
An adorable child star who overcame an out-of-control adolescence and reclaimed her post as America’s mischievous but pure-hearted sweetheart, Drew Barrymore rode a career rollercoaster spanning two decades before the age of 25. The product of an acting dynasty that runs from great-great-grandmother Louisa Lane Drew through grandfather John Barrymore, the youngest Barrymore showed promise right erom the start and appeared in TV commercials before reaching the age of one. While her lineage was responsible for some notice, the saccharine-free sweetness of her performance as little Gertie in the 1982 classic “ET, The Extra-Terrestrial” won Barrymore acclaim reserved for the truly talented. Her watchability propelled many a subsequent film, including the otherwise unremarkable Stephen King adaptations “Firestarter” (1984) and “Cat’s Eye” (1985). A victim of 1980s Hollywood lifestyle, Barrymore had too much too soon, and began to attract less attention for her acting than for the increasingly sordid tabloid stories about her pre-adolescent addictions to drugs and alcohol. After undergoing rehab and–another Barrymore tradition–publishing a memoir, “Little Girl Lost” (1989), the resilient teen made an impressive comeback in the early 90s, riding a wave of celebrity and controversy.