He starred in a number of top Brat Pack movies
- Beth Allcock, Freelance Showbiz Reporter
- Published: 7:18 ET, Nov 27 2024
- Updated: 7:27 ET, Nov 27 2024
A HOLLYWOOD star looked completely different from his movie bad boy fame as he stepped out in a car park in Los Angeles.
The Breakfast Club actor, 64, also clocked up roles in Girls In The Basement, St Elmo's Club and New Jack City during his stellar film career in the "Brat Pack" group.
The Brat Pack was a nickname given to a collection of young actors who frequently appeared together in coming-of-age films in the mid-80s.
It included actors Emilio Estevez, Rob Lowe, Demi Moore, Andrew McCarthy, Anthony Michael Hall, 56, Molly Ringwald and Ally Sheedy, who were all on the 1985 cover of New York magazine that forever changed their lives.
Tom Cruise broke away from The Brat Pack with his movie Top Gun in 1986 and saw him become a grown-up star in his own right.
Now Maine-born Judd Nelson, 64, appeared unrecognisable as he walked past a series of parking spaces in the city.
Clear to go unnoticed, he kept his head down as he scuttled past a row of vehicles.
Judd donned jeans paired with a cosy grey jumper and black gilet.
He pulled on a pair of round-rimmed glasses and black trainers to complete his look.
Popular films that featured several members of the Brat Pack at one time were The Outsiders, Sixteen Candles, St. Elmo's Fire, Pretty in Pink, and, of course, The Breakfast Club.
Judd played John Bender in the iconic 1985 movie, The Breakfast Club.
The role often saw him don checked shirts and a floppy brunette hairstyle in the flick centred on high school students.
80s legend, now 56, has barely aged as actress looks the same after iconic roles in Breakfast Club and Sixteen Candles
Yet now, he can often be seen with a grey beard and moustache, and close-cropped hairstyle.
SPEAKING OUT
Judd's bad boy character found love with Molly Ringwald's Claire Standish in the movie, something which she has now expressed discomfort over.
Molly was praised for calling out "troubling" sexual harassment on the show in a recent essay.
Yet in a recent interview with The StarNews of Wilmington Judd said the movie is "a product of its time."
He then added he doesn’t "see those problems that Molly sees."
Meanwhile, in an interview with the Metro, he said: “You always hope a project that you work on has the legs to last longer than that minute you worked on it.
"And The Breakfast Club was like an incredibly fast horse. Just stay on. Do not fall off. Do not use your riding crop. Do not use your spurs. Just hold on to that horse and you'll be fine.
"To receive letters from people that had seen the movie … it was just fascinating to hear the same thing from people from, say, Japan.
“I'm like, 'What? How can your school be the same?' There are many similarities to all kids trying to become adults."