
Think your movie superstar was born famous? Think again. Some of them began in the most unlikely occupations you can imagine—distributing flyers, making balloon animals at kids’ parties, even lion taming. Others abandoned acting entirely for entirely new careers. Hollywood is full of left turns, detours, and gasp-inducing spins. Let’s count down (in reverse, for dramatic effect) 15 of the craziest origin stories and career shifts.

15. Ken Jeong: From Doctor to Comedy Powerhouse
Before cracking us up as Mr. Chow in The Hangover, Ken Jeong was practicing medicine. He balanced his life as a physician with late-night stand-up until he finally went all-in on comedy. Luckily for us, laughter won.

14. Ariana Richards: Jurassic Park to Painter’s Studio
You may recall her as the wide-eyed grandkid in Jurassic Park. Nowadays? Ariana Richards exchanges raptors for paintbrushes and paints, establishing a lucrative career as a professional artist.

13. Steve Buscemi: Fireman to Actor
Legendary for his quirky performances and fiery on-screen intensity, Steve Buscemi once battled actual blazes as a New York City firefighter. After 9/11, he even returned to his former firehouse to lend a hand—evidence that some heroes never retire their helmets.

12. Gwyneth Paltrow: From Screenplays to Jade Eggs
Since winning an Oscar, Gwyneth Paltrow followed a career detour to establish her lifestyle empire, Goop. Love her or eye-roll her wellness fads, she’s garnered as much news for jade eggs as ever she did for Shakespeare in Love.

11. Christopher Walken: Circus Lion Tamer
Before The Deer Hunter, before the “cowbell” sketch, young Christopher Walken toiled alongside lions in a traveling circus. Only Walken would make “former lion tamer” sound just right on-brand.

10. Daniel Day-Lewis: Vanishing Into Cobbler Life
The method acting master formerly vanished entirely—not into character, but into cobblery. Daniel Day-Lewis relocated to Italy to study cobbling before revisiting for a few iconic, Oscar-winning roles.

9. Whoopi Goldberg: Dead to Makeup to EGOT
Before the awards, Whoopi Goldberg was a bricklayer and even a mortuary makeup artist. From preparing the dead to joining the coveted club of EGOT winners—that’s one glow-up.

8. Freddie Prinze Jr.: Heartthrob to Chef
After becoming the face of all late-’90s teen romantic comedies, Freddie Prinze Jr. discovered that his true calling was in the kitchen. He became a trained chef and even authored a cookbook, showing he’s just as adept with a spatula as he was under the Hollywood lights.

7. Gabourey Sidibe: From Call Center to Oscar Nominee
Before hitting it big in Precious, Gabourey Sidibe worked as a receptionist and answered phones at a call center. A single audition afterward, and she was strolling down red carpets and raking in an Academy Award nomination.

6. Kal Penn: White Castle to White House
Most famous for Harold & Kumar, Kal Penn took a break from acting to work in the Obama administration as an Associate Director of Public Engagement. Talk about trading stoner comedy for hard politics.

5. Hugh Jackman: Party Clown to Wolverine
Before donning the claws of Wolverine, Hugh Jackman made children laugh as a party clown. He’s said he wasn’t very good at balloon animals, but let’s be thankful he didn’t give it up.

4. Mara Wilson: From Matilda to Mental Health Activist
Mara Wilson, aka Matilda, quit Hollywood to become a writer and mental health activist. Her off-screen efforts have perhaps made her more of an influence than any of the magic she performed on film.

3. Danny DeVito: Hairdresser Before Hollywood
Before becoming a cinematic and television icon, Danny DeVito cut hair at his sister’s beauty salon. From perms to punchlines, his transition from scissors to scripts was one of Hollywood’s greatest makeovers.

2. Harrison Ford: Carpenter to Space Smuggler
Harrison Ford was driving nails as a carpenter for years before he got Han Solo. His “side hustle” brought him George Lucas—and the rest is film history.

1. From Extras to Icons
Many of today’s A-listers began behind the scenes: Leonardo DiCaprio worked on commercials, Viola Davis cut her teeth with TV bit roles, and Brad Pitt dressed up in a chicken costume to promote a restaurant. Even Robert Downey Jr., Samuel L. Jackson, Taraji P. Henson, and Marilyn Monroe began life as faceless figures in a crowd. Each superstar you can think of once waited on the sidelines for that initial break.

The next time you notice an extra walking across the frame in a scene, don’t blink—you might be looking at the next Hollywood star.