Iconic child stars of the β70s
The 1970s brought typical family comedies, detective stories, game shows, and the like to television audiencesβbut the nuances and variables that came with them made all the difference.
Audiences began to see racial barriers previously never crossed suddenly disintegrate. During that time, Americans witnessed the first Black-centered family comedy with βThe Jeffersons,β along with the in-your-face comedy of βAll in the Family,β where the storyline often forced Carroll OβConnorβs curmudgeonly patriarch to confront his overt racism in uncomfortable conversations.
The β70s became a byproduct of the counterculture revolution that firmly rooted itself in the American lexicon during the β60s. The sexual revolution, the feminist movement, and anti-war sentiments all managed to make their way into the foundational structures of shows that were groundbreaking for the time. These included shows with female-led casts to powerful miniseries events such as βRootsβ taking over the airwaves.
We forget that many of the casts of these showsβespecially some everlasting family-centered dramas in televisionβs historyβhad child stars put into a completely unfamiliar spotlight. No one could prepare these young performers for this level of fame, as television in and of itself was such a new and uncharted art form. These child stars began their careers as young as infancy, and a number of them have achieved success over the years. Some have won Oscars; some have chosen to leave Hollywood; some left us far too soon. In whatever category they may fall, these child stars made their way into millions of peopleβs lives every week and have left their legacy in the entertainment world.
Stacker compiled a list of 30 of the most iconic child stars of the β70s using multiple sources for television and film history, including IMDb and Time. These actors left an indelible mark on the small or large screen, some of whom have carried on to wildly successful careers as adult actors. Scroll through to see if some of your childhood favorites made the list.

Danny Bonaduce
Danny Bonaduce was best known as the ginger-haired youngster who played Shirley Jonesβ wise-cracking middle son on βThe Partridge Family.β Bonaduceβs real-life personality seemed to match the mischievous nature of his TV character, which got him into his fair share of trouble as his career continued.
Incidents include his well-known 1990 arrest in Daytona Beach while attempting to buy cocaineβdespite being in the area to host a D.A.R.E event. Heβs maintained a somewhat solid career of television appearances over the years and, much like a few other child stars, played himself in some of these appearances.

Kristy McNichol
Kristy McNichol was a young, freckle-faced kid when she made her first appearances in a variety of commercials. Yet, her breakthrough role in the mid-70s sitcom βFamilyβ earned her screen recognition and critical acclaim. Her role as Letitia βBuddyβ Lawrence earned her back-to-back Emmy award nominations in 1977, 1978, and 1979βwith her winning two out of those three years.
She found her way into a supporting role on the β80s sitcom βEmpty Nest,β a spinoff of the wildly popular βGolden Girlsβ on which McNichol appeared. She announced her retirement from acting in 2001.

Peter Ostrum
If you grew up any time between the β70s and the present day, youβre likely familiar with Peter Ostrumβs role as the Golden Ticket-winning Charlie Bucket in the trippy classic βWilly Wonka & The Chocolate Factoryβ with comedic legend Gene Wilder.
Ostrumβs turn as Charlie gained him instant notoriety, but he realized early on that Hollywood life was not for him. He graduated from Cornell University in 1984 and has worked as a veterinarian ever since.

Mackenzie Phillips
Mackenzie Phillips was a fresh-faced kid from a fairly famous family when she landed her role on the β70s sitcom βOne Day at a Time,β a show based around a divorcee-mother attempting to raise two children on her own.
Phillips, daughter of The Mamas & the Papas lead singer John Phillips, saw her tenure on the show finish before the series due to substance abuse issues. Her Hollywood career never fully recovered, but she became a substance use disorder counselor in Pasadena.

Ricky Schroder
Ricky Schroder became the lovable son of Hollywood in 1979 with his breakout role in the movie βThe Champ,β a neo-noir drama starring Jon Voight and Faye Dunaway. The role earned Schroder a Golden Globe Award at age 9, making him the youngest actor in the award showβs history to take home a trophy. Afterward, Schroder went on to star in the family sitcom βSilver Spoons.β
His career continued into adulthood, with starring roles in various shows from βLonesome Doveβ to βNYPD Blue.β

Tatum OβNeal
Tatum OβNeal was a young kid from a Hollywood family when she made her debut in the 1973 film βPaper Moon,β which starred her father Ryan OβNeal. Tatum, who played a child con artist being mentored by her grifter father (played by her real-life father), earned an Academy Award for the role. She is still the youngest person to have ever won an Academy Award.
While her career was fairly successful early on, her personal life was marred by rocky personal relationships, including a volatile and public separation from tennis star John McEnroe, and arrests that led her adult career to taper off.

Leif Garrett
Leif Garrett had a mile-long resume by the time his musical career took off in the mid-70s. Before then, he had appeared in the βWalking Tallβ movies as Mike Pusser and had a recurring role on the series βFamily,β among other shows and films.
His appearance in the 1975 miniseries βThree for the Roadβ assisted in Garrettβs achievement of teen heartthrob status, and from there, his musical career took off. Like many young stars of the time, legal troubles blemished Garrettβs career. In 2019, he published an autobiography entitled βIdol Truth.β

Kim Fields
You take the good, you take the bad, you take it all, and then you have the fact that for a decade, βThe Facts of Lifeβ theme song played its way into millions of homesβand with it came Tootie, the lovable, gossipy character played by actor Kim Fields.
Centered around a girlsβ boarding school, the show thrust Fields and her shining stage presence into the spotlight. Fields went on to have a successful career after the series, starring in the groundbreaking β90s sitcom βLiving Single,β which many have pointed to as the blueprint with which the success of shows like βFriendsβ was founded. Fields has remained a mainstay on television, including a brief stint as a cast member on βThe Real Housewives of Atlantaβ and a starring role on Netflixβs βThe Upshawsβ from 2021 to 2026.

Corey Feldman
As famous as he is infamous, child actor Corey Feldman began his career as a young star, appearing in hundreds of commercials and TV shows like βThe Bad News Bearsβ and βMork and Mindyβ by the time he became a teenager. He also had an impressive film career in the β80s, including classics like βThe Gooniesβ and βThe Lost Boys.β On Feb. 3, 2025, Feldman reunited with his βGooniesβ costars, prompting new talks of a long-awaited sequel.
Throughout his adolescence, Feldman became a young heartthrob, tilting his career on an upward trend while taking his mental health on a downward spiral. Like many young actors of the time, Feldman suffered from addiction issues, which, according to a March 2025 interview, cost him a role in the 1993 film βWhatβs Eating Gilbert Grape.β Battling his way through, Feldman has since become an advocate for child actors. The documentary "Corey Feldman vs. the World" debuted in December 2025.

Jodie Foster
While you may recognize this Oscar-winning actor from her roles in movies like βThe Silence of the Lambsβ and βPanic Room,β Jodie Foster began her long-standing career in Hollywood as a child star.
Foster was nominated for her first Oscar at 14 for her role in the Martin Scorsese-directed movie βTaxi Driver,β which she played at age 12 alongside Robert De Niro. With those kinds of acting credits at such an early age, itβs no wonder she has continued in the industry. In 2024, Foster won her first Emmy Award for her role in βTrue Detective: Night Country,β a part that also earned her a fourth Golden Globe in 2025.

Brooke Shields
There were child stars, and then there was Brooke Shields, who starred in a Dove commercial at 11 months oldβby the age of 14, Shields had already landed a print advertisement spread in Vogue magazine.
Her first major role in the French film βPretty Babyβ caused quite a stir as the 12-year-old Shields played Violet, a young girl raised in a brothelβthe scenes were so risquΓ© for a child that many accused filmmakers of child pornography violations. From there, her career flourished in Hollywood and the modeling world, with Shields maintaining a TV and film career and becoming a published author. In January 2025, she released her third book, βBrooke Shields Is Not Allowed to Get Old.β

Maureen McCormick
Few shows impacted popular culture during the β70s the way βThe Brady Bunchβ didβthe wholesome sitcom showcased a blended family, something reasonably unheard of then. By proxy, everyone in the cast became instant stars, including Maureen McCormick, who played the beautiful, bright-eyed eldest sister and girl-next-door character of Marcia Brady.
However, her popularity seemed to end as quickly as it came, and despite her early fame, her career halted. McCormick attempted a music career that did not get very far, and since the early 2000s, she has appeared on a smattering of reality shows.

Janet Jackson
Famous families are a recurring theme when talking about child stars, but the Jacksons could be considered the most famous of them all during the β60s and β70s. This family produced many stars, from the leading quintet The Jackson 5 to βThe Jacksons Variety Showβ to the solo star born when Michael Jackson debuted as a solo artist.
Included in that all too famous family was actor and singer Janet Jackson, who made her acting debut on her familyβs variety show but quickly paved her own path with appearances on βGood Times,β βFame,β and βDiffβrent Strokes.β Jackson eventually found her love, passion, and success in music, selling more than 100 million records worldwide.

Michael Jackson
Another progeny of the Jackson family brood was Michael Jackson, who, from an early age, became the coat whose tails his family rode in on. While the entire Jackson family seemed preternaturally talented, Michael had the undeniable charm, presence, and charisma to make him a star.
From his early success in the Jackson 5 to releasing his first solo album, βOff the Wall,β in 1979, Jacksonβs career transformed him into the proverbial βKing of Pop.β However, his personal life often brought his career into question, including multiple lawsuits alleging Jackson had molested children at his Neverland Ranch home. While no charges were ever filed, the question mark loomed over his head (even after his untimely death in 2009). The biopic βMichaelβ starring his nephew Jaafar Jackson was released in April 2026, earning a tremendous box-office take but largely negative reviews.

Robert Downey Jr.
You may know this particular star from his turn as the red and copper-clad superhero Iron Man, or you may remember him from his earlier roles as one of the infamous boys of the Brat Pack. But before he was all of those things, Robert Downey Jr. was a child actor who made his first appearance in the 1970 film βPound,β based on the off-Broadway play βComeuppance,β both of which were written by his father.
Despite his fairly consistent success, Downey also had his fair share of problems with the law and drugs throughout his career. After being arrested multiple times on various substance-related charges, Downey received a three-year sentence in the late β90s but only served a year in a Corcoran-based rehab facilityβa testament to what can happen when rehabilitation is the focus of incarceration. As further proof, Downey won his first Academy Award in 2024 thanks to a supporting role in βOppenheimer,β and made his Broadway debut in the play βMcNealβ in September of that year. He returned to the Marvel Cinematic Universe in July 2025βs βThe Fantastic Four: First Steps,β and will appear in "Avengers: Doomsday," due out in December 2026.

Linda Blair
There isnβt a movie that left such a terrifyingly indelible mark upon its viewers as βThe Exorcist,β a 1973 supernatural horror movie about a young girl possessed by an evil force. Linda Blair earned a Golden Globe Award for the role of the girl, as well as an Academy Award nomination.
Despite her near-instant success, the allegations that the film was cursed also seemed to haunt Blairβs career. She became typecast, relegated to horror films, and spent most of her career in B films. As time went on, she seemingly embraced that role, making tongue-in-cheek appearances in horror films such as Wes Cravenβs βScreamβ franchise. Blair even reprised her best-known role for a cameo in the 2023 movie βThe Exorcist: Believer.β

Scott Baio
Among the heartthrobs of the β70s was Scott Baio, who found his big break on the nostalgic sitcom βHappy Daysβ starring fellow child star Ron Howard. Baioβs screen presence, handsome looks, and killer smile not only earned him the recurring role as Chachi on βHappy Days,β but his characterβs success as a love interest for the showβs character Joanie earned them a spinoff, βJoanie Loves Chachiβ that aired for 17 episodes.
While his career never had A-list success, Baio has made a decent career with bit parts and appearances in various TV shows, in some instances playing himself.

Valerie Bertinelli
Another child television star alumnus from βOne Day at a Timeβ is the cherubic-faced starlet Valerie Bertinelli. She stole everyoneβs hearts and won two Golden Globes in the process. Her smile lit up the television screen, and she portrayed an aura of wholesomeness.
During a time of sexual openness and counter-revolution, many TV viewersβespecially parentsβsought out something wholesome, and they found that in Bertinelli. After her early period of fame in some β70s and β80s sitcoms, she went on to marry rock star and β80s hair god Eddie Van Halen, which kept her in the spotlight for a whole other reason. Since then, Bertinelli divorced Van Halen (who died in 2020) and published memoirs and cookbooks highlighting her Italian heritage. She also starred alongside Betty White in the TV show βHot in Clevelandβ from 2010 to 2015, but has more or less stayed off-camera since, until announcing her return to acting in June 2025.

David Cassidy
The 1970s musical family comedy βThe Partridge Family,β which combined super saccharine songs along with mad-cap scenarios carried about by the Partridge kids, produced a young heartthrob in actor David Cassidy. Cassidy made his way onto TV screens and music albums throughout his career in the β70s, but as the over-the-top disco era ended, so did his career.
Heβs made guest appearances and one-offs on various TV shows, in some instances playing himself over the years, but substance and legal issues marred his career. Cassidy ultimately passed away in 2017 after suffering from liver failure.

Ron Howard
Another Oscar winner among the many β70s child stars is Ron Howard, who started as the cute kid from βThe Andy Griffith Showβ and made another imprint with his supporting role in βHappy Days.β
While Howard was known early in his life for acting, his later career took him behind the camera. He became an award-winning director who helmed films, including βCocoonβ and βSplashβ in the β80s, βApollo 13β and βRansomβ in the β90s, and βA Beautiful Mind,β βCinderella Manβ and βFrost/Nixonβ in the 2000s, all of which earned him multiple nominations and awards, including Oscars, BAFTAs, and Golden Globes. His most recent film, "Eden," hit theaters in August 2025, with his next movie, "Alone at Dawn," in production.

Marie Osmond
Having started her music career at an early age, Marie Osmond made appearances on βThe Andy Williams Showβ by the time she was 6, and found success with the release of her 1973 debut album βPaper Rosesβ at age 12. Her wholesome lyrics, persona, and family upbringing gave her a heavy appeal to the masses.
By 16, she co-hosted a popular variety show with her brother Donny Osmond. Sheβs maintained her career over the decades through various means, such as memoirs and a talk show revival of the βDonny & Marieβ show, which aired from 1998 to 2000.

Donny Osmond
In a similar vein to his sister Marie, Osmond began making appearances on television shows like βThe Andy Williams Showβ when he was barely old enough to go to kindergarten. Known for his boyish good looks and charm, Osmond was a teen idol in music before collaborating with his sister to form the βDonny & Marieβ show, which first aired from 1976 to 1979. Osmond continued acting, making music, and hosting television shows over the years. The singing star is currently doing a Las Vegas residency at Harrahβs that runs through December 2026.

Melissa Gilbert
βLittle House on the Prairieβ was a highly successful young adult series of books adapted into a successful series. Melissa Gilbert played the lead character, Laura Ingalls, who spent her life on the proverbial prairie with her family. The show catapulted Gilbert into fame, and she appeared in several successful miniseries during that period, such as βThe Diary of Anne Frankβ and βThe Miracle Workerβ, and has since gone on to voice characters in successful animated series like βBatman: The Animated Seriesβ as Batgirl.
Gilbert was also the president of the Screen Actors Guild and ran for Congress in Michigan in 2016. Though she won, she had to drop out after the primaries due to health issues. In 2025, she appeared on the Hallmark series βWhen Calls the Heart,β co-created by the son of her TV dad, Michael Landon.

Christopher Knight
Best known for playing Peter Brady, the mischievous middle child on βThe Brady Bunch,β Christopher Knight transitioned from child stardom to a successful tech career. The show launched him and his other co-stars into an ever-focused spotlight, and Knight became a heartthrob before it ended.
He had a successful career in computer tech in the β90s, co-founding Visual Software, a graphics company then known for its state-of-the-art 3D software. He briefly returned to acting, but mostly in a reality show capacity, even appearing as one of the mummies in the eighth season of βThe Masked Singerβ along with fellow βBrady Bunchβ alum Barry Williams.

Gary Coleman
Gary Coleman charmed audiences on the sitcom βDiffβrent Strokesβ as Arnold Jackson, a young orphan adopted alongside his older brother by the wealthy single father who had employed the boysβ mother before her death. Colemanβs mischievous character and catchphraseββWhatchoo talkinβ βbout, Willis?ββwas a massive hit throughout the seriesβ eight seasons on TV.
However, during and long after the end of βDiffβrent Strokes,β Coleman struggled off-screen. The child actor faced career and financial challenges and trouble with the law. Coleman died at 42 in 2010 after an accidental fall caused a fatal brain hemorrhage. His tragic story is chronicled in a 2024 Peacock documentary called βGary.β

Kim Richards
Like many of her β70s child star contemporaries, Kim Richards got her start in commercials, but those who grew up in the era may remember her best for her work with Disney, including five episodes of βThe Wonderful World of Disneyβ and a starring role in βEscape to Witch Mountainβ and its sequel, βReturn from Witch Mountain.β She also starred on the popular sitcom βNanny and the Professor,β and appeared in its TV movie follow-ups.
While Richards went on to guest star on shows throughout the β80s, sheβs best known now as one of the original cast members of βThe Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.β She appeared on the first five seasons, starting in 2010, and has made several guest appearances in the years since. Richardsβ substance abuse struggles have been well documented on the series and in the tabloids. In September 2024, news broke that she had been placed on a psychiatric hold amid a relapse, but sisters Kyle Richards and Kathy Hilton said she was doing better in April 2025.

Kyle Richards
Kimβs sister Kyle Richards is also a former β70s child star who became a reality star. A scream queen from a very young age, her most famous role (outside of Bravo programming) is Lindsey Wallace in John Carpenterβs foundational 1978 horror film βHalloween.β While she was only eight at the time, she left a lasting impression, and she made her mark in other scary movies of the era, like βThe Carβ (alongside Kim), Disneyβs βThe Watcher in the Woods,β and βEaten Alive.β
Like Kim, Kyle Richards was out of the spotlight for years, reemerging in 2010 on βThe Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.β She has remained on the series for 15 years, and continues to drum up drama a decade-and-a-half later. But Kyle has also enjoyed a resurgence in her acting career, reprising her role as Lindsey in 2021βs βHalloween Killsβ and 2022βs βHalloween Ends.β Her latest big-screen appearance was in the 2024 romantic comedy βBeautiful Wedding,β and she appeared on an April 2026 episode of β9-1-1: Nashville.β

Eve Plumb
Another Brady sibling, Eve Plumb, played frequently ignored middle child Jan Brady on βThe Brady Bunchβ for all five seasons. Like her TV brothers and sisters, Plumb went on to play the character on βThe Brady Kidsβ and several subsequent spinoffs. In the β70s, the actor stayed busy doing TV shows and TV movies, starring in βDawn: Portrait of a Teenage Runawayβ and playing Beth March in NBCβs adaptation of βLittle Women.β
Aside from the Brady follow-ups, Plumb has worked sparingly onscreen in the decades since. Sheβs shown up on episodes of shows like βBullβ and βBlue Bloods,β and appeared in indie films like βNowhereβ and βBlue Ruin.β In August 2025, she announced that sheβd written a memoir, "Happiness Included: Jan Brady and Beyond," which was released in April 2026.

Jackie Earle Haley
If you grew up with the βBad News Bearsβ movies, you remember Jackie Earle Haley, who played Kelly Leak in the 1976 comedy and its two sequels, 1977βs βThe Bad News Bears in Breaking Trainingβ and 1978βs βThe Bad News Bears Go to Japan.β Haley had plenty of TV roles throughout the decade, popping up in episodes of βThe Partridge Family,β βThe Waltons,β and βThe Love Boat.β
However, Haley has really made a name for himself as an adult actor. His performance in the 2006 film βLittle Childrenβ earned wide acclaim, with Haley picking up an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor. Since then, heβs kept busy with roles in major films like βLincoln,β βShutter Island,β and βWatchmen.β Most recently, heβs appeared in horror films "The Host" in 2025 and "Family Movie" in 2026.

Danielle Brisebois
Late in the run of βAll in the Family,β the show introduced the character of Stephanie Mills, Archie and Edithβs nine-year-old niece. Danielle Brisebois appeared on the show until its conclusion in 1979, and continued with the spin-off βArchie Bunkerβs Place,β which ran until 1983. She even got a Golden Globe nomination for her work on the sequel series.
But aside from some additional TV parts in the β80s, Brisebois largely disappeared from our screens. Instead, sheβs been working as a recording artist and a songwriter. You probably donβt realize how many notable songs Brisebois has been involved with. Sheβs credited as a writer on songs by Paula Abdul, Kylie Minogue, and Kelly Clarkson. You can even thank her for co-writing Natasha Bedingfieldβs smash hits βUnwrittenβ and βPocketful of Sunshine.β Brisebois earned an Oscar nomination in 2015 for the song βLost Starsβ from βBegin Again.β
Additional writing by Cu Fleshman. Story editing by Chris Compendio. Copy editing by Kristen Wegrzyn. Photo selection by Clarese Moller.






