In a series of TikToks to promote her new single âUsed To Be Young,â Miley Cyrus shared stories from her childhood as a kid actor on Disney Channelâs Hannah Montana. Her intense work schedule echoes much of what we now know about the grueling working conditions that child actors dealt with, as they shot up to stardom.
âThis is a schedule,â Cyrus explains, at the start of the video, before detailing her dayâs events as a 12 or 13-year-old. At 5:30a.m., sheâd get hair and makeup done in a hotel, at 7:15a.m. sheâd have her first live interview followed by another three interviews, each 30 minutes after the last. After an hour and a half meeting with editors; she then had five more interviews and two photoshoots â including one over lunch â before flying home, to shoot episodes of Hannah Montana immediately on the following Monday. Itâs an intense work schedule, especially for a kid.
Cyrus is just one of a number of famous 2000s kid actors who are using their platforms to reflect on their fame, and the demanding schedule it required. Earlier this year, Wednesday star Jenna Ortega talked on the Armchair Expert podcast about the âcrazy, crazy hoursâ she worked as the star of Disneyâs Stuck in the Middle. In June, Christy Carlson Romano, star of Even Stevens, told Fox News that child actors deserve better protections.
And itâs not just Disney. In Jennette McCurdyâs firebrand memoir Iâm Glad My Mom Died, published just over a year ago, the actress who portrayed Sam Puckett on iCarly and Sam & Cat wrote candidly about her time as a child actress. During those years, she suffered abuse at the hands of a controlling mom, and a toxic work environment at the hands of a showrunner she refers to as âThe Creator,â who readers widely regard to be Dan Schneider. She also writes about her desire to transition into writing and directing, a career move which never materialized for her, during her time at Nickelodeon.
Cyrus also dug into a bit of the friction between her own creative ambition and the Hannah Montana brand. Like other Disney and Nickelodeon era stars, she penned her own music, only to have her record label prioritize the music under her Disney persona. âMy record label told me that this song wasnât going to be a hit,â she said of her 2007 single âSee You Again.â She added: âmy fans decided otherwise.â