Barry Williams was 19 when the Brady house closed for good, but Greg Brady followed him out the door like a shadow that refused to disappear.
Maureen McCormick carried something even heavier. The world kept seeing Marcia Brady, while her real life slowly slipped into addiction, anxiety, pain, and self-doubt.
*The Brady Bunch* (1969) created one of television’s most comforting family portraits. Six children. Two patient parents. A wise housekeeper. Problems that always seemed to find a solution before the episode ended.
The series ran from 1969 to 1974.
Then something unexpected happened.
The show became even bigger after it ended.
Through endless reruns, new generations discovered the Brady family. But while viewers stayed in that familiar house, the actors kept growing older.
That was the trap.
The audience never really let them leave.
Barry Williams understood it almost immediately. After the series ended, he wanted to move forward and build a career beyond Greg Brady. He wanted new roles, new challenges, and a new identity.
Years later, he admitted, “It was strange for me for the first few years after we stopped filming the show. I was done with it.”
But the public was not.
Everywhere he went, people still saw Greg.
For a long time, being called by the character’s name felt like a threat to who he was becoming. Eventually he accepted it, but that peace took years to find.
Maureen McCormick faced an even harder battle.
As Marcia Brady, she represented beauty, confidence, and teenage perfection. She was the girl everyone seemed to admire.
But when the cameras stopped rolling, reality looked very different.
Work became difficult to find. Expectations became impossible to meet.
She later described those years with painful honesty.
“My life after Marcia Brady was a whirlwind of experimentation and searching that evolved into a grim spiral of avoidance, denial and self-destruction.”
Behind the famous smile were struggles with cocaine, prescription drugs, depression, and insecurity.
The gap between Marcia Brady and Maureen McCormick became a burden she carried every day.
Eve Plumb experienced another version of the same problem. Jan Brady became one of television’s most famous middle children, forever linked to the phrase, “Marcia, Marcia, Marcia.”
The joke never seemed to fade.
Even decades later, people still connected her to a character she played as a teenager.
Susan Olsen faced it too.
Only seven years old when she began playing Cindy Brady, she later admitted she disliked aspects of the character. At school, classmates often treated her like Cindy rather than Susan.
They repeated lines.
Mocked her speech.
And confused the actress with the role.
That is what makes the Brady story feel different today.
The show gave viewers comfort, laughter, and a family they loved returning to.
But the young actors paid a price.
They lost privacy.
They battled typecasting.
They spent years proving they were more than the children America remembered.
The Brady kids grew up.
The audience simply refused to let them.
Thank you so much for making THIS DAY so heartwarming for me.😊Please know how much your kind words will always stay with me. Stay tuned!❤️
youtube.com/shorts/JGIzS6l…
Linda Cohn, who has anchored more editions of SportsCenter than anyone in ESPN history, will be retiring from ESPN on June 30. Cohn, who was honored in 2016 for hosting her 5,000th edition of SportsCenter, will make her final appearances on ESPN during the 6 p.m., 10 p.m. and 11 p.m. ET editions on Friday, June 26.
Still not over it 🥇
As we gear up for the 4th of July, here's your reminder that the red, white and blue went undefeated at the #WinterOlympics and #WinterParalympics.
On this day in 1973, the astronauts of Skylab 2—the first crewed mission to the Skylab space station—returned to Earth after 28 days, 404 orbits, and 392 experiment hours.
On this day in 1970, the WW2 action comedy 'Kelly's Heroes' premieres. Starring Clint Eastwood, Telly Savalas, Donald Sutherland and Don Rickles, the movie follows a platoon of misfit GIs who set out to rob a bank full of Nazi gold. Any fans? More importantly, any haters?
🚨#BREAKING: Charlotte NC police say they have ARRESTED 23 "TEENS" and CITED THE PARENTS of the teens who took part in a spree of violence during a "teen-takeover" where over 200 teens were seen...
...BEATING POLICE OFFICERS, JUMPING ON TOP OF CARS, BLOCKING TRAFFIC, DRIVING RECKLESSLY, AND RESISTING ARREST.
I’m sick to my freaking stomach reading Tulsi Gabbard’s declassified bombshells. They laid out the entire treasonous plot: weaponizing the Zelensky phone call to impeach Trump, with Rudy Giuliani squarely in their crosshairs next.
This wasn’t politics—it was a straight-up coup by corrupt deep state actors to overthrow the will of the American people.
These people belong in prison for this shit. Deeply disturbing and downright terrifying.
DON RICKLES and CLINT EASTWOOD plotting a gold heist behind enemy lines in KELLY’S HEROES (1970).
A war film, a caper comedy, and a western all rolled into one.
Wonderful stuff.
🚨Keir Starmer is TERRIFIED of the world seeing this massive sea of British Patriots reclaiming their country with Union Jacks everywhere!
The natives are DONE with open borders, grooming gangs, and two-tier rule. Britain is waking up!
Go get those views, patriot! 🇬🇧🇺🇸
Happy birthday to Tim Russ, who played Lt. Commander Tuvok on Voyager—and more recently, Picard. He was also Devor on Next Gen, T'Kar on Deep Space Nine, and a lieutenant in Star Trek Generations. He directed the Voyager episode "Living Witness."
#StarTrek