He had once been the smiling boy who seemed to appear on every magazine cover, the teen idol families welcomed into their living rooms throughout the 1980s. To the world, he looked confident and destined for lifelong stardom, but behind that polished image was a child quietly trying to understand who he was.
Born in 1974, he entered Hollywood before most kids were allowed to cross the street alone. At eight, he played an autistic child on St. Elsewhere. His mother explained how some children lived in their own worlds, and he understood easily. His vivid inner life became both his talent and his burden.
Soon, he was everywhere — Our House, My Two Dads, countless TV movies. While other kids learned to ride bikes, he learned to perform. The world saw a charming teen star; he felt like a child pretending to be something he wasn’t. “People were making a lot of money,” he later said. “And I didn’t want to do it anymore.”
By sixteen, he had become a brand, carefully packaged and publicized. The boy the world loved felt like a stranger to him. Wanting something real, he stepped away from Hollywood and enrolled in high school, finding belonging among theater kids who felt as out of place as he did.
But off-screen, another struggle deepened. Raised Catholic, he carried guilt and confusion, which fed into addiction. After hitting rock bottom, he entered recovery, determined to rebuild. At 21, while working on Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman, a tabloid outed him with stolen photos, and fear swept in.
Hollywood distanced itself. His family struggled. Yet letters from young men thanking him for his honesty helped him heal. Still, roles disappeared, and he fought to start over.
In 2015, he left Hollywood entirely. He earned a doctorate in clinical psychology and opened Confluence Psychotherapy, choosing a life centered on healing rather than fame.
Today, Chad Allen lives quietly, counseling others, advocating for the LGBTQ+ community, and embracing the peace he spent decades searching for.