What Happened to This 70s TV Icon, Left Paralyzed on One Side After an Accident & Stepped Away from Hollywood for a Time?
From nursing her mother through her final months to fighting against environmental issues and raising her children, take a look at what happened to this actress who captivated audiences with her raw talent and disappeared from Hollywood at the height of her fame.
Born on May 16, 1955, to Ruth and Robert in Cleveland, Ohio, this famous actress showed early promise. She was an intelligent child, graduating from high school at just 15 years old before enrolling in college to study criminology.
But acting had quietly captured her heart. She kept hera secret from her family, only pursuing it later after a brush with death made her reconsider her path.
At 17, while working at an amusement park in California to earn extra money, she experienced an accident that would alter her life forever.
The actress photographed on January 1, 1980, in New York. | Source: Getty Images
Dressed as a troll in a Christmas-themed show, she was warned to take care of the costume she wore — it was expensive, and she was responsible for it.
While riding in the back of a small truck, she noticed the costume slipping. “[…] I reached for it,” she. Just as she stood up, the driver swerved. The teenager was thrown from the vehicle and slammed onto the asphalt.
The ’70s icon photographed at a wrap party on March 21, 1981, in Culver City, California. | Source: Getty Images
She woke up in a hospital, disoriented and frightened, with devastating injuries. The accident had caused a brain hemorrhage, leaving her blind and paralyzed on one side of her body.
She spent months in recovery, drifting in and out of a light coma. At times, she felt that her sense of time was distorted, describing the experience as surreal.
The Hollywood star circa 1981. | Source: Getty Images
“The organization of time seemed less linear and more spatial,” she. Even after healing, the emotional scars remained. “I have no separation, timewise, from that experience. It doesn’t get softer. It doesn’t fade,” she.
The young actress circa 1981. | Source: Getty Images
Doctors told her she might never walk again, let alone return to any semblance of normal life. But once she regained her strength, the actress made a bold decision — she would pursue acting full-time.
The near-death experience had left her with a renewed sense of purpose. She felt life was fleeting and fragile, and if she had a passion, she wasn’t going to waste any more time hiding it.
The ’70s star backstage during the 54th Academy Awards on March 29, 1982, in Los Angeles, California. | Source: Getty Images
After moving to Los Angeles to chase her dream, she landed her firston the TV show “Wonder Woman,” playing the superhero’s younger sister, Drusilla. Although her stint on the show was brief, it opened the door to film roles.
The actress at the 54th Academy Awards on March 29, 1982. | Source: Getty Images
However, Hollywood didn’t quite know what to make of her at first. She was a fresh face who didn’t fit neatly into any box. Despite this, her talent was undeniable. She quickly became known for her fierce, commanding presence on screen, and her ascent to stardom was swift.
The ’70s icon and John Travolta on the set of “Urban Cowboy” circa 1980. | Source: Getty Images
Hercame in the 1980 film “Urban Cowboy,” where she starred opposite John Travolta. In one memorable scene, her character rides a mechanical bull in a Texas honky-tonk bar, exuding a raw sensuality that captivated audiences and critics alike.
The famous actress and John Travolta on the set of “Urban Cowboy” circa 1980. | Source: Getty Images
Her performance made her a household name overnight. Reflecting on her rapid rise to fame, the actress, “Now, we’re sort of used to people in their 20s hitting just like that. […] But it wasn’t that typical when it happened to me. It was wild.”
The “Urban Cowboy” actress and John Travolta circa 1980. | Source: Getty Images
In the years that followed, she landed back-to-back roles in critically acclaimed films. “An Officer and a Gentleman” in 1982, where she starred alongside Richard Gere, earned her an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress.
The actress at the 54th Academy Awards on March 29, 1982. | Source: Getty Images
Her portrayal of a working-class woman in love with a Navy pilot made her one of Hollywood’s most sought-after leading ladies. However, her experience on set wasn’t without controversy.
The American actress and Shirley MacLaine on the set of “Terms of Endearment” in 1983. | Source: Getty Images
She famously described Gere as “a brick wall,” humorously, “I probably could have come up with something nicer.” Despite the tension, the film was a massive success.
A year later, she earned another Oscar nomination for “Terms of Endearment,” a heart-wrenching family drama co-starring Shirley MacLaine and Jack Nicholson.
The Hollywood star filming “Terms of Endearment” in 1983. | Source: Getty Images
By the mid-1980s, the actress was at the top of her game, widely regarded as one of the most talented performers of her generation. Yet, despite her success, she remained deeply.
The industry’s focus on image over substance frustrated her, and she bristled at the pressures placed on actresses to conform to unrealistic beauty standards.
The ’80s icon and Shirley MacLaine photographed for “Terms of Endearment” in 1983. | Source: Getty Images
While filming “An Officer and a Gentleman,” the actress recalled how someone on set once handed her a bottle of water retention pills, saying she looked “puffy in the dailies.”
She was stunned. “I was so young I didn’t even know what it was, and I just handed it back and said, ‘I’m not taking that.’ It just sounded ridiculous to me. But somebody else could have really succumbed,” she.
The actress at the “Stayin’ Alive” premiere on July 11, 1983, in Hollywood, California. | Source: Getty Images
Her strong-willed personality made her both respected and feared in Hollywood. She wasn’t afraid to speak her mind, even if it meant clashing with directors or turning down lucrative roles.
The actress during the 1987 Student Film Awards in Beverly Hills, California. | Source: Getty Images
But by the early 1990s, she felt the industry was changing in ways that no longer excited her. The rise of male-driven blockbusters left fewer meaningful roles for women, and the quality of scripts she was being offered declined.
The star at the 63rd Annual Academy Awards on March 25, 1991, in Los Angeles, California. | Source: Getty Images
After receiving her third Oscar nomination for “Shadowlands” in 1994 — a film she described as “the most literate script I’ve ever read” — she made the shocking decision that she was.
The star at the premiere of “Shadowlands” on December 5, 1993, in Hollywood, California. | Source: Getty Images
Her decision baffled many as she was still at the top of her game. Some speculated that her relationship with then-Nebraska governor Bob Kerrey, whom she met while filming “Terms of Endearment,” influenced her choice.
The star circa 1994. | Source: Getty Images
The pair had a whirlwind romance, and Kerrey, who lost part of his lower leg in Vietnam, reportedly once, “What can I say — she swept me off my foot.” Though deeply in love, their relationship eventually ended, with the star, “I tried the pillbox hat for a while, but I couldn’t.”
The actress photographed during the “Interview with the Vampire” Los Angeles premiere on November 9, 1994, in Westwood, California. | Source: Getty Images
Others suggested health issues were to blame, citing her ongoing struggles with back problems. But she insisted her decision to leave Hollywood was a personal one.
“No. I stopped because I ceased being challenged,” she. “I don’t want to sound like some old moaning loudspeaker about ‘women’s roles,’ but it wasn’t good,” she.
Arliss Howard and the “Terms of Endearment” star during the “New Yorker” magazine 70th Anniversary event in 1995 in New York. | Source: Getty Images
During her hiatus, she focused on her personal life. In 1996, the Hollywood star married, director, and writer Arliss Howard, whom she met on the set of “Wilder Napalm” in 1993. “A good marriage is different to a happy marriage. Happy is a tough word. But I did marry…well!” she.
Arliss Howard and the actress at the premiere of “The Man Who Captured Eichmann” on November 7, 1996, in New York. | Source: Getty Images
Together, they raised theirof three sons — Noah, born in 1987 during her marriage to her first husband, actor Timothy Hutton, her stepson Sam, and her youngest boy from her second marriage, Babe.
“She’s a very good, very thoughtful mother, and I think it was hard for her to bring the commitment to her work that it requires when we were young,” her eldest son.
The actress and Babe Howard at The Pale Blue Eye New York Tastemaker Screening event on November 29, 2022. | Source: Getty Images
Like their mother, all three boys pursued careers in the film industry. Noah is a, director, and editor, Sam is in screen advertising, and Babe is an, writer, and director.
The ’70s star and her son Babe Howard at the “Drive-Away Dolls” New York premiere at AMC Lincoln Square Theater on February 20, 2024. | Source: Getty Images
The famous actress also took care of her mother during her the last three months of life, devoted time to environmental activism and charity work, taught at Harvard, wrote a book, and performed on stage. “I did a lot of interesting stuff,” she. “And I didn’t feel like any of it was ‘instead of.'”
The actress and her son at the “Drive-Away Dolls” premiere on February 20, 2024. | Source: Getty Images
This actress is none other than, who, though occasionally appeared in indie films, largely stayed out of the public eye until 2016, when she joined the Netflix series “The Ranch” alongside Ashton Kutcher.
However, she still had her critiques of the entertainment industry. “I don’t feel like it’s settled yet. [The industry] is still in upheaval,” she.
Nonetheless, her return to acting wasn’t without its challenges. “I never thought I would start working again, and I did, but it was really hard,” she. “I don’t know that I would advise anyone to step back the way I did.”
Despite her disappearance from the acting scene over the years, fans have not forgotten Winger’s timeless beauty.”You look GREAT miss lady,”a social media userin part on one of the actress’s recent Instagram posts. Another person,”Still beautiful”and a third,”Debra you look lovely.”
As of 2017, Winger has split her time betweenin Sullivan County, New York, and various film projects. She enjoys Sundays spent gardening and working toward solarizing her property.
Reflecting on her life and career, she remains unapologetically true to herself. “There’s a lot of living that needs to be done,” she, and for Winger, that living has always been on her own terms.
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