Family Affair child star Johnny Whitaker who acted with Jodie Foster then flamed out on drugs resurfaces at 66... see him now

2 hours ago 11

Johnny Whitaker, child star of the classic 1960s sitcom Family Affair, was spotted at a recycling center in California this week aged 66.

He began acting at three and, by the time he was six, landed his best-remembered role as an orphan boy on the CBS series, which ran for five seasons.

After the show ended, he also played the title character in the 1973 musical movie Tom Sawyer opposite a young pre-stardom Jodie Foster.

Among his notable jobs was being the first actor to play the General Hospital character Scotty Baldwin, who is initially seen on the show as a small child and grows up over the course of several seasons into an aging man.

However his career as a child star also plunged him into what he described as an 'environment where drinking and using drugs was acceptable,' with him attending Hollywood parties at 16 and becoming an 'addict' before eventually sobering up and starting a new life as a drug counselor, via Fox News.

He cut a casual figure when he resurfaced this week in Santa Clarita - just north of Los Angeles County - wearing a loose-fitted t-shirt with sweats and slippers.

Johnny Whitaker, aged about eight, is pictured in a 1967 publicity shot for his star-making sitcom Family Affair along with Anissa Jones, who played his twin sister

After the show ended, he also played the title character in the 1973 musical movie Tom Sawyer opposite a young pre-stardom Jodie Foster

Whitaker lent himself a touch of relief from the beating California rays with a baseball cap that cast a shadow over his complexion and his silver beard. 

Born in the Los Angeles suburb of Van Nuys in 1959, he was discovered while singing with his sisters in their church choir at the age of three.

His big screen debut came with a local used car dealership commercial, and by 1965 he had landed his role of Scotty Baldwin on General Hospital.

Whitaker's first movie was the 1966 comedy The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming, a Cold War satire with a top-flight cast including Alan Arkin, Carl Reiner, Eva Marie Saint, Theodore Bikel and Brian Keith.

When Keith then scored the lead role on the upcoming CBS sitcom Family Affair, he remembered his experience working with Whitaker and recommended him for a part.

Keith starred as Bill, a wealthy New York City bachelor who suddenly inherits his orphan nieces and nephew when their parents die in a car crash. 

Whitaker and Anissa Jones played six-year-old twins Jody and Buffy respectively, with Kathy Garver as their 15-year-old sister Cissy and the English character actor Sebastian Cabot as Bill's valet Giles French.

The heartwarming series proved a hit with viewers across five seasons that aired from 1966 to 1971, kick-starting Whitaker's career as a child star.

He cut a casual figure when he resurfaced this week in Santa Clarita - just north of Los Angeles County - wearing a loose-fitted t-shirt with sweats and slippers

Whitaker lent himself a touch of relief from the beating California rays with a baseball cap that cast a shadow over his complexion and his silver beard

Born in the Los Angeles suburb of Van Nuys in 1959, he was discovered while singing with his sisters in their church choir at the age of three

During the run of Family Affair, he had already guest-starred on Bonanza and featured in a Hallmark movie of the 1940s children's novel The Littlest Angel.

In 1973 he landed his best-known film role as the lead in the musical adaptation of Mark Twain's classic novel The Adventures of Tom Sawyer.

He has since noted that 'I hadn’t read the book before I was cast, since it was more of a junior high school novel, and I was just getting out of elementary that year,' in an interview with the blog From the Mixed-Up Files of Middle-Grade Writers.

His co-stars included a 10-year-old Jodie Foster - three years away from her Taxi Driver fame - in the role of Tom's girlfriend Becky Thatcher.

'Well, Jodie Foster and I studied French together, and then I gave her her first onscreen kiss - it wasn't French kiss,' he joked to interviewer Scott D. Stewart while recounting the filming decades later on TikTok.

'But then she turns gay, not my fault!' he quipped, laughing good-naturedly. 'But she doesn't answer my calls today. I guess there was something wrong with the kiss.' 

He had previously worked with Foster on the 1972 movie Napoleon and Samantha, a little-known adventure picture also starring a live lion. 

In 1973 and 1974 he also starred on the beloved Saturday morning children's television series Sigmund and the Sea Monsters, which had a supporting cast including Margaret Hamilton, The Wicked Witch of the West in The Wizard of Oz.

(from left) Anissa Jones, Brian Keith, Kathy Garver, Sebastian Cabot and Johnny Whitaker are pictured in a 1966 publicity shot for Family Affair, which ran for five seasons on CBS

Whitaker is pictured as Tom Sawyer with a 10-year-old Jodie Foster - three years away from her Taxi Driver fame - in the role of his girlfriend Becky Thatcher

He had previously worked with Foster on the 1972 movie Napoleon and Samantha, a little-known adventure picture also starring a live lion

He left acting in 1974 and then - having been a Mormon from childhood - attended Brigham Young University in Utah and served as a missionary in Portugal.

His post-acting work included managing Diff'rent Strokes star Dana Plato, working at his sister's talent agency and acting as a computer consultant for CBS - the network that had run his star-making sitcom Family Affair years earlier.

From 1984 until 1988 he was married to a woman named Symbria Wright, who left him for 'the man who gave me my bachelor party,' he said.

His failed marriage was one of the contributing factors to his drift from his religion and his plunge into 10 years of 'sex, drugs, rock and roll' that resulted in his excommunication from Mormonism, he told the local Utah new station KSL.

Whitaker's family staged an intervention in 1997 and he enrolled in a 12-step program, remaining sober ever since, he confirmed in a 2025 interview.

Now a drug counselor, he founded the nonprofit Paso Por Paso for Spanish-speaking recovering addicts in 2003, and he was rechristened into the Mormon church in 2019.

In 2002 he guest-starred on one episode of a Family Affair reboot, opening the door to a smattering of returns to the screen in the ensuing decades.

His latest showbiz jobs include an episode of the game show Cram in 2003, an independent family film called A Talking Cat!?! in 2013 and five episodes of a revival of Sigmund and the Sea Monsters in 2016 and 2017.

Read Entire Article