RELATED: He Played Potsie on Happy Days. See Anson Williams at 72. Gimpel left the cast of Fame after the first three seasons but continued to make guest appearances on the series throughout its six-season run. In the decade that followed, she appeared in one-off roles on various TV series, until in 1996, she landed a recurring, 45-episode role on the NBC crime drama Profiler. Simultaneously, she worked on ER, appearing in 19 episodes of the popular medical drama. Given the subject of the show that shot Gimpel to fame, it’s no surprise that she’s given some consideration to her own. She reflected on her newfound stardom soon after Fame hit the airwaves. “In the show I sang a song called ‘Be Your Own Hero,’ and I was looking at the audience and thinking that it was kind of ironic,” she told the Official Fame Magazine in 1983. “I could see that some of the people in the audience were really admiring us and thinking ‘Oh, I wish I could be like them,’ or maybe even, ‘I’d like to be like Erica Gimpel,’ yet the song is about looking within yourself and finding your own dream and not putting your hopes and ideals into someone else. Here I was, singing to people who maybe look up to me and what I was saying was ‘No, no, it’s not us it’s you, it’s in you. You have just as much light and excitement and spirit within yourselves as you see in us!’” In 2010, Gimpel became a part of finding the next generation of talent, serving as a judge on the Irish reality show, Fame: The Musical, which sought young actors to play leads in a tour of the stage show.ae0fcc31ae342fd3a1346ebb1f342fcb The actor talked about the “highs and lows” of fame in an interview with Ireland AM at the time, saying that the ebb and flow of her own success has helped keep her humble. “I think it’s about being human,” she said. “We’re all helping each other, we’re all igniting each other to follow and continue forward. It’s so hard, ultimately—why not be nice about it? Why not encourage each other? That always left a mark with me.” It’s been 40 years since Fame first aired, and people still remember Gimpel for Coco. She’s fine with being associated with the show still, especially because of what it represents. “I think what it did was the show Fame ignited in young people to follow their dreams, really ignited that excitement and that permission—because a lot of people come from remote areas and it’s not even a conscious choice or even an availability that it can be a real job,” she told Ireland AM. She also shared more recently that she still feels the impact of Fame in her interactions with fans. “To this day I will travel around the world and people come up to me and say, ‘You don’t understand—that school, that show, inspired me to follow my dream,” she said in 2021. RELATED: For more celebrity news sent directly to your inbox, sign up for our daily newsletter. Gimpel and her Fame character have a lot in common. For one, Gimpel graduated from Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts, the real-life inspiration for the School of the Arts in Fame. “It’s all very artistic and exciting there, and I miss the energy of New York,” she told the Official Fame Magazine at the time. “I admire Coco,” the actor said. “She has a hard life, but she’s very idealistic and dedicated.” She added that if Coco were a real person, there are some tips she would share with her. “I would tell her that I hope she keeps on believing in herself as strongly as she does. I think that people are going to try to persuade her to do other things or to go a different route, and they’ll tell her that she is too idealistic. I would tell her to try to play characters who are individuals, not just ethnic characters who are pigeon-holed by what they look like. And, most of all, I would tell her to keep on believing and striving, because whatever you want and strive for can be yours if you work hard enough.” Forty years later, it’s clear that Gimpel has followed her own advice. RELATED: She Played Natalie on The Facts of Life. See Mindy Cohn Now at 55.