'Bill & Ted' Star Alex Winter Says He Was Sexually Abused as a Child Star

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'Bill & Ted' Star Alex Winter Says He Was Sexually Abused as a Child Star

The actor said he never discussed it before because it was a "potentially dangerous secret," but that Hollywood's changing culture has made the conversation possible.

Alex Winter, the star of '80s hit Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure opposite Keanu Reeves, has admitted that he was sexually abused as a child star in the 1970s, and says he didn’t talk about it because he thought it was a “potentially dangerous secret.”

Speaking to Adrian Chiles on BBC 5 Live, Winter said that the impact on him a young boy was “hellish” and that he suffered from a “massive form of something, which turned out to be post-traumatic stress disorder.”

“That was evident to me while I was still in my teens,” he said. “And so I began to do work on it. But it really took time, and it really wasn’t in my case, I would say, ’til well into my 30s, that I was really able to do heavy lifting on this stuff.”

Winter didn’t go public at the time, he says, because “there is a power dynamic that does put you in a position where you’re afraid for your own safety. So there’s that, on top of the taboo nature of being public.”

Winter explained that the “lightbulb” moment in terms of talking about what had happened came over the last year, since the Harvey Weinstein scandal broke, saying he never thought he’d ever discuss it with the media.

“I figured I would die with it within the circles of people that understood it, which I thought was wrong, it was wrong,” he said.

Although Winter said the recent changes in Hollywood culture has meant that, were the abuse to happen to him now, he would be able to talk about it, he claimed there was a long way still to go.

“The problems aren’t going to get sorted out overnight, because frankly, these issues are part of the fabric of human nature, and they’ve existed since there have been human beings walking around on the planet,” he said.

“So it’s going to take time, it’s going to take mental health work, it’s going to take the capacity of society to listen to some very unpleasant truths about itself. And there’s no doubt that that’s going to take time.”

As for his most famous film, Winter said, while he was in a “dark place around that time,” making Bill & Ted was “therapeutic” for him.

“The films were really, really seminal for me, personally, in that way. They were really therapeutic for me in a way, and they gave me kind of a grounding that I moved off from with them. The world of Bill & Ted is a very sweet and fun place to run around in.”

PapaSmurphy on February 2nd, 2018 at 17:57 UTC »

I'm glad other people are stepping forward. No one listens to Corey Feldman because he's so fucked in the head. Really there's a good reason he's fucked in the head and it sucks that more isn't being done to stop other kids from meeting the same fate.

EDIT: To all those "He should name names without asking for a paycheck" replies -

He already has. He spoke to the police when the incidents occurred. He even started again after pitching the movie because the movie is about more than his specific abuse. So far he has publicly named Alphy Hoffman, Jon Grissom and Marty Weiss. Apparently it's a more popular story to talk about how greedy he is because asking for money to make a movie had a much larger media footprint than any of his name drops.

Wyld__Stallyns on February 2nd, 2018 at 16:41 UTC »

This news made me cry. I'm a huge fan, obviously.

I've always wondered if this happened to him because of two things he's said in interviews that made the hair on the back of my neck stand up.

During an interview about The Lost Boys (which happens to be my favorite interview of Alex), when asked if he hung out with the other actors while filming, he said that he did. However, although the Coreys and Jamison Newlander were younger than him, he hung out with them the most "mostly to keep an eye on them to make sure they were okay."

In an interview--or maybe even in one of his AMAs here--he was asked what advice he'd give to child actors or young actors. He said the advice he'd give would be to their parents and the advice was something like watch your kids very closely because things can go wrong and go wrong quickly. I'll try to find that interview and post it.

ETA: The second question was indeed from one of his AMAs.

The questions asked by u/itsdavidthegreat:

Q: What are some of the biggest challenges facing child stars, and what impact does America's celebrity-obsessed culture have?

Alex: navigating the industry is hard at any age. it's especially fraught as a child. And the culture's obsession with raising up and tearing down celebrities is especially hard when that celebrity is young.

Q: Thanks for the response! One of my friends has a couple of kids who have been doing a bunch of acting lately - what's some advice you would give to an aspiring child actor?

Alex: more to the parents than the actor. be there all the time. be sane. and be vigilant. when things go bad, they go bad very quickly.

Minscota on February 2nd, 2018 at 15:29 UTC »

There is a reason 99% of child actors come out of hollywood fucked up. Sooner or later the dam is going to break.