The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Children in Hollywood

Being a child actor has always been tough, but social media makes it so much worse.

- By Stephanie Merry

“Matilda” star Mara Wilson learned early on that looking herself up online was a mistake. She wasn’t yet a teenager the first time she searched for her name and found sites that falsely promised nude photos of her, not to mention people discussing her body in sickening detail. Later, she found images of her feet floating around cyberspace, alongside those of other young actors.

“I actually came to laugh it off,” Wilson, now 30, said over the phone recently. “And it’s really sad, when you’re 14 or 15, that you’re laughing off that you’re on a foot fetish website.”

Wilson made the journey from child star to stable adult with relative ease, but that path is littered with cautionary tales. Kids in Hollywood have always faced dangers, and they historical­ly came from within the industry. Just think of Judy Garland’s tales of being groped and harassed by a power player like Louis B. Mayer.

But the challenges for similar kids today are shifting and broadening with the rise of the internet and the popularity of social media. Suddenly child stars are being bombarded both with praise and criticism from the media, blogs and anonymous strangers.

There’s no real consensus on how to talk about child actors.

They’re often treated like adults. The problem with that line of thinking is coming into focus with the kids from Netflix’s hit series “Stranger Things.” Thirteen-year-old Millie Bobby Brown’s wardrobe choices, for example, were endlessly and sometimes uncomforta­bly scrutinize­d during the press tour for the show’s second season. When a former NBCUnivers­al executive tweeted a red carpet photo of Brown in a leather dress with the caption, “Millie Bobby Brown just grew up in front of our eyes,” Wilson, among others, hit back, accusing him of sexualizin­g a young girl.

“A 13-year-old’s body is never your business unless you are that 13-year-old girl,” Wilson said in an interview. “I don’t understand why we don’t see it as off limits. It would be creepy if you were to talk about a 13-year-old girl down the street.”

It would, but there’s a double-standard for youngsters in the public eye, and boys aren’t immune. Just look at the 27-yearold model who suggested, via Instagram, that then-14-year-old “Stranger Things” star Finn Wolfhard “hit me up in four years.” Meanwhile, fans have publicly pined for a romantic relationsh­ip between the actor and Brown, posting photoshopp­ed art of the pair together.

Before the internet was as big, it was easier to shield a child actor from everything. Wilson’s parents and agent used to go through her fan mail and pick out the particular­ly weird stuff so she wouldn’t have to read it, which worked — for the most part.

“But that doesn’t mean they can protect you from everything,” she said. “And that’s something that’s even more true with the advent of social media, which has democratiz­ed everything in a wonderful way, but also in a dangerous way.”

These days movie and television contracts might even stipulate social media activity as part of a publicity commitment, and studio teachers — the people who protect and advocate for children on sets — are worried about what that means. Sometimes, with the especially young, a parent or

employee will do the posting. But not always.

“So they’re doing that sometimes without supervisio­n,” said studio teacher Sharon Sacks. “I think that’s the next big thing that has to be monitored.”

Sacks has worked closely with Ariel Winter, along with the other child stars on “Modern Family,” for the past nine years, which means she has had a frontrow seat to the struggles that come with growing up both in the public eye and online. Winter told the Hollywood Reporter that before she was a teenager, strangers were posting that she was “a fat slut” and “a whore.” For a while, she decided to change her appearance in the hopes it would shield her from criticism.

“I was like, ‘Maybe I’m going to lose some weight, dye my hair, change how I dress. … Maybe I’m doing something wrong.’ But it didn’t help,” she said. “I actually got more hate by trying to change.”

It’s not just trolls on the internet who are using grown-up language to discuss young stars. It happens in the media and other more wellestabl­ished forums. Brown routinely shows up on Tom + Lorenzo, the take-no-prisoners fashion site, where the writers skewer the likes of Gal Gadot, 32, and Jessica Chastain, 40. TMZ peppers Wolfhard with questions about kissing Brown for the camera. During a panel at San Diego Comic-Con, comedian Patton Oswalt introduced Wolfhard as the “actor born with the greatest porn name ever.”

Some will argue that any child actor signed up for this. And they have a point: If a kid wants to be famous, then he has to take the bad with the good. But that’s simplifyin­g a situation that can often be murky.

Child actors today have to navigate these potential issues while dealing with inevitable online chatter — but, of course, it’s not all critical. Some of it is the opposite. Wolfhard and Brown’s tweets often get near worshipful responses from fans. But that comes with its own risks.

“It’s hard for an adult to adjust to the business, but being a kid and getting all this adulation from adults, that’s very addicting,” Sacks said. “I think the best thing we can do is try to help them learn that this isn’t life.”

Long before Twitter and Facebook, Danny Tamberelli — one of the stars of “The Adventures of Pete & Pete” — remembers thinking how it was both flattering and strange when fans used to come to his shooting locations and give him gifts. The attention was nice, but he’s glad now, at 35, that his parents kept him grounded; they even forced him to get a summer job at a local bagel shop to “learn the value of a dollar.” These days he’s a musician, stand-up comic and he hosts a podcast with his “Pete & Pete” co-star Michael Maronna.

He feels he has to be on Twitter, Instagram and other platforms for publicity reasons, but he’s glad those sites weren’t around when he was on a hit show. These days he still gets “weird, creepy videos, sometimes from fans.”

During a convention recently, he met some of the “Stranger Things” kids and was struck by their need to “create content” by shooting fun videos to feed their fan base.

“And there’s something about that that makes me feel sad,” he said, even though he assumes the children enjoy doing it. “I don’t think they should have to be worrying about that. At 12, 13, 14, they should be worrying about themselves and having fun.”

It’s just another way that the Internet is forcing child actors to grow up long before a normal kid would have to.

“I don’t think kids should have the responsibi­lity of creating yourself and creating your brand,” he said. “It’s an extra way for kids who grow up in this business to go down a bad path and be disconnect­ed from reality, because social media is whitewashi­ng everybody’s true selves with their perfect Instagram lives.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY NETFLIX ?? Millie Bobby Brown plays a young girl with extraordin­ary powers in “Stranger Things.”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY NETFLIX Millie Bobby Brown plays a young girl with extraordin­ary powers in “Stranger Things.”
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY FRAZER HARRISON/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Thirteenye­ar-old Millie Bobby Brown attended the 19th annual post-Golden Globes Party Jan. 7. Her wardrobe choices were endlessly and sometimes uncomforta­bly scrutinize­d during the press tour for the show’s second season.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY FRAZER HARRISON/ GETTY IMAGES Thirteenye­ar-old Millie Bobby Brown attended the 19th annual post-Golden Globes Party Jan. 7. Her wardrobe choices were endlessly and sometimes uncomforta­bly scrutinize­d during the press tour for the show’s second season.
 ?? ASTRID STAWIARZ / GETTY IMAGES FOR SIRIUSXM ?? Actors Gaten Matarazzo (from left), Millie Bobby Brown, Sadie Sink, Finn Wolfhard and Caleb McLaughlin, stars of Atlanta-filmed “Stranger Things,” are growing up in front of the camera — and that can make for a tricky childhood.
ASTRID STAWIARZ / GETTY IMAGES FOR SIRIUSXM Actors Gaten Matarazzo (from left), Millie Bobby Brown, Sadie Sink, Finn Wolfhard and Caleb McLaughlin, stars of Atlanta-filmed “Stranger Things,” are growing up in front of the camera — and that can make for a tricky childhood.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY NETFLIX ?? Finn Wolfhard stars in “Stranger Things.”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY NETFLIX Finn Wolfhard stars in “Stranger Things.”
 ?? JASON KEMPIN / GETTY IMAGES FOR SHORTY AWARDS ?? Actress Mara Wilson, who starred in “Matilda” as a child, believes it’s harder to be a child actor now that the internet is around.
JASON KEMPIN / GETTY IMAGES FOR SHORTY AWARDS Actress Mara Wilson, who starred in “Matilda” as a child, believes it’s harder to be a child actor now that the internet is around.

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