“The Brady Bunch” stars Barry Williams and Christopher Knight are feeling reflective about the past, having recently celebrated the show’s 55th anniversary.
But Williams wants to clarify one piece of history.
In a recent interview with Us Weekly, the 70-year-old said, “We all hooked up with each other at some point, not necessarily while we were filming.”
“That’s not accurate,” Williams told Fox News Digital. “I said that 14 years ago…you know how these things cycle around.”
Barry Williams, left, said his comments about the “Brady Bunch” cast having all “hooked up” with each other during the original run of the show were not completely “accurate.”(Getty Images)
“We all grew up together. We’re the people that we knew, we trusted,” he explained. “We spent more time together as a ‘Brady’ family during times of the year and most of the year than with our own families. And we genuinely liked each other, and it seemed kind of a normal extension of affection.
“So what I meant by that was that Bobby and Cindy had a fake marriage in Tiger’s doghouse, literally. I dated Maureen and we went out and I was her first kiss. So that’s kind of what I meant by hooking up.”
Knight said of his relationships while on the show, “I was a late bloomer and very slow. And I was being chased by Eve [Plumb] for a number of years.”
“You know, looking back on it, it’s kind of embarrassing,” he added.
“What does that have to do with hooking up?” Williams questioned.
“Well, I tripped,” Knight responded, getting a laugh from his co-star.
Williams and Knight agreed that the cast was closely bonded, with Williams noting they spent more time together than they often did with their families.(Getty Images)
“The Brady Bunch” aired for five seasons on ABC from 1969 to 1974 and has become a pop culture staple with spin-offs, parodies, and a still-passionate fan base.
And much like the close-knit family onscreen, behind the scenes, the “Brady Bunch” stars really connected.
“We all grew up together. We’re the people that we knew, we trusted.”
— Barry Williams
Knight, who was around 12 years old when the show began, recalled that it was “a very warm and inviting environment. And I keep coming back to that because it was. It was a struggle in my own household to feel validated, to have a voice and to feel anything but a burden…the juxtaposition is now not lost on me.”
“Therewas an authenticity to doing that pilot because the show was about meeting each other, learning about each other. And we were literally meeting each other and learning about each other,” Williams said.
He recalled filming the wedding of their onscreen parents, Mike and Carol, played by Robert Reed and Florence Henderson, and knowing “it was special in its own way.”