After enrolling at NYU to study acting, he was expelled after barely attending classes. Just weeks later, his life changed when he answered an open casting call for the film Class. The role launched his career almost overnight. By the mid-’80s, McCarthy was a full-blown star, appearing in St. Elmo’s Fire, Pretty in Pink, Mannequin, and Weekend at Bernie’s.
Yet fame made him uncomfortable. He later admitted he wasn’t suited for attention and felt overwhelmed by success. Behind the scenes, alcohol became his coping mechanism, giving him confidence he didn’t feel on his own. At times, he was hungover while filming roles fans saw as sensitive and romantic.

In his late 20s, his drinking spiraled. After several painful years, McCarthy hit bottom and entered rehab at 29. Sobriety became the turning point that reshaped his life. Stepping away from teen-idol fame, he reinvented himself as a director, writer, and travel journalist, even earning Travel Journalist of the Year in 2010.

He built a quiet family life, raised three children, and directed dozens of television episodes. Today, McCarthy looks back without nostalgia. He didn’t just survive Hollywood—he found something better on the other side, proving that the most powerful story is often the second act.