Eight Actors Who Walked Away From Hollywood And Never Looked Back
Over the years, after all the hard work and fame, dozens of actors have left the world of entertainment and never looked back.
Celebrities who initially found success in their craft — like Gene Hackman, Rick Moranis, and Delores Hart — eventually decided a quiet life with their family and children was all they wanted. Some have even found their second career after quitting acting was what they were always meant to do.
Mary-Kate And Ashley Olsen
Childhood superstar’s Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen became household names at the young age of nine-months old when the twin sister’s were cast sharing the role of Michelle Tanner on the hit sitcom “Full House” in 1987. The sisters would work in Hollywood for several decades. Mary-Kate had an independent career in acting until 2012. Ashley worked in TV and appeared on the big screen until 2007 when she and her sister took on the role of producers.
“I don’t like to be the center of attention anymore,” Ashley told Elle UK in 2012. Since that time, the sisters have been focused on fashion and founded several luxury brands like The Row and Elizabeth and James.
Peter Ostrum
Once child-star, Peter Ostrum, appeared in one film as an actor in “Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory” in 1971 across from Gene Wilder when he was just 12.
When Ostrum was done filming the fantasy film, he returned home where his parents had bought a horse. He enjoyed seeing the veterinarians work on the animal and said “it made a huge impression” on him. Eventually, Peter got his Doctorate in Veterinary Medicine from Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine in 1984 and has been a practicing vet in New York where he lives.
The 65-year-old former star previously shared in a speech in 2016 at the University of Missouri, that after dipping his toe into the entertainment world, the “film industry just wasn’t for me,” Yahoo reported.
Demond Wilson
“Sanford and Son” star Demond Wilson started at a young age on Broadway, but he wouldn’t make it into TV and movies for decades. In the early 70’s, Wilson finally landed the role of Lamont Sanford across from Redd Foxx who played his father on the hit show. In 1977, the sitcom was canceled and by the early 80s Demond had decided to leave Hollywood to become an ordained minister. He also founded the Restoration House in 1995 that helped rehabilitate former prison inmates.
The 76-year-old former actor previously shared that his climb to the big and small screen took so long he once contemplated becoming a priest before he made that leap years later when he walked away from acting. Now retired, Wilson enjoys his life with former model Cicely Johnston with whom he shares six children.
Terrence Howard
Terrence Howard recently announced his second retirement from acting, saying this time is really “the end” for him, Entertainment Tonight reported.
“This is the end for me. This is the end for me,” the 53-year-old actor explained. “I retired two years ago, for the most part. I was done. … I asked Sidney Poitier 10 years ago does he want to do any more work, and he said, ‘Why would I spend my last 10 years doing an impersonation of myself?’ And that’s what I’ve gotten to.”
Howard was nominated for a Best Actor Oscar in 2006 for his role in “Hustle & Flow.” He also appeared on the big screen in such movies as “Mr. Holland’s Opus,” “Dead Presidents,” “Who’s the Man,” and “Iron Man.”
Rick Moranis
Rick Moranis was a staple of so many of those great movies from the 80s and it would be impossible not to remember the 69-year-old actor from some of his great roles on the big screen in films such as “Little Shop Of Horrors,” Ghostbusters, “Spaceballs” and “Honey, I Shrunk The Kids,” just to name a few. Moranis would appear in several other movies before walking away from Hollywood to mainly care for his two children after his wife, Anne, died from liver cancer in 1991.
“For the first couple of years I was able to make it work – doing one and a half pictures a year for three months with no problem,” Moranis shared with the Independent in 2006.
“But I started to really miss them,” he added. “It got to the point where I was doing a lot of pictures with kids – really nice kids, but not my kids. So, I was like, ‘You know what? I’m tired of talking to my kids from a hotel room. I’m going home.’ So I turned down the next pictures that came along and the break just got longer and longer. I didn’t miss the work, I didn’t miss the travel, I didn’t miss the people. I didn’t miss any of it.”
The comedic actor hasn’t appeared in any movie since 1997.
Gene Hackman
Gene Hackman was a staple
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