- She went to the audition for Matchstick Men (2003) in 2002, dressed as and acting like a 14-year-old girl. Ridley Scott only realized her real age when she told him. She was 24 at the time.
- Retired from acting in 2009 to focus on being a mother to her children. She only occasionally does a film role every few years that involves her filmmaker husband Mark Neveldine, usually a cameo appearance.
- Had a small role in Kevin Costner's Dragonfly (2002) as a cancer patient, though her scenes were cut. Since she shaved her head for the role she had to wear wigs throughout her next movie White Oleander (2002).
- She studied acting, ballet, and dance, and she eventually won awards and scholarships for her talent.
- Was cast as "Christine Brown" in the film Drag Me to Hell (2009) after Elliot Page dropped out due to scheduling problems.
- Plays a character eleven years younger than herself in Flicka (2006).
- Alison runs a coaching business.
- Has 3 children with her husband Mark Neveldine including a son named Billy Neveldine (b.2010). Billy's birth was not revealed until August 2011. She has since given birth to a 2nd child and given birth 3rd child.
- Her father Gary Lohman is an architect and her mother Diane Dunham owned a French bakery.
- Is an environmentalist and supports many charities which improve and protect the environment.
- One of Esquire Magazine's "Women We Love".
- She has Irish, German, English, Scottish, and more distant French-Canadian, ancestry.
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