, interview record, or further information about her available in public sources.

3. Did Lee Majors II grow up with his father?

No. His parents divorced when he was roughly two or three years old. He was raised by his mother. He maintained a relationship with his father and appeared at significant events like his father’s 1973 wedding to Farrah Fawcett, but they did not share a household.

4. What are his most notable acting roles?

His most recognized roles are in the three Six Million Dollar Man reunion TV movies (1987, 1989, 1994), where he played OSI agent Jim Castillian alongside his father. He also appeared in a notable Fall Guy episode in 1986 and Tour of Duty in 1990.

5. Did he really work on big Hollywood productions after acting?

Yes. Records confirm he worked as a lighting technician and electrician on Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2013), Live Free or Die Hard (2006–2007), The Lincoln Lawyer (2009), It’s Complicated (2006–2007), and other productions. This is documented but rarely covered in celebrity profiles about him.

6. Why did his acting career stop around 1995?

No public explanation exists. His last confirmed acting credit is Ice Cream Man (1995). He transitioned to behind-the-camera work, but whether this was his choice or a lack of casting opportunities is not documented anywhere.

7. Who is Cody Majors?

Cody Majors is Lee Majors II’s son. He is a sprint car racing driver competing in the USAC circuit on the West Coast. He won his first race in Ventura, California, in 2018 and publicly thanked his father for his support. He represents the third generation of the Majors family, but chose a completely different career path.

8. Is Lee Majors II married?

He appears to be or have been married based on the existence of his son Cody, but his wife’s name and any details about his personal relationship history are not available in any public record found in this research.

9. Did Farrah Fawcett play a role in his life?

She was his stepmother from 1973 (when he was 11) until his father’s divorce from her was finalized in 1982. She died in 2009. Lee II has made no known public statements about her. His relationship with her during those years is completely undocumented publicly.

10. What is his estimated net worth?

Multiple sites estimate it at $1–$2 million. These figures are not sourced to any verified financial document. Treat them as rough estimates, not confirmed numbers.

11. How tall is Lee Majors II?

He is reported to be 6 feet 2 inches (188 cm) tall — two inches taller than his father.

12. Where is Lee Majors II now in 2025?

He lives a private life. He is not active on public social media with a verified account. He supports his son Cody’s racing career. He has not appeared in recent film or TV productions. His exact location is not public information.

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