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Steven Ford

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Steven Meigs Ford (born May 19, 1956) is an American actor, and the youngest son of former U.S. President Gerald Ford and former First Lady Betty Ford. He is perhaps best known for playing Andy Richards in the soap opera The Young and the Restless.

Key Information

Early life

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Steven Ford with his mother, Betty Ford, in 1976

Ford is the third child and youngest son of former President Gerald Ford and former First Lady Betty Ford. Ford graduated from T. C. Williams High School in Alexandria, Virginia, on June 13, 1974, at which his father, then Vice President, gave the commencement address.[2] Ford attended Utah State University, studying range management;[3][4] while his older brother John Gardner (Jack) Ford studied forestry. Ford also attended California State Polytechnic University, Pomona and California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, where he studied equine studies.[5]

Career

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Ford was cast in the film Grease (1978) as Tom Chisum, but dropped out before filming began and was replaced by Lorenzo Lamas, citing stage fright.[6] Ford joined the cast of The Young and the Restless in 1981, creating the role of Private Investigator Andy Richards.[7] He was a regular member of the cast from 1981 to 1987 and briefly from 2002 to 2003.[7] Ford has since appeared in minor roles in a number of films and television series, including Escape from New York,[8] Babylon 5: In the Beginning, Armageddon, Black Hawk Down, Starship Troopers, When Harry Met Sally...,[7] Heat, Contact, and Transformers. From 1992 to 1993, he hosted the short-lived series Secret Service.

Personal life

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Ford serves on the board of trustees for the Gerald R. Ford Foundation in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He describes himself as a "moderate Republican" and a "fiscal conservative". He also acknowledged that he suffered from alcoholism in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Although he still takes on occasional acting assignments, he spends most of his time raising money for charitable organizations and giving speeches and motivational talks to student groups on alcoholism.[9]

In 1991, he announced his engagement to Laura Carlos. Later he said that the marriage plans did not go forward as he was working on his sobriety.

On February 14, 1980,[10] he filed a lawsuit in California to determine if he was the legal father of a boy named Lawrence, born on December 16, 1979,[10] to Joy Malken.[11] He also filed for custody and/or visitation rights.[10] There was "a complete and amicable settlement" very shortly afterward, details being kept private.[12][13]

On January 9, 2025, Ford read a eulogy written by his father on the occasion of the 2025 state funeral of former President Jimmy Carter, and made reference to his "wife" at the funeral of President Carter, though she has not been named publicly.[14]

Filmography

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Film

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Year Title Role Notes
1980 Cattle Annie and Little Britches Deputy Marshal
1981 Escape from New York Secret Service #2
1982 Young Doctors in Love Soap Cameos
1986 The Eleventh Commandment Tom Leary
1989 When Harry Met Sally... Joe
1990 Twenty Dollar Star Jim
1995 Heat Officer Bruce
1996 Eraser Knoland
1997 Midnight Blue Detective Dobkin
1997 Contact Major Russell
1997 Starship Troopers Lt. Willy
1997 Against the Law Lt. Bill Carpenter
1998 Armageddon Nuke Tech
1999 The Rage: Carrie 2 Coach Walsh
2001 Black Hawk Down Cribbs
2007 Transformers Four Star General

Television

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Year Title Role Notes
1981 Happy Days Frankie Episode: "The Sixth Sense"
1981 The Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo Rodeo Cowboy Episode: "Keep on Buckin'"
1982–2003 The Young and the Restless Andy Richards 212 episodes
1984 The Cowboy and the Ballerina Wes Butler Television film
1988 Murder, She Wrote Drake Eaton Episode: "Harbinger of Death"
1988 Shooter Capt. Walker Television film
1990 Columbo Toby Ritt Episode: "Agenda for Murder"
1994 Team Suomi Willi Television film
1995 Sirens Dr. Paul Ravenson Episode: "The Obsession"
1995 Flipper F. Scott Blondel Episode: "F. Scott"
1996 JAG 'Daddy' Dan Austin Episode: "Hemlock"
1996 Mr. & Mrs. Smith Frank Parker Episode: "The Suburban Episode"
1996 Dark Skies Phillips Episode: "Ancient Future"
1997 The Beneficiary Bill Girard Television film
1997 The Sentinel Norman Oliver Episode: "Secret"
1997 Baywatch Steve Cause Episode: "Trial by Fire"
1997 Walker, Texas Ranger D.A. Mark Clark Episode: "Texas vs. Cahill"
1997 Two Came Back Lt. Belwick Television film
1998 Babylon 5: In the Beginning Prometheus First Officer
1998 Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman Prosecutor Meadows Episode: "Legend II: Vengeance"
1998 Suddenly Susan Skip Episode: "A Tale of Two Pants: Part 2"
1998, 2000 Pensacola: Wings of Gold Lt. Col. Donald Stuart / Lt. Col. Martin Niles 2 episodes
2001 18 Wheels of Justice Senator Quentin Young Episode: "Past Imperfect"

Further reading

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Steven Meigs Ford (born May 19, 1956) is an American actor, motivational speaker, and the youngest son of former U.S. President Gerald Ford and First Lady Betty Ford.[1][2] Ford pursued a career in acting, appearing in over 25 major motion pictures including Black Hawk Down, Starship Troopers, and Transformers, as well as extensive television work totaling more than 800 hours of productions.[2][3] He has served as a trustee and chairman of the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Foundation, contributing to the preservation and promotion of his father's legacy.[2][4] As a speaker, Ford addresses themes of leadership, integrity, and overcoming personal adversity, drawing from his experiences growing up in the White House and his family's public challenges with addiction and health issues.[5][3] Earlier in life, he was a professional rodeo team roper and worked in the horse racing industry as vice president of Turfway Park Race Course.[6]

Early Life and Family Background

Birth and Upbringing

Steven Meigs Ford was born on May 19, 1956, in Washington, D.C., the third child and youngest son of Gerald R. Ford, then a U.S. Representative from Michigan's 5th congressional district, and his wife Elizabeth "Betty" Bloomer Ford.[7] His older brothers are Michael Gerald Ford, born March 14, 1950, and John "Jack" Gardner Ford, born March 16, 1952; his younger sister is Susan Elizabeth Ford, born July 6, 1957.[8] The Ford family resided primarily in Alexandria, Virginia, during Gerald Ford's long tenure in Congress, which began in 1949, allowing proximity to Washington while maintaining ties to their Michigan roots.[7] Steven Ford grew up in this suburban environment, experiencing a relatively stable middle-class upbringing despite his father's increasing prominence as House Minority Leader from 1965 onward.[7] He attended local public schools in the Alexandria area, culminating in his graduation from T. C. Williams High School in the spring of 1974, shortly after his father ascended to the vice presidency.[7] This period of his youth was marked by the demands of his father's political life, including frequent absences, but also by family closeness and Midwestern values instilled by his parents.[8]

Experiences During Father's Political Career

Steven Ford attended T. C. Williams High School in Alexandria, Virginia, during his father's vice presidency, graduating in the spring of 1974 shortly before Gerald Ford ascended to the presidency.[7] Vice President Ford delivered the commencement address at the ceremony on June 14, 1974.[9] Following Gerald Ford's swearing-in as president on August 9, 1974, the 18-year-old Steven Ford transitioned into the role of First Son, residing in the White House with his family amid a period of national upheaval including the Watergate scandal's aftermath and the Vietnam War's conclusion.[3] His personal interests in equestrian activities and ranching persisted, leading him to work as a cowboy on remote Western ranches, where he engaged in horseback riding, cattle roping, and branding.[10] Ford contributed to his father's 1976 re-election campaign efforts as his schedule allowed, balancing these involvements with family life in the executive residence.[7] In subsequent accounts, he has recounted the era's domestic adjustments, including the impact of high-profile decisions such as the September 8, 1974, pardon of former President Richard Nixon, which occurred during his White House tenure.[11]

Education and Early Interests

Formal Education

Steven Ford graduated from T. C. Williams High School in Alexandria, Virginia, in the spring of 1974.[7][12] His father, then-Vice President Gerald Ford, delivered the commencement address on June 13, 1974.[13] After high school, Ford took a gap year, working as a ranch hand in Montana, before pursuing higher education.[7][14] He enrolled at Utah State University, studying range management, a field aligned with his brother's forestry studies at the same institution.[15] Ford subsequently attended California Polytechnic State University.[15] No public records indicate completion of a bachelor's degree from either university, as his career shifted toward acting in the late 1970s.[15]

Pre-Acting Pursuits

Prior to pursuing acting, Steven Ford engaged in various hands-on roles centered on ranching, animal husbandry, and outdoor activities, reflecting his longstanding interest in horses and the American West. Following his high school graduation in spring 1974, Ford deferred college enrollment for a year, during which he worked as a ranch-hand on a cattle operation near Missoula, Montana, from 1974 to 1975.[7] He also held positions milking cows at a dairy farm in Virginia and laboring on a ranch in Utah, experiences that honed his practical skills in agriculture and livestock management.[7] Ford's affinity for equestrian pursuits manifested in raising and training horses, as well as part-time employment on a ranch near California Polytechnic State University, Pomona, where he studied animal science after transferring there in January 1976.[7] He received instruction in rodeo bronc riding from nine-time world champion Casey Tibbs and competed on the professional rodeo circuit as a team roper before entering acting in 1980.[7][2] Complementing these endeavors, Ford participated in wilderness activities, including three summers starting at age 12 with an outfitting company in Alaska and field studies on grizzly bears in Montana alongside researchers John and Frank Craighead.[7] These pre-acting occupations underscored his commitment to ranching, outdoor preservation, and equine-related vocations, pursuits he continued recreationally thereafter.[7][2]

Professional Career

Entry into Acting

Ford transitioned to acting in 1980 after working on the professional rodeo circuit as a team roper, a pursuit that followed his family's departure from the White House in 1977.[2][16] This shift marked a departure from his earlier outdoor and athletic interests, with no prior formal acting training documented in available accounts.[11] His professional acting debut occurred in 1981, beginning with small film roles including Secret Service Agent #2 in Escape from New York, directed by John Carpenter, and an appearance in Cattle Annie and Little Britches alongside Burt Lancaster.[17][18] That same year, Ford originated the recurring role of private investigator Andy Richards on the CBS daytime soap opera The Young and the Restless, portraying the character from 1981 to 1987 and briefly reprising it in 2002–2003.[19][11] The soap opera role provided his initial sustained television exposure, leveraging his all-American persona amid the show's focus on Genoa City intrigue.[20] These early opportunities established Ford in Hollywood, where he balanced bit parts in action and drama films with television work, drawing on his rodeo background for authenticity in rugged characters.[1] Despite his presidential lineage, sources indicate his entry relied on persistence rather than nepotism, as he competed in an industry known for high barriers to newcomers.[21]

Notable Roles and Achievements

Steven Ford gained prominence in daytime television through his portrayal of Detective Andy Richards on the CBS soap opera The Young and the Restless, a role he held from January 1981 to July 1987, appearing in over 200 episodes and contributing to the show's Emmy Award-winning status during that period.[22] This character, a police lieutenant involved in major storylines including investigations and personal dramas, marked Ford's most sustained television success and helped establish his presence in Hollywood despite his lack of formal acting training.[21] In film, Ford secured supporting roles in several high-profile productions, beginning with early appearances such as Secret Service Agent in John Carpenter's Escape from New York (1981), where he shared screen time with Kurt Russell amid the dystopian action narrative.[18] He later played Major Russell in Robert Zemeckis's Contact (1997), a scientist aiding Jodie Foster's character in extraterrestrial signal analysis, and Lieutenant Willy in Paul Verhoeven's Starship Troopers (1997), depicting military exploits in a satirical sci-fi war.[23] These roles showcased Ford's ability to handle authoritative figures in ensemble casts, though they were typically brief. Ford's film work extended to military-themed dramas, including Lieutenant Colonel Joe Cribbs in Ridley Scott's Black Hawk Down (2001), portraying a U.S. Army officer during the 1993 Mogadishu raid based on real events, and a Four Star General in Michael Bay's Transformers (2007), advising on alien threats.[22] Additional credits include Nuke Technician in Armageddon (1998) and a detective in Midnight Blue (1997), accumulating over 800 hours of screen time across more than 50 projects by the early 2000s.[24] Despite this output, Ford received no major acting awards or Academy Award nominations, with his career sustained by consistent character work rather than lead acclaim.[1]

Challenges in Hollywood

Steven Ford encountered significant personal challenges during his acting career, primarily stemming from his struggles with alcoholism, which created a "double life" between professional success and private turmoil. While maintaining a steady stream of roles in film and television—appearing in over 800 hours of productions spanning more than 25 years—Ford revealed that his addiction intensified when traveling for on-location work, leading to binge drinking episodes that left him in drunken stupors followed by forced recovery to meet professional obligations.[25][26] This pattern persisted despite his public image as the son of former President Gerald Ford and Betty Ford, with Ford describing how the demands of Hollywood's transient lifestyle exacerbated his condition, contrasting sharply with the stability he projected on set.[25] He has attributed the secrecy of his struggles to a sense of shame, noting that the addiction operated as a persistent, opportunistic force waiting for vulnerabilities like isolation on acting gigs.[27] Ford achieved sobriety around 1994, marking 25 years of recovery by 2019, which allowed him to sustain and build upon his career without the previous disruptions, though he credits the experience with informing his later advocacy on addiction and resilience.[28][29] Unlike overt industry barriers, these challenges were internal and self-managed, enabling Ford to avoid derailment while highlighting the mental health tolls common among performers in high-pressure environments.[30]

Public Engagement and Advocacy

Role in Ford Presidential Foundation

Steven Ford has served as a trustee of the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Foundation since March 24, 1982.[2] In this role, he has supported the foundation's efforts to preserve and promote the legacy of President Gerald R. Ford through initiatives including educational programs, scholarships for students studying public service, and the upkeep of the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum and Library in Grand Rapids, Michigan.[2] Ford held leadership positions within the foundation, acting as vice chairman from 1987 to 1989 and again from 1995 to 1997, before serving as chairman from 2010 to 2014.[2] During his tenure as trustee, he has participated in public events advancing the foundation's goals, such as the August 25, 2025, launch of the $12 million FORD50 campaign, which aims to fund civic education programs commemorating the 50th anniversary of President Ford's inauguration and address political polarization.[31][32] As the youngest son of President Ford, his involvement provides continuity in stewardship, drawing on personal insights into his father's principles of bipartisanship and integrity in governance.[4]

Motivational Speaking and Leadership Topics

Steven Ford delivers motivational speeches centered on leadership, frequently under the banner of "Leadership with Character," where he underscores the necessity of integrity, resilience, and principled decision-making in guiding others.[16] Drawing from his firsthand experiences during his father's presidency, Ford illustrates these principles through anecdotes such as Gerald Ford's handling of the Nixon pardon in September 1974, which he portrays as a demonstration of prioritizing national healing over political expediency, and the family's response to two assassination attempts on the president in September 1975, highlighting composure under crisis.[30] In his talks, Ford advocates rethinking contemporary leadership amid perceived declines in civility and values, arguing that true leaders must embody character traits observed in his father's administration, including humility, family prioritization, and ethical boundary-setting.[33] He often incorporates multimedia elements like historic photographs and videos from White House life to convey lessons on juggling priorities—such as balancing public duty with private family responsibilities—and making choices aligned with core values, which he credits for his own career transitions from acting to advocacy.[30] These presentations target corporate, educational, and civic audiences, encouraging participants to apply similar frameworks to personal and professional challenges.[3] Ford's leadership discourse also integrates broader motivational elements, such as overcoming adversity through disciplined self-reflection, informed by his observations of institutional pressures during the post-Watergate era, though he maintains a focus on timeless attributes like accountability over situational ethics.[34] He has delivered such keynotes at events including a 2009 address on leadership and character hosted by the Hauenstein Center, where he linked familial influences to enduring governance models.[35] Overall, his approach privileges empirical examples from verified historical events over abstract theory, positioning leadership as a practice rooted in verifiable personal and familial precedents rather than ideological constructs.[2]

Advocacy for Addiction Recovery

Steven Ford has advocated for addiction recovery through public speaking and sharing his personal experiences with alcohol addiction and co-occurring depression, achieving sobriety in the early 1990s after years of binge drinking that complicated his acting career.[36][37] By 2012, he had maintained sobriety for 19 years, crediting a 12-step recovery program—though not formal inpatient treatment like the Betty Ford Center founded by his mother—and family support, particularly from Betty Ford, whose own public battle with substance abuse in the late 1970s inspired his commitment to openness about recovery.[37][25] Ford has emphasized that his dual diagnosis required addressing both addiction and mental health, a perspective he promotes to reduce stigma and encourage treatment-seeking.[38] As a motivational speaker, Ford targets audiences in educational, community mental health, and recovery settings, delivering talks on overcoming addiction's personal and familial impacts, often tying his narrative to the Ford family's experiences during and after the White House years.[39][30] He has appeared at events like those hosted by Gateway Rehabilitation Center in 2012 and community mental health systems, where he discusses resilience, redemption, and the role of faith and family intervention in sustained recovery.[29][40] In a 2023 podcast with the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation, Ford detailed his journey from denial and professional secrecy to long-term sobriety, now exceeding 30 years as of 2021, positioning his story as one of hope for others facing similar struggles.[41][42] Ford's advocacy extends to broader mental health integration with recovery, influenced by his mother's legacy but focused on his independent path, including warnings against the isolation of celebrity life that exacerbated his issues.[43] He has not held formal roles at the Betty Ford Center but leverages its foundational ethos in his messaging, advocating for accessible 12-step principles and personal accountability over institutional dependency alone.[39][25] Through these efforts, Ford aims to empower individuals and families, reporting that his talks have reached diverse groups seeking practical insights into maintaining sobriety amid public scrutiny.[30]

Personal Life

Marriages and Family

Steven Meigs Ford has never married.[44] In 1991, he announced his engagement to Laura Carlos, but the plans did not proceed as Ford prioritized his recovery from alcohol addiction.[44] Ford has one son, Lawrence Malken, born on December 16, 1979, from a relationship with Joy Malken; the couple did not marry.[45] On February 14, 1980, Ford filed a paternity lawsuit in California to determine whether he was Lawrence's legal father.[46] Subsequent biographical accounts identify Lawrence as his son.[47] No other children are documented.

Personal Struggles and Resilience

Steven Ford grappled with alcoholism for years, engaging in binge drinking episodes that created a compartmentalized "double life" separate from his public persona as an actor and the son of a former president.[25] This pattern intensified during his time traveling for acting roles, leading to personal crises such as the abrupt end of a planned engagement after a hotel-room confrontation with his own behavior.[27] Ford has described the addiction as intertwined with depression, forming a dual diagnosis that exacerbated feelings of isolation despite his family's high-profile history with substance abuse awareness.[39] Despite the irony of his mother Betty Ford's pioneering openness about her own alcoholism—through the Betty Ford Center, which she helped establish in 1982—Ford initially avoided formal inpatient treatment, instead entering a 12-step recovery program around the early 1990s.[25] [43] His commitment to sobriety proved enduring; by 2011, he marked 19 years sober, progressing to 25 years by the mid-2010s and 30 years by November 2021.[48] Ford's resilience manifests in his proactive sharing of these experiences via motivational speaking, where he emphasizes personal accountability and the transformative power of admitting vulnerability to dismantle addiction's stigma.[29] This approach, informed by his family's legacy but grounded in his independent recovery journey, has positioned him as an advocate who addresses both substance use and co-occurring mental health challenges without relying on celebrity privilege for validation.[49]

Filmography

Film Roles

Steven Ford's film roles have primarily consisted of supporting characters, often in action, sci-fi, or military-themed productions, reflecting a modest but steady presence in Hollywood from the early 1980s onward. His screen debut came in Cattle Annie and Little Britches (1981), a Western drama about outlaws, though details of his specific character remain sparsely documented in production records.[50] That same year, he appeared as Secret Service #2 in John Carpenter's dystopian action film Escape from New York, a minor role in a cast led by Kurt Russell.[1][51] A breakthrough in visibility occurred with his portrayal of Joe, a sarcastic friend of Billy Crystal's character, in the romantic comedy When Harry Met Sally... (1989), directed by Rob Reiner and starring Meg Ryan, which grossed over $92 million domestically and earned critical acclaim for its witty script.[18][1] In the mid-1990s, Ford played authoritative figures, including a banker in Michael Mann's crime epic Heat (1995) alongside Al Pacino and Robert De Niro, and Major Russell, a military liaison, in Robert Zemeckis's science fiction drama Contact (1997) based on Carl Sagan's novel.[51][1] Ford's roles in late-1990s action blockbusters included Lieutenant Willy, a Mobile Infantry officer, in Paul Verhoeven's satirical Starship Troopers (1997); a nuke technician in Michael Bay's Armageddon (1998), which depicted an asteroid deflection mission; Detective Dobkin in the thriller Midnight Blue (1997); and Lieutenant Bill Carpenter in Against the Law (1997).[1][18] He followed with Coach Walsh, a high school authority figure, in the horror sequel The Rage: Carrie 2 (1999).[50][1] Into the 2000s, Ford continued with military portrayals, such as Cribbs, a Delta Force operator, in Ridley Scott's Black Hawk Down (2001), a depiction of the 1993 Mogadishu raid that earned six Oscar nominations, and a four-star general briefing Shia LaBeouf's character in Michael Bay's Transformers (2007).[1][18] These appearances underscore Ford's typecasting in disciplined, uniform-wearing parts, with over a dozen credited films by 2010, though none led to starring status.[51]

Television Appearances

Ford portrayed private investigator Andy Richards on the CBS daytime soap opera The Young and the Restless from 1981 to 1987, appearing in over 200 episodes during his six-year tenure.[52][11][1] In addition to his soap opera work, Ford made guest appearances across various primetime series. These included roles such as Toby Ritt in the 1990 Columbo episode "Agenda for Murder," Prosecutor Meadows in the 1998 Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman episode "Vengeance," Frank Parker in Mr. & Mrs. Smith (1996), Norman Oliver in The Sentinel (1997), Steve Cause in Baywatch (1997), and Phillips in Dark Skies (1996).[53][1] He also appeared in episodes of JAG, Walker, Texas Ranger, Suddenly Susan, and 18 Wheels of Justice.[21][52]

References

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