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Former Star Wars actor Jake Lloyd made a rare public appearance on Instagram, a little over a year after assuring fans he was doing well amid his journey with schizophrenia.
Daniel Logan, who also had a role in the Star Wars prequel films as a child actor, shared a picture with Lloyd on Sunday, Jan. 18. Logan, 38, flashed a peace sign and a grin for the camera as he sat beside Lloyd, 36, outside a restaurant.
“Just spent the day with my brother,” Logan wrote on Instagram alongside the photo.
Daniel Logan/Instagram
Lloyd played the young Anakin Skywalker when he was 9 in 1999’s Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace. Logan starred as the young Boba Fett in 2002’s Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones. Ahmed Best, who played Jar Jar Binks in all three Star Wars prequels, added a heart emoji in the comments to Logan’s post.
The photo with Logan was published a year after author Clayton Sandell published a rare interview with Lloyd on Jan. 1, 2025. At the time, the former child actor said he felt “pretty good” after completing an 18-month stay at a Southern California inpatient mental health facility. According to Sandell, Lloyd began 2025 in a new rehabilitation center where he was “basically free to come and go as he pleases.”
Lloyd’s mother, Lisa Lloyd, also told Sandell that her son struggled with anosognosia, which is common for those with schizophrenia. The Cleveland Clinic describes anosognosia as a condition where “your brain can’t recognize one or more other health conditions you have.”
Ron Galella, Ltd./Ron Galella Collection via Getty
Lloyd’s mother told TMZ in 2015 that her son was diagnosed with schizophrenia and began showing signs when he was 19. The actor also had run-ins with the law, including an arrest in May 2023 after turning his car off in the middle of a three-lane road. Lisa described the incident as a “psychotic break” in a March 2024 interview with Sandell for Scripps News.
Lloyd told Sandell in 2025 that it was necessary to hit “rock bottom” to “honestly take part in treatment, honestly take your meds, and honestly live with your diagnosis.”
Although Lloyd does not attend fan conventions, he told Sandell last year that meeting fans is “immediately therapeutic.”
“I really do appreciate the time that’s been taken on us,” Lloyd said at the time. “I’m very appreciative.”
Lisa also told Sandell in 2025 that Lloyd is “actually getting so much better than he was,” adding, “It’s a big relief for me and the rest of his family. We’re all just thrilled that he’s doing as well as he is, and that he’s working really hard at it. We appreciate that.”
Gilbert Carrasquillo/FilmMagic
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