"I wanted to go to regular high school - it looked like a lot of fun"
About this Quote
There is a quiet ache hiding inside that breezy phrase "regular high school". Tommy Rettig frames it like a casual preference, but the wording gives away the real story: he was already living outside the boundaries of normal adolescence, and he knew it. "It looked like a lot of fun" is the kind of simple, almost shrugging sentence people use when they dont want to sound bitter. The point isnt that high school is inherently magical; its that, from Rettigs vantage point as a working child actor, it was a symbol of something he couldnt buy with fame: anonymity, routine, and the right to be ordinary.
The line also works because it flips the usual cultural myth of stardom. We are trained to imagine the set as a playground and school as the penalty. Rettig suggests the opposite: the "regular" world is where the social experiments happen, where you try on identities, fail publicly, and still get to come back tomorrow. That is "fun" in the way adulthood later teaches you to miss it.
Context matters here. Rettig came up in an era when child performers were marketed as wholesome fixtures of American life, but the industry rarely protected the childhood behind the image. So the sentence reads like retrospective self-audit: not a dramatic grievance, just a small, devastating admission that his teenage years were something he watched from the outside, like everyone else on TV.
The line also works because it flips the usual cultural myth of stardom. We are trained to imagine the set as a playground and school as the penalty. Rettig suggests the opposite: the "regular" world is where the social experiments happen, where you try on identities, fail publicly, and still get to come back tomorrow. That is "fun" in the way adulthood later teaches you to miss it.
Context matters here. Rettig came up in an era when child performers were marketed as wholesome fixtures of American life, but the industry rarely protected the childhood behind the image. So the sentence reads like retrospective self-audit: not a dramatic grievance, just a small, devastating admission that his teenage years were something he watched from the outside, like everyone else on TV.
Quote Details
| Topic | Student |
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