Molly Ringwald, Judd Nelson, Andrew McCarthy – these are just some of the '80s actors who are synonymous with the decade that gave fans movies like Pretty in Pink and The Breakfast Club.
Though their movies may be frozen in time, these actors are anything but. Unlike ‘80s stars who seemed to disappear, many of the most popular actors of the 1980s went on to have long careers in Hollywood. Some found steady work on long-running television shows, while others embraced new challenges and found artistic purpose behind the camera. A surprising number of them went on to become writers and directors.
These actors didn’t let their early success define them. Instead, they used it as a foundation to build careers that will last a lifetime.
Appearing in a movie like Ferris Bueller's Day Off is the type of golden egg that most actors can only dream of. With his performance as Cameron in the film, Alan Ruck has a signature role that people still reference to this very day.
Ruck's career didn't end with Ferris Bueller's Day Off though, and he has enjoyed consistent work well into the 21st century. After appearing in '90s projects like Speed and Spin City, Ruck has most recently found success on the prestige show Succession. “I've been waiting for a show like this for more than 30 years, something that's ostensibly a drama but is really twisted and funny,” he told The Guardian in 2021.
Starring in signature films like La Bamba and Stand and Deliver, Lou Diamond Phillips secured recognition as one of the brightest stars of the '80s.
More recently, Phillips has made the most of the many TV projects humming in Hollywood, working on everything from Prodigal Son to Family Guy and Blue Bloods. He even has directed episodes of shows such as Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. and Fear the Walking Dead.
Phillips is also broadening his horizons. In 2020, he published his debut novelTinderbox, a sci-fi story.
Debra Winger began the 1980s with a bang. Her breakthrough role in Urban Cowboy earned her awards buzz and paved the way for her appearance in other hits like An Officer and a Gentleman and Terms of Endearment. In 1995, however, she made the decision to step away from Hollywood and pursue other interests, like farming and getting involved with politics.
Since then, Winger has resumed acting. Most notably, she was in 2008's Rachel Getting Married. She's also found work on television. Her roles on The Ranch, Patriot, and Mr. Corman have enabled her to work alongside Ashton Kutcher and Joseph Gordon-Levitt, both of whom – like Winger – first made a splash in Hollywood well before they were 30.
The 1980s birthed the so-called “Brat Pack,” a group of young actors who appeared in generation-defining movies like St. Elmo's Fire and Pretty in Pink. Andrew McCarthy just so happened to have appeared in both films, making him an indisputable member of the pack.
Well, I recoiled from the title. I found it pejorative and dismissive. When people are in their late teens, early twenties, they're just trying to define who they are. Your life is this blank slate to be written upon, and suddenly, it felt like it was defined for me in a way that didn't seem to have anything particularly to do with me on a personal level. So I felt disempowered by it in that way, and I felt powerless to do anything about it.
Elisabeth Shue played crucial roles in celebrated '80s classics like The Karate Kid, Adventures in Babysitting, and Cocktail. Yet Shue has also found a home on the small screen, winning main roles on CSI, The Boys, and On the Verge.
What defines her career in the 21st century? In a word: gratitude. Shue shared with The Columbus Dispatch in 2012, “I'm very grateful to be working. I'm always grateful. And the older you get, you get more grateful and appreciative.”
Molly Ringwald was arguably the queen of the 1980s, and for good reason. As the star of teen classics Sixteen Candles, Pretty in Pink, and The Breakfast Club – all of which were written or directed by John Hughes – Ringwald became a teen idol who seemed to exemplify life as an American teenager in the '80s.
Ringwald apparently shares her fans' affection for many of those films. She confessed to Vogue, “I would say overall that I feel very loving and nostalgic towards the films I made with John [Hughes]. They occupy an important part of my life.”
Since the 1980s, Ringwald has appropriately transitioned to adult roles where she's parenting a new generation of teen idols. Her work includes the Kissing Booth series, The Secret Life of the American Teenager, and Riverdale.