Valerie Bertinelli looked with melancholy in her Hollywood career this week with a blatant backward photo.

The actor turned into a celebrity chef shared an advertising shot of herself on Instagram on Thursday that dates back to 1979, approximately four years after her interpretation of Barbara Cooper Royer in “One Day at A Time” of News catapulted her to stardom. In it, he wore a flannel shirt and black panties, along with a couple of needle heels.

After noticing in the title that the image had been taken “at the end of one of the many disposable photo sessions that would have in News,” Bertinelli recalled how a similar photo had been used along with a less holder than flattering.

“A photo of this session ended on the cover of us with a headline on me growing too fast,” he wrote.

However, as the raising of eyebrows was that evaluation, she believes that she might not have been so far from the brand.

Valerie Bertinelli in 1979, four years after he catapulted fame in CBS's
Valerie Bertinelli in 1979, four years after he catapulted fame in “One Day at A Time” of News.

News Photo Archive through Getty Images

“I mean, they were not really wrong … months later, I met Ed, I committed and married in the period of eight months,” he wrote, referring to Rock musician Eddie Van Halen, who died in 2020 at the age of 65.

Bertinelli and Van Halen married from 1981 to 2007. In 2011, she and the financial Tom Vitale married, but separated in 2022.

More recently, Bertinelli was in a relationship with life writer Mike Goodnough. The couple finished their romance in November last year after about 10 months together.

According to all reports, Bertinelli and Goodnough seemed to be in friendly terms at the end of their relationship. Earlier this month, however, Goodnough shared a cryptic note on Instagram accusing his ex to “go to a place where he has been playing a woman’s tennis game thinking that there is someone on the other side of the network.”

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“I am not communicating with Valerie through my publications. I am not getting involved with the things I publish,” he wrote. “While I am disappointed with the variety of hostiles, dishonest and without problems for hand blows, it continues to take towards me, there is no war between us. It simply does not stop shooting.”

“Valerie is in a war with his ghosts,” he continued. “I am only the guy who catches the bullets. And that is not new.”