Teen Idol Nude

Teen Idol Nude




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The original Gidget and late ’50s, early ’60s cutie pie starlet Sandra Dee would have turned 70 years old today. We doubt the actress would still be willing to brave a surfboard in her senior years, but the scenario is funny to imagine given Dee’s clean-cut, wholesome image that often pegged her as a total square. While her peers were slinking across the big screen, Dee was busy perfecting her lifelong role as the wide-eyed ingénue and singing innocent songs about falling in love.
However, the performer’s career proves appearances can be deceiving. The teen idol struggled with drug and alcohol problems, and an eating disorder her entire life — having started starving herself as an up-and-coming model early in her career.
We looked at other Hollywood, chart topping teen idols whose clean-cut images betrayed their messy and often tragic lives. Although many fans assume their favorite stars are practically invincible, these teen talents prove the shocking truth about humans: we’re all flawed.
A former vaudeville singing act, the always self-conscious Judy Garland grew up in Hollywood next to studio sirens like Ava Gardner and Lana Turner never quite feeling like she fit in. At just thirteen years old Garland was primed to be an eternally youthful, girl next door type, and her iconic role in The Wizard of Oz reinforced the image in the minds of audiences everywhere. While Garland’s stellar singing voice and bright smile were starting to take over the screen, studio giant MGM was busy feeding the actress pills to keep her on task, leading to a lifelong addiction. Despite her struggles, Garland was one of the few teen idols who made a successful leap from young superstar to adult actress.
Singer-songwriter Ricky Nelson is credited with popularizing the term “teen idol” after Life Magazine used the phrase to describe the “Poor Little Fool” vocalist in 1958. He was an overnight sensation who further secured his wholesome image on The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet (he played himself). Think of it like America’s first realty television show — and the young Nelson’s good looks fit right in with the picture of idyllic 1950’s American family life. That changed when the singer discovered drugs, which became worse as his star rose. Parties, groupies, and managers who acted more like dealers encouraged Nelson’s bad habits. His reckless lifestyle and messy relationship life soiled the star’s clean-cut image.
Before Pat Boone became known for his wacky Obama citizenship conspiracy theories and calling liberals “cancer,” he was a pop rock Billboard artist that made wholesome teen girls swoon. The performer — who, ironically enough, got famous for his R&B covers performed by African American singers — was the second biggest charting singer of the late ’50s (right behind Elvis), and he eventually segued into a film career. Apart from his recent bizarre ramblings that have transformed his old-fashioned façade into something much uglier (or perhaps just revealed it to be so), Boone faced struggles with alcohol before committing himself to Christianity completely. We’re not sure the big guy upstairs is helping him in the love and acceptance department, though. P.S. We still can’t believe the formerly squeaky clean singer dressed up like a leather daddy and made a metal album.
Frankie Lymon was a soprano teen sweetheart who made his first hit single at only 14 years old. “Why Do Fools Fall in Love” was The Teenagers’ most famous tune, and Frankie was a standout success in the years that followed. It wasn’t easy feat given the African American singer grew popular in the racially tense 1950s, but his clean-cut image — complete with letter sweater — and innocent lyrics helped. When Lymon attempted to go solo, he didn’t find a warm reception from audiences as his signature voice started to change with age. While the singer tried to save his career he was fighting a heroin addiction and jumping into the beds of women more than twice his age. “I was never a child although I was billed in every theater and auditorium where I appeared as a child star. I was a man when I was 11 years old doing everything that most men do. In the neighborhood where I lived, there was no time to be a child,” he once shared. Lymon tried to make good in his early 20s, but by 25 he lost the struggle due to a heroin overdose.
Paul Anka crooned his way through the late 1950s and ’60s with hit songs like “Diana” and “Put Your Head on My Shoulder.” His catchy, timeless, and romantic tunes were easy to relate to. Anka had a way with audiences thanks to his boyish charm, and his vocal chops and writing talent (he penned famous songs for folks like Tom Jones and Frank Sinatra) made him a teen idol hit. Anka showed his true colors, however, when a rage recording surfaced in the 1980s — that went viral years later online — in which the singer flipped out on his crew and band. He told the gang that he was “the only important one on that stage,” and added hilariously that he could “slice like a hammer.” Al Pacino spoofed the quotable lines in Ocean’s Thirteen, and we’ve been laughing ever since.
Being openly gay in the 1960s wasn’t unheard of, but for a Hollywood star or popular singer it was still scandalous. Although Rebel Without a Cause star Sal Mineo came out of Hollywood’s closet, his protégés — like the innocent, aw-shucks Bobby Sherman, famous for playing sweetie pie Jeremy Bolt on late 1960’s sitcom Here Come the Brides — didn’t always follow suit. Mineo’s 2011 biography revealed that the actor’s longtime girlfriend reportedly caught Mineo in bed with Sherman sometime after he took the young hopeful under his wing to help start Sherman’s singing career. We can’t say for sure if the whole thing is just a rumor, or if the duo had some kind of fling. Either way, Sherman’s saccharine sweet image would have turned sour for many of the teen idol’s female fans in the less tolerant 1960s had his lifestyle not matched his wholesome appearance.
Although Partridge Family star Danny Bonaduce arguably struggled the most post television sitcom fame, his TV brother David Cassidy was the biggest teen idol of his siblings. Eventually Cassidy became huge as a solo act, but his clean-cut persona crafted on the popular network program followed him, shaggy haircut be damned. A nude Annie Liebovitz photoshoot for Rolling Stone in 1972 shook things up when the article revealed Cassidy drank, smoked pot, and partied. Also behind the singer’s winning smile were reportedly devastating feelings of isolation brought on by the pressures of fame. Times of London columnist Janice Turner wrote of the teen idol:
“The most troubled person I ever met was David Cassidy, the teen idol of Jackson’s era, unhinged long ago by his fans. For five years girls slept outside his house, followed him everywhere, ripped his clothing, forced him into isolation, made his life empty and lonely. And then, abruptly, when he was no longer the pretty boy du jour they deserted him.”
Bucking 1970’s hard rock music trends, The Carpenters came on the scene with warm romantic ballads full of lush melodies and a thoroughly wholesome image. Singer and drummer Karen Carpenter tried to hide her lifelong struggle with anorexia while topping the charts with songs like “Close to You” and “We’ve Only Just Begun.” Behind her perfect façade, Carpenter’s troubling obsession with her body image often revealed itself — sometimes physically and other times in interviews like this one where she talked about being on a “water diet.”
Before his life spiraled out of control from drug addiction, 1980’s teen dreamboat Corey Haim was flashing his cute smirk on screen and dominating the days of Tiger Beat and Bop. The more crushable of the Two Coreys, Haim always came across as the more likable of the duo whose boy next-door looks and seemingly good-natured innocence wooed audiences. The actor had a slight bad boy edge — then again, the neon 1980s made everyone in Hollywood seem just a little sleazy — but it was nothing short of charming. Whether playing the younger brother trying to keep his family together (and away from vampires) in The Lost Boys, or as the underdog misfit struggling for acceptance in Lucas, people rooted for Haim. Sadly drugs were starting to consume the actor at a young age. He started drinking beer on the set of Lucas (at 14 years old). “I lived in LA in the Eighties, which was not the best place to be. I did cocaine for about a year and a half, then it led to crack,” Haim once shared. In an interview with Larry King, Haim admitted that the 1988 movie License to Drive — in which Haim was only 16 years old at the time — was his “breaking point.”
Before the days of nude cell phone pic leaks and celebrity sex tapes, singers Debbie Gibson and Tiffany were trying to break free from their pop princess images by posing nude in Playboy. Although the fleshy photoshoots didn’t happen until years after each mall performer’s popularity had cooled completely, it was amusing to watch pop fans dissect lyrics and try to find the “slutty” subtext behind songs like “I Think We’re Alone Now.”

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Christopher Atkins: PopWatch 'Teen Idol' Q&A (Part 4 of 4)
Updated August 04, 2020 at 10:55 AM EDT
He was the definition of man candy in the early ’80s — a fact that the autographed nude photo collection in the (censored) store section of his official web site is happy to remind you of. Today, Christopher Atkins — best known for baring all (or nearly all) in The Blue Lagoon,
“>TV’s Dallas, the cult favorite The Pirate Movie, and that rare male foray into the stripper genre, A Night in Heaven — is hoping for a comeback on VH1’s newest celebreality show, Confessions of a Teen Idol (premieres Jan. 4). PopWatch caught up with Atkins, now a doting father of two with a career building luxury pools, as he was heading to the park to play ball with his son, Grant, a standout shortstop and pitcher at UNC Charlotte. (Daughter Brittney is in film school.) We talked about wild nights at Studio 54, the role he lost that would’ve changed his career, how he knows for a fact that I’m not the only fan of The Pirate Movie, why he agreed to do Confessions (and why his kids will be embarrassed), and what’s next.
Read our interviews with ‘Teen Idol’ castmates Adrian Zmed, Eric Nies, and Jamie Walters.
PopWatch: How did Confessions of a Teen Idol come to you?
Christopher Atkins: Well… The true story of it is, the pilot supposedly came about because of me. I don’t know if I’m supposed to say that or not. A friend of mine asked me to come over and install a television wall hanging thing, the tray the flatscreen goes on, so I went over there and I was helping her out. She was dating someone who ended up being one of the exec producers on the show, and she said to him, “You won’t believe who’s hanging a TV for me right now.” He just thought Wow, that’s kinda a cool idea. I wonder what these guys are all up to these days, and if it might make a fun show. So they were sorta chasing me down for a year to be in the show. They could never tell me what the show was about.
Did they tell you any of the circumstances they’d be putting you guys in? [They attend group therapy sessions with a “celebrity psychology expert” among other things.]
No, they really didn’t. They kinda just asked, “What are the things that you wouldn’t do?” Which is pretty much everything that they had us do. [Laughs]
In the premiere, Baywatch‘s David Chokachi is already threatening to leave the show. Did you ever reach that point?
Oh, yeah…. But at the same time, that’s what made the show different. There were some things that were in-your-face and tough to swallow. That can be really hurtful or incredibly magically beautiful. I had both of them happen to me on the show. There were some things that you didn’t know about the other guys: Billy shared a really interesting time in his past that none of us knew, where he was sleepin’ in a car and all the rest of the stuff, and what motivated and drove him. I think it will be very revealing. It looks into the lives of some guyswho, in their day, had tremendous fame. There wasn’t a place on theplanet that I could go that I wasn’t mobbed at one point in time in mylife. It’s cool to be able to reveal that to people — thegood, the bad, and the ugly. It’s not all good.
Is there a moment you’re most nervous about seeing?
It’s called all eight episodes…. My daughter is already planning a big party at the house [for the premiere]. My son was all excited about it, I think, until he saw me in my old spandex pants trying to play a guitar on a car in the trailer. He was like, “What the hell, dad?” I said, “Dude, that’s an ’80s gold spandex pant, and I hope your whole college baseball team sees it, because you’re gonna never live that one down. ‘That’s your dad?’ ‘Yep, that’s my dad.'”
Why are you in an ’80s gold spandex pant?
I had to be an ’80s rocker. [Laughs] When they showed us the outfits that we had to put on, I thought What would embarrass my kids the most? And that’s what I went for. That’s what I live for.
addCredit(“Everett Collection; VH1”)
Speaking of the ’80s, we had readers submit questions for you,and I was surprised that the movie mentioned most was your 1982musical, The Pirate Movie. I’ve always wondered if other people loved it as much as my sister and I.
I’ll tell you a very interesting story about that movie. That moviedidn’t do anything at the box office, which was too bad. It had itstroubles when we shot it. They had to change directors and all kinds ofstuff. And then one day, that I was in Canton, Ohio and doing aplay with a university out there — they have celebs come out and workwith their theater department — and the kids said, “Here, we have asurprise for you.” They sat me on a couch in one of their houses orwherever, and like 15 of ’em came flying out from around a corner andperformed the freakin’ Pirate Movie in front of me. I mean, word-for-word, the dances exactly. I was catching flies. My jaw was down to my knees. Oh.My.God. [Laughs]From that time on, it seemed like there’s a huge generation that lovedthat movie. I’m sitting here thinkin’ to myself, Paramount probablyowes me a bunch of money from that, ’cause I had a percentage in thatfilm… You don’t know how many people loved that movie. It absolutelyshocked me because it came and went. As a cult film, it’s huge. There’sfan sites everywhere. As a matter of fact, one of the fan sites isnow my official web site. I said, “God, I love the site. You’re awesome. Do you want to do my official site?” So this woman and I became friends.
This reader question is a great one: Why didn’t you get to do a commentary track for The Pirate Movie DVD? Were you ever approached? What would you have said?
No, I wasn’t approached. I wish we [he and costar Kristy McNichol]were. I probably would’ve talked all about the singing and dancing.It’s one of my big jokes today that I have a gold album because of thatmovie and I can’t sing in the shower. Everybody sounds good in theshower but me, that’s how bad of a singer I am. The dancing: I’m agreat athlete, but I can’t dance. I’m such a bad dancer, they alwaysput me in the back. [Laughs] It was probably my most fun movie to make, after The Blue Lagoon.It was six months in Australia. I had fencing lessons, we did ropecourses so we could all of this stuff on the boat and make it all lookgood and real. The worst part about it was that the Pirate King [TedHamilton] was one of the producers, and he never went to the lessons orpracticed the choreography, so every time we’d do a fencing scene, I’dcome away with welts all over me. He kept whacking me with his sword thewhole time. [Laughs] Man, that hurts.
In the premiere of a Confessions of Teen Idol, you talk about how you spent a lot of nights at Studio 54. What are your best stories… that you’re willing to share?
[Laughs] Studio 54 was a wild and crazy place. I meteverybody. I’ve got a picture of me and Christie Brinkley from Studio54 that I cherish. Me and Lorna Luft [Grease 2‘s Paulette] endedup in Snoopy’s doghouse one time. They had a whole Snoopy set there orsomethin’, and we ended up in the doghouse together, just hiding awayfrom everybody and laughing our butts off…. It was insane. There wasone time in particular, I was there with one of my best friends fromwhere I grew up, and we come out of the club at 4 in the morning orsomething ridiculous, and I couldn’t find my car. I was plastered. I’mgoing, “They stole it! They stole it!” We ran into these cops, and onerecognized me, and he goes, “Hey, hey, get it! Get in! I gotta take yousome place.” So we get into the back of this copcar, and my friend is all scared to death, and I’m all, “Woohoo! Hey,turn the lights on, man! Come on!” They hit the lights, and it turnsout they took us to an embassy, and there was a woman in one of thelittle guard shacks at the embassy and they’re yellin’, “Hey, we gotChristopher Atkins in the back of the car!” It was the funniest thing.Then they took us and found my car, dropped us off, told me I shouldn’tdrive — so that was all good. My friend turns to me and goes, “I’vebeen in the back of cop cars before, but they never drop me off.” [Laughs] That was pretty fun. New York cops are the best, man.
You also mention in the premiere that partying cost you Kevin Bacon’s role in Footloose. I never knew that.
I was back in the day, partying my butt off. They needed me to gomeet the producers, and I went in half-cocked because I was on my wayto go someplace and they called me at the last minute. I went in withit in the bag, and just absolutely blew it. That’s a true story. Itprobably would’ve changed my whole career, too. But things are meantfor a reason. I haven’t touched anything in 22 years. When I had mykids, I just wanted to be a dad. I didn’t want to party anymore, and Iwas lucky enough to stop.
Watch the trailer for 1983’s A Night in Heaven
Tell me about your life since then.
I’ve worked pretty much consistently — I’ve done over 70 films –but I never chased it. I did all those movies that you wouldn’t wantyour dog to watch, but I did ’em to keep going. You really have tochase it, and I wanted to be a dad more than anything else in my life.At 16-years-old, I was teaching sailing in New York, and every checkthat I got, I took a dollar away and put it in the bank for somedaywhen I had kids. When all of the sudden I was 24, and I had my son, Ifound myself — and it was probably one of the downfalls of my marriage — I found myself more motivated by my son and then when my daughter came,my two kids, than anything else. I kinda focused everything on that. Ididn’t want to miss a minute. Probably because I’m a big kid, too. ButI’m here right now. I just pulled up to the park, my son’s pulling abucket of baseba
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