The Camden House was supposed to feel safe, full of prayers, second chances, and Sunday night lessons about family, but looking back at Seventh Heaven now feels more complicated. The children grew up, the parents aged, some careers changed forever, and time added shadows that the original show could never have predicted.
For millions of viewers, this was once a portrait of faith, forgiveness, and home. Today it is also a reminder that people behind those familiar faces carried lives far beyond the screen. Tonight we return to seventh heaven. Not just for the comfort but for what time revealed. Reverend Eric Camden is the father at the center of seventh heaven.
The man audiences first remembered as a calm voice in a house always full of noise, questions, and growing pains. Steven Collins, born October 1, 1947, was 48 when the series premiered in 1996. And he gave Eric the st presence of someone trying to guide not just a family, but an entire community. Eric mattered because he was more than a television pastor.
He was the emotional structure of the Camden home. The one expected to forgive, advise, discipline, and somehow have the right answer when life became messy. But looking back now, the role carries a complicated weight. In 2026, Collins turned 79, and his legacy is inseparable from both the show’s long success and the serious personal controversy that later ended much of his public career.
Before Seventh Heaven, he had appeared in projects like Star Trek, The Motion Picture, Tales of the Gold Monkey, The First Wives Club, and many television roles. But Eric Camden became the image most viewers never forgot. The contrast between the comforting character and the actor’s later public fall makes this rewind feel different.
Rev. Eric Camden endures because Steven Collins made moral guidance feel warm and familiar on screen even as time later made the memory of that warmth far more complicated. Annie Camden is the heart of the Camden household. the mother whose love often felt like the quiet force holding seven children, a pastor husband, and an entire storm of family problems together.
Katherine Hicks, born August 6th, 1951, was 45 when Seventh Heaven premiered in 1996. And she gave Annie a warmth that felt practical, protective, and deeply human. Annie was not just the smiling mother in the background. She cooked, corrected, worried, listened, pushed back, and carried the emotional labor of a family that always seemed to have one more crisis at the door.
What made Hicks’s performance work was the way she let Annie be nurturing without making her weak. She could be gentle, but she could also be firm, disappointed, exhausted, and fiercely loyal when her children needed her. In 2026, Hicks turned 75 after a career that reached far beyond the Camden Kitchen.
Before Seventh Heaven, she earned attention for Ryan’s Hope, starred as Marilyn Monroe in Marilyn, the untold story, appeared in Peggy Sue Got Married, and became unforgettable to horror fans as Karen Barkley in Child’s Play. But for many viewers, Annie remains her most emotionally lasting role. The mother figure connected to Sunday night television, family arguments, forgiveness, and growing up.
Annie Camden endures because Catherine Hicks made motherhood feel warm, imperfect, and strong enough to carry a whole house through time. Simon Camden is the sensitive son whose boyish innocence slowly gave way to some of seventh heaven’s heaviest coming of age pain. David Gallagher, born February 9th, 1985, was 11 when the series premiered in 1996.
And he gave Simon a thoughtful, vulnerable quality that made his growth feel personal to longtime viewers. At first, Simon was the bright, curious kid in the Camden household, often trying to understand faith, rules, and family expectations through a child’s eyes. But as he aged, the show pushed him into more difficult territory.
guilt, responsibility, identity, and the emotional damage that can follow one irreversible moment. That shift made Simon one of the clearest examples of the series attempt to follow children into adulthood without pretending the road stayed simple. In 2026, Gallagher turns 41 after a career that continued through film, television, and voice acting.
Beyond 7th Heaven, audiences may remember him from Look Who’s Talking Now? Super Eight, The Vampire Diaries, and especially as the voice of Riku in the Kingdom Hearts video game series. Simon Camden endures because David Gallagher made adolescence feel uncertain, wounded, and full of questions that could not always be solved by a family talk.
Advertisements
Matt Camden is the oldest child carrying the pressure of being responsible before he is fully sure who he wants to become. Barry Watson, born April 23rd, 1974, was 22 when Seventh Heaven premiered in 1996. And he gave Matt the easy charm of a young man standing between childhood loyalty, adult freedom.
Matt mattered because he often became the bridge between Eric and Annie’s parenting world and the younger siblings still trying to find their way. He could be protective, impulsive, romantic, stubborn, and sincere. the kind of older brother who wanted to lead even when he was still learning how to stand on his own. His journey into medicine gave the character a path toward purpose, but his relationships and mistakes kept him human.
In 2026, Watson turns 52 after a career shaped by both success and real life resilience. Beyond Seventh Heaven, he appeared in What About Brian, Samantha Who, The Loudest Voice, and other television projects while also surviving Hodgekin Lymphoma, a battle that interrupted his career and gave his public story a deeper layer of endurance.
Matt Camden endures because Barry Watson made growing into responsibility feel imperfect, heartfelt, and quietly brave. Mary Camden is the daughter who carried rebellion into the Camden house. The athlete whose strength often came wrapped in mistakes, pride, and a desperate need to be understood. Jessica Beal, born March 30, 1982, was 14 when Seventh Heaven premiered in 1996, and she gave Mary an intensity that made her stand apart from the show’s gentler family rhythms.
Mary mattered because she was not the perfect daughter. She pushed boundaries, made poor choices, chased independence, and forced the series to deal with consequences in a more complicated way. Her basketball dreams, loyalty, anger, and search for forgiveness made her one of the show’s most memorable young characters. In 2026, Beiel turns 44 after building one of the most successful careers to emerge from the series.
She moved from teen television into film and producing, appearing in the Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Blade, Trinity, the Illusionist, I now pronounce you, Chuck and Larry, and earning major acclaim as producer and star of the Sinner. Her public life also became closely followed through her marriage to Justin Timberlake and her move into producing darker, more adult stories.
Mary Camden endures because Jessica Beal made imperfection feel restless, athletic, and painfully human inside a family built on forgiveness. Kevin Kirk is the steady man who enters the Camden world like a promise of safety, especially when Lucy’s life begins shifting toward adulthood, marriage, and family.
George Staltz, born August 16 to75, was 27 when he joined 7th Heaven in 2002, and he gave Kevin a calm, dependable presence that fit naturally into the show’s later years. As a police officer and Lucy Camden’s husband, Kevin often represented stability, not the dramatic kind, but the everyday kind, built from loyalty, patience, and showing up.
He mattered because the series needed characters who could expand the Camden family without breaking its emotional tone. Kevin’s relationship with Lucy brought comedy, tenderness, conflict, and a sense that the next generation of family life was already beginning. In 2026, Stoultz turns 51. After continuing a career in television and film, often playing likable, grounded men whose warmth felt familiar to viewers.
Beyond Seventh Heaven, he appeared in projects such as October Road, The Finder, and several television films while remaining strongly associated with Kevin for fans of the series. Kevin King endures because George Schultz made dependability feel romantic, gentle, and quietly necessary in a house that never stopped changing.
Martin Brewer is the troubled young outsider who arrives at the Camden House carrying more pain than he knows how to explain. Tyler Hodchlin, born September 11th, 1987, was 16 when he joined 7th Heaven in 2003, and he gave Martin a guarded vulnerability that helped him become one of the show as most important later characters.
Martin mattered because he was not born into the Camden family. Yet, he became part of its emotional orbit. His story explored grief, confusion, responsibility, teenage mistakes, and the complicated need for guidance when a young person is trying to act strong before he is ready. In 2026, Huxland turns 39 after building a career far larger than his early family drama role.
He became known to a new generation as Derek Hail on Teen Wolf. Then stepped into one of pop cultures most iconic mantles as Clark Kent and Superman in Superman and Lois. He also appeared in Road to Predition, Everybody Wants Some, and other projects that showed his range from wounded intensity to classic heroism. Martin Brewer endures because Tyler Hucklin made teenage damage feel quiet, defensive, and capable of growing into real strength.
Robbie Palmer is the outsider who walks into the Camden family carrying charm, trouble, and the possibility of change. Adam Lavorna, born November 1, 1981, was 18 when he joined 7th Heaven in 1999. And he gave Robbie the kind of young, conflicted energy that made him more than just a boyfriend figure.
Robbie mattered because he began as someone the family had reasons to doubt. Yet over time, he became part of their daily emotional life. His relationship with Lucy, his complicated history with Mary, and his slow attempt to become more responsible gave the show a story line about redemption that felt personal rather than abstract.
In 2026, Levoria turns 45 and his life after Seventh Heaven became quieter than the visibility he had during his teen and young adult years on television. He had already appeared in Brooklyn Bridge, I’ll be home for Christmas, and other projects before stepping away from the constant pace of mainstream fame. Robbie Palmer endures because Adam Lavorna made second chances feel messy, charming, and believable.
The kind of change that happens slowly under the eyes of people who are not sure they should trust you yet. Lucy Camden is the daughter whose heart was always open, sometimes too open, and that made her one of Seventh Heaven’s most emotional anchors. Beverly Mitchell, born January 22, 1981, was 15 when the series premiered in 1996, and she gave Lucy sincerity that carried the character from awkward teen years into adulthood.
Lucy could be dramatic, hopeful, insecure, loving, impulsive, and deeply committed to becoming someone who mattered. Her journey through crushes, heartbreak, faith, marriage, motherhood, and ministry made her feel like the Camden child most shaped by the family’s spiritual world. In 2026, Mitchell turns 45 after staying closely connected to the memory of the show while building a life beyond it.
She continued acting, released country music, appeared in projects like Saw Too and The Secret Life of the American Teenager, and later shared parts of her real life publicly, including motherhood and personal loss with honesty and vulnerability. For many viewers, Lucy represents the emotional growing pains of a generation that watched her grow up almost in real time.
Lucy Camden endures because Beverly Mitchell made earnestness feel fragile, sometimes messy, but always full of heart. Roxanne Richardson is the confident outsider who brings a different rhythm into the Camden world. A young woman whose independence gives the later seasons a sharper edge. Rachel Blanchard, born March 19th, 1976, was 26 when she joined 7th Heaven in 2002.
And she gave Roxanne a lively, self- assured presence that made her stand out from the show’s more sheltered family atmosphere. As a police officer and a woman connected to Kevin King’s world, Roxanne represented adulthood, work, romance, and emotional choice outside the Camden household’s familiar structure.
She mattered because she brought contrast, a character who could be caring without seeming soft, romantic without losing herself, and funny without becoming lightweight. In 2026, Blanchard turns 50 after a career that crossed teen comedy, drama, and darker adult television. Before and beyond Seventh Heaven, she appeared in Are You Afraid of the Dark, Clueless, Peep Show, Fargo, Yumi, Her and many projects that showed her ability to shift between charm and complexity.
Roxanne Richardson endures because Rachel Blanchard made confidence feel warm, modern, and strong enough to dance beside the Camden family without disappearing into it. Cecilia Smith is the bright teenage presence who brings music’s weakness and youthful uncertainty into Simon Camden’s later story. Ashley Simpson, born October 3, 1984, was 18 when she joined 7th Heaven in 2002, and she gave Cecilia a lively warmth that fit the show’s early 2000’s energy.
Cecilia mattered because she belonged to the world of young love where every feeling seems huge. Every choice feels permanent and every relationship becomes part of growing up. Her connection with Simon gave the series another way to explore adolescence, loyalty, and the fragile line between support and self-discovery. In 2026, Simpson turns 42 after a career that moved far beyond acting into pop music and celebrity culture.
She became a major music figure with her debut album autobiography, had a widely discussed reality series, faced one of the most infamous live television mishaps of the 2000s on Saturday Night Live, and later rebuilt her image through music, family, and selective entertainment projects. Cecilia Smith endures because Ashley Simpson made young love feel bright, imperfect, and tied to a moment when television, music, and teen fame were all changing at once.
Chandler Hampton is the later season minister whose presence brings charm, conflict, and emotional complication into the Camden family’s orbit. Jeremy London, born November 7th, 1972, was 29 when he joined 7th Heaven in 2002. And he gave Chandler a gentle but uneasy quality that made the character feel like someone still trying to prove his own steadiness.
Chandler mattered because he entered a show already built around faith, family, and moral guidance. Yet, he was not simply another perfect helper. His relationships, especially his connection with Lucy, created tension around love, vocation, and the question of what kind of life a person is truly ready to build. In 2026, London turns 54 after a career that included Party of Five, Malrats, I’ll Fly Away, and many film and television roles.
His real life later included public struggles and personal difficulties which made his story beyond the screen more complicated than the clean moral world of Seventh Heaven. Chandler Hampton endures because Jeremy London made charm feel searching, vulnerable, and slightly unfinished, as if even a man meant to guide others was still trying to find his own way.
Peter Petrayski is the wounded boy trying to act tough while quietly needing a place where he can finally feel wanted. Scotty Levvenworth, born November 17th, 1990, was 12 when he joined 7th Heaven, and he gave Peter a restless, believable sensitivity that made the character connect with younger viewers.
Peter mattered because he brought another version of childhood into the Camden world. Not the secure childhood of a big family, but the uncertainty of a kid shaped by absence, divorce, and the fear of not fitting anywhere. His friendship and young romance with Ruthie allowed the show to explore growing up through smaller, tender moments.
Jealousy, loyalty, embarrassment, and the search for trust. In 2026, Levvenworth turns 36 after a childhood acting career that included The Green Mile, Aaron Brochovich, Life as a House, and other projects before he largely stepped away from the public spotlight. That quieter later life gives Peter’s story an extra feeling of distance, as if both actor and character belonged to a specific early 2000’s memory.
Peter Petroski endures because Scotty Levvenworth made childhood hurt feel guarded, sincere, and quietly healed by connection. John Hamilton is the kind-hearted young man whose calm maturity brought a different emotional texture into the early Camden years. Chaz Lamar Shepard, born October 26th, 1977, was 18 when Seventh Heaven premiered in 1996.
And he gave Jon a thoughtful steadiness that made him feel older than his years. Jon mattered because he represented responsibility, friendship, and young love without the chaos that often surrounded the Camden teenagers. His connection to Lucy and his place near the family allowed the series to explore trust, respect, and the difficult process of becoming an adult while still carrying youthful hopes.
In 2026, Shephard turns 49 after a career that continued across acting and music. Beyond Seventh Heaven, he appeared in The Parkers, The Temptations, Set It Off, and stage productions, while also building a music career that showed another side of his artistry. His presence in the show remains tied to an earlier, softer era of the series before the Camden children’s lives became more complicated and sprawling.
John Hamilton endures because Chaz Lamar Shepard made decency feel young, grounded, and quietly memorable in a family drama full of moral crossroads. Sandy Jameson is the young woman whose arrival brings new emotional pressure into the later years of Seventh Heaven, especially around love, responsibility, and the consequences of growing up too fast.
Haley Duff, born February 19, 1985, was 20 when she joined the series in 2005. And she gave Sandy a sweetness that helped soften some of the heavier turns in her story line. Sandy mattered because she represented a different kind of young adulthood than the Camden children had known. One shaped by uncertainty, romance, motherhood, and the need to make choices before everything feels clear.
Her connection to Martin and the family created drama, but also gave the show another chance to talk about support, forgiveness, and second chances. In 2026, Duff turns 41. After a career that crossed acting, music, food, and lifestyle media. She appeared in Napoleon Dynamite, Material Girls, Lizzie Maguire related projects, television films, and later built a presence as a host and entrepreneur.
Sandy Jameson endures because Haley Duff made young motherhood feel vulnerable, imperfect, and deserving of compassion rather than judgment. Mack is the loyal friend who helps give Martin Brewer’s later storyline a sense of everyday teenage life outside the Camden walls. Kyle Sirills, born June 24th, 1985, was 19 when he joined 7th Heaven in 2004, and he gave Mack an easygoing warmth that made him feel like the kind of friend a troubled young person needs nearby.
Mac mattered because not every character in a family drama has to carry the largest tragedy to be important. Sometimes the emotional value is in steadiness. Someone who listens, jokes, reacts, and helps another character feel less alone. Through his friendship with Martin and his own relationships, Mack added a lighter social dimension to the show’s later teen stories.
In 2026, Sirilles turns 41 after continuing work in entertainment, music, and creative projects beyond the role that first made him familiar to many viewers. His time on Seventh Heaven remains one of his most recognizable screen chapters tied to the series final era as it tried to follow a newer generation of young characters.
Mac endures because Kyle Sirills made friendship feel relaxed, loyal, and quietly useful when growing up became complicated. Rose is the woman who nearly becomes part of the Camden family, bringing tension, impatience, and a complicated kind of love into Simon’s adult storyline. Sarah Thompson, born October 25th, 1979, was 26 when she joined 7th Heaven in 2005.
And she gave Rose a strong willed presence that made the character difficult to ignore. Rose mattered because she challenged the family’s comfort with Simon’s future. She was not written as simply sweet or easy. She could be determined, insecure, demanding, and vulnerable, which made her relationship with Simon feel unsettled in a way that reflected young adult uncertainty.
Her story raised questions about marriage, timing, compatibility, and whether love can survive when two people are not fully ready for the life are trying to build. In 2026, Thompson turns 47 after continuing an acting career in television and film. Beyond Seventh Heaven, she appeared in Angel, Cruel Intentions 2, Boston Public, Without a Trace, and international projects that expanded her screen work beyond American family drama.
Rose endures because Sarah Thompson made almost joining a family feel emotional, uneasy, and full of the painful difference between wanting love and being ready for it. Lou Dalton is the steady community figure who makes Glenn Oak feel like more than just the Camden House and the church. Alan Fudge, born February 27, 1944, was 53 when he first appeared on 7th Heaven in 1997.
And he gave Lou a warm, dependable presence that fit the show’s vision of neighborhood, faith, and support. Lou mattered because family dramas need people beyond the central household. friends, mentors, neighbors, and elders who make the world feel connected. His relationship with Eric Camden and the broader community added a layer of everyday wisdom, the kind that does not demand attention, but helps hold the story together.
Fudge died on October 10, 2011 at 67 after battling lung and liver cancer, leaving behind a long career in television and film. He appeared in Man from Atlantis ET, The Extraterrestrial, Knots Landing, LA Law, and many guest roles where his calm authority made him a familiar face. Lou Dalton endures because Alan Fudge made support feel ordinary, fatherly, and quietly essential to the moral world 7th Heaven wanted to build.
Wilson West is the charming young father whose presence gave Lucy Camden’s early romantic life a mix of sweetness, complication, and adult responsibility. Andrew Keegan, born January 29th, 1979, was 18 when he first appeared on 7th Heaven in 1997. And he brought Wilson the kind of Tina doll warmth that made him instantly memorable.
Wilson mattered because he was not just another crush. As a young father, he forced the show to connect teenage romance with realworld responsibility, giving Lucy’s story a more mature emotional edge. He could be playful and appealing, but his life already carried obligations that made the relationship more complicated than simple first love.
In 2026, Keegan turns 47 after a career strongly tied to late 1990s youth culture. He appeared in 10 Things I Hate About You, Party of Five, The Broken Hearts Club, and and many film and television projects before later drawing public attention for his spiritual community and unconventional life outside mainstream acting.
Wilson West endures because Andrew Keegan made young charm feel burdened, sincere, and shaped by responsibilities most teen romances never had to carry. Ben Kirk is the easygoing presence who enters the Camden world through romance and family connection, bringing warmth without the heavier burden carried by some of the show’s central characters.
Jeff Staltz, born December 15th, 1977, was 23 when he first appeared on Seventh Heaven in 2001, and he gave Ben a relaxed, likable quality that made him fit naturally into the show’s later seasons. Ben mattered because he expanded the Kirk side of the series, helping the Camden universe feel larger as the children grew older and new relationships formed around them.
His connection with Mary and later family dynamics added another layer to the show’s ongoing themes of commitment, adjustment, and emotional belonging. In 2026, Stoultz turns 49 after building a steady career across television and film. He appeared in October Road, The Finder, Enlist Listed, Grace and Frankie, Little Fires Everywhere, and many projects where his approachable charm and physical ease made him a familiar presence.
Ben Kingerk endures because Jeff Staltz made likability feel natural, unforced, and part of the expanding family circle that kept Seventh Heaven moving into its later years. Shana Sullivan is the free-spirited young woman whose relationship with Matt Camden brought early adult love, distance, and growing pains into 7th Heaven.
Moren Flanigan, born May 19, 1973, was 24 when she joined the series in 1998, and she gave Shana a bright independence that made her feel like someone with a life beyond the Camden family’s orbit. Shauna mattered because she represented the kind of relationship that teaches a character as much through difficulty as through affection.
With Matt, her story explored independence, ambition, emotional timing, and the reality that love does not always fit neatly inside family expectations. In 2026, Flanigan turns 53 after a career that began long before Seventh Heaven. She was already known for out of this world where she played Eevee Garland and later continued acting, producing, and creative work across different parts of the industry.
Her presence in Seventh Heaven gave Matt’s storyline a mature romantic chapter, one that felt tied to choices about future, identity, and separation. Shana Sullivan endures because Moren Flanigan made young independents feel warm, restless, and honest enough to leave a mark even when love did not stay simple. T-Bone is the troubled teen who arrives near the end of Seventh Heaven carrying the show’s oldest belief that a young person can still change if someone cares enough to stay.
Colton James, born January 24th, 1987, was 19 when he joined the series in 2006. And he gave T-Bone a rough but lovable energy that fit the final chapter of the Camden story. T-Bone mattered because he represented the kind of outsider the show had always been drawn to. Someone with damage, attitude, and bad habits, but also the possibility of redemption.
His place among the younger characters gave the later episodes one more chance to explore guidance, trust, and the healing power of being welcomed instead of rejected. In 2026, James turns 39 after moving through acting and later into more behindthecenes creative and production work. His screen career also included appearances in Austin Powers, International Man of Mystery, er, and other projects before his life shifted away from the center of teen television fame.
T-Bone endures because Colton James made rough edges feel redeemable, human, and worth noticing before the Camden House finally closed its doors. Julie Camden Hastings is the extended family presence who reminds Seventh Heaven that the Camden story was never limited to parents and children under one roof. Deborah Rafen, born March 13th, 1953, was 43 when the series premiered in 1996, and she gave Julie a gentle, composed quality that made her feel like someone connected to the family’s wider emotional history.
Julie mattered because relatives in a show like this carry memory, old patterns, shared responsibility, marriage, recovery, and the complicated ways adults keep trying to support each other. Her story lines touched on family bonds and personal struggle, giving the Camden universe a broader sense of adulthood beyond the immediate household.
Rafen died on November 21st, 2012 at only 59 after a battle with leukemia, leaving behind a career that moved through acting, producing, and publishing. She appeared in films such as Once Is Not Enough, Death Wish 3, Touched by Love, and many television projects while also co-founding a successful audiobook publishing company. Julie Camden Hastings endures because Deborah Rafen made extenti family feel graceful, vulnerable, and quietly woven into the larger fabric of love, loss, and memory.
Sam Camden is one half of the youngest heartbeat of the Camden family, a child whose presence reminded viewers that Seventh Heaven was always about a household still expanding, changing, and trying to make room for more love. Lorenzo Bruno, born September 21st, 1998, began appearing on the series as a baby in 1999, sharing the role in earlier years with his brothers before becoming more closely identified with Sam.
In the show, Sam and his twin brother David brought lightness, mischief, and the everyday chaos of raising little children into a family already crowded with teenage drama and moral lessons. But looking back now, Sam’s scenes carry a sadness no one could have imagined at the time. Lorenzo Bruno died on March 9th, 2020 at only 21 in a car accident, a loss that shocked fans who remembered him as one of the Camden babies.
His acting career was brief, but his connection to Seventh Heaven remains part of the show’s final era. When the family had grown so large that the house itself felt like a symbol of time passing, Sam Camden endures because Lorenzo Bruno made childhood feel playful, familiar, and heartbreakingly frozen in memory. Ruthie Camden is the little girl who grew up in front of the audience, the youngest daughter whose sharp eyes often saw more than the adults expected.
McKenzie Rosman, born December 28th, 1989, was just six when Seventh Heaven premiered in 1996. And she gave Ruthie the kind of childhood presence that made the Camden House feel alive from the very beginning. Ruthie mattered because she was not only the cute child at the edge of family scenes.
She was curious, stubborn, funny, and emotionally perceptive, often turning simple moments into reminders that children absorb far more than adults realize. As the years passed, viewers watched her move from innocence into adolescence, carrying the strange pressure of growing up not only inside a fictional family, but also on national television.
In 2026, Rosman turns 37, and her life after 7th Heaven became quieter than the childhood fame that introduced her to millions. She continued acting in select projects, but also built a life connected to horses, philanthropy, and causes outside Hollywood’s constant glare. Ruthie Camden endures because McKenzie Rosman made growing up feel funny, awkward, and tenderly real inside a television home.
Many viewers treated like their own. The Camden House grows quiet now, and the Sunday night comfort feels different than it once did. But Seventh Heaven was never only about sermons, family dinners, or easy lessons at the end of an episode. It was about children growing up, parents trying to hold everything together, and a home that millions of viewers treated like a safe place. Time changed that memory.
Some cast members became major stars. Some stepped into quieter lives, and some, like Lorenzo Bro, Alan Fudge, and Deborah Raffen, are gone now. If this Rewind brought you back to the Camden family, stay with Rewind 1960s for more stories about the shows, faces, and memories that time made more complicated and more Human.