He was once one of America’s most beloved child stars, a familiar face throughout the 1980s. Behind the fame, however, was a young actor struggling with identity, pressure, and a lost sense of self after growing up almost entirely on Hollywood sets.
Born in 1974, he began acting at eight and quickly rose to fame through hit TV shows, trading a normal childhood for scripts, studios, and public scrutiny. Though successful, he felt trapped by the image carefully built around him. As a teenager, he walked away from Hollywood to experience a more ordinary life, finding comfort in theater away from the teen-idol spotlight.
As adulthood approached, addiction took hold, leaving him isolated and near collapse. Recovery became a turning point, but in 1996 his life was shaken again when a tabloid outed him as gay. Though the exposure strained family relationships and stalled his acting career, he refused to deny who he was. Unexpectedly, messages of gratitude from young LGBTQ+ fans helped him find purpose and strength.
After years of navigating fame, addiction, and identity, he left acting in 2015. He returned to school, earned a doctorate in clinical psychology, and opened a private practice, dedicating his life to helping others heal. Today, he lives quietly, advocates for LGBTQ+ rights, and reflects a life transformed—choosing authenticity and meaning over fame and applause.