Cheryl Ladd endured a #MeToo moment early on in her career. The former "Charlie’s Angels" star said the incident, which involved a male Hollywood executive, took place after she moved from South Dakota to Los Angeles to pursue an acting career. "I was about 19, and I did get chased around one desk," the actress recalled to Page Six Tuesday. "I literally ran around the desk and out the door." The 70-year-old didn’t name the exec in question.
However, she went on to appear in several hit shows during the early ‘70s, including "The Partridge Family" and "Happy Days." Her major break came in 1977 when she famously replaced Farrah Fawcett in "Charlie’s Angels." Cheryl Ladd said she experienced a #MeToo moment early on in her career. (Harry Langdon/Getty Images) Ladd played Kris Munroe in the Aaron Spelling-produced TV series.
She stayed on until the show came to an end in 1981. "In a way, [it was] the best of times and the worst of times," Ladd told the outlet. "People forget that when you did a series like ‘Charlie’s Angels,’ there were 29 episodes [a season].
And, not to mention, all the wardrobe fittings and all the interviews. We just worked ourselves to the bone." "I had a 2-year-old daughter when I started ‘Charlie’s Angels,’" she continued. "It was really, really difficult on so many levels.
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