Kelly Hyman.Photo: Kelly Hyman

Kelly Hyman

Recently Hyman — who had stints on shows likeYoung and the Restlessand a range of commercials in the 1970s and ’80s —appeared onFox News @ Night. She was asked to discuss the legalities surrounding U.S. sprinterSha’Carri Richardson’s suspensionfor marijuana use, which derailed her Olympic plans. The show’s other guest commentator brought up some of the talking points that Hyman had prepared.

“I’m sitting there thinking to myself, ‘What am I going to say? What am I going to say?’ " Hyman, now 51, tells PEOPLE.

She “started to panic. And so I said to myself, ‘From my acting training, take a breath, breathe … Listen to what [anchor] Shannon [Bream] says and asks you and just go off that.”

She was inspired to appear on outlets like Fox News and Newsmax, a far-right cable news outlet, after hearing an impassioned speech from Bill Maher on his HBO showReal Time.

Kelly Hyman

Kelly Hyman

“My recollection is he talked about he would have someone like Ann Coulter come on his show … He said, ‘But the Democrats do themselves a disservice that they don’t go on these kinds of shows and speak to people with the election coming up,’ " recalls Hyman, who was 30 when she decided to leave acting to go to become a lawyer. (She also volunteered during former PresidentBarack Obama’s two election campaigns and served as a poll watcher during the past presidential election.)

“I also remember hearing that 5 percent of the people that voted forHillary Clinton, their main source of news was Fox News,” Hyman continues. “I thought if I could change 5 percent and make a difference, that I should.”

She wants to reach that same sect of people with her new book,Build Back Better, a policy-focused “progress report” published last month of PresidentJoe Biden’s first 100 days in office.

Hyman believes “Biden is not just the president for people who voted for him. He’s the president for all Americans.” She says that Biden’s biggest success so far has been the $1.9 trillionCOVID-19relief package that he signed into law in March. She wants readers “to look at his policies and to look at how they can help you and make a difference in your life.”

Kelly Hyman (center) poses during a commercial.Kelly Hyman

Kelly Hyman

Hyman says she’s been interested in politics from the time she was a young girl. Her mother, a tennis pro, emigrated from Australia and raised Hyman on her own in Florida and then California. Hyman’s foray into acting began with the help of Charlton Heston who, as it happens, was taking tennis lessons from Hyman’s mother.

“I was a cute young kid and [my mom] brought me on the court. He was a very tall, nice man,” Hyman, who was 5 years old at the time. She says now. “I remember him patting me on the head and saying, ‘I will help her.’ "

With Heston’s assistance, Hyman got an agent and went on to land roles in the showGetting Thereand commercial spots. From early on, she remembers hoping she’d continue to land gigs to help her mother out financially.

The young star on set.Kelly Hyman

Kelly Hyman

“I’ll never forget looking at the stars saying, ‘Please, God. Get me another commercial,’ " she says. “Because I wanted to make sure that we had money coming in.”

Not only did acting help Hyman learn to be more “outgoing,” she also has fun memories of meeting other actors, including a before-he-was-famousBrad Pitt.

She remembers going to McDonald’s with McCall and Pitt after an event in Studio City.

“Shalane’s mom, Sherry, took photos of us there,” says Hyman, who adds, “I remember him telling me he was from small place in Missouri and there was a local newspaper doing a story about him. And I was like, ‘That’s great.’ "

Shalane McCall and Kelly Hyman with Brad Pitt.Kelly Hyman

From Getting McDonald’s With Brad Pitt to Fox News Contributor: How Child Actor Kelly Hyman Entered Politics

Now, Hyman is having policy discussions instead of chatting with stars. But it brings her just as much fulfillment.

“I’ve been called Pollyanna sometimes on different shows,” says Hyman, who is an avid supporter of voting rights, which have come under scrutiny in the wake of Trump’s baseless claims of election fraud.

“We should make sure that people have access to the polls and not limit their access to the polls,” Hyman says. “This shouldn’t be a political issue — a lot of things shouldn’t be a political issue.”

“People have the power to change things,” she says. “I strongly believe in that.”

Hyman says she received confirmation she’s able to bridge the political divide after an appearance on Fox News. Her driver, a former member of the military and self-described lifelong Republican, had asked if he could watch the show.

“He said, ‘I was listening to you and everything you said, I was just nodding my head,’ " Hyman remembers. “‘That other guy, he didn’t know what he was talking about.’ "

Build Back Better: The First 100 Days of the Biden Administration, and Beyondis on sale now.

source: people.com