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15 Famous Actors Who Quit Hollywood While They Were Still on Top
In most cases, an actor’s career in Hollywood will fade away into obscurity. Work slows down and phone calls stop. Slowly but surely, the actor becomes a forgotten name on the marquee. But there is a less frequent tale that keeps cropping up through the ages of cinema. The actor who walks away at the exact moment the offers are at their biggest and the reviews are at their best.
All of the 15 actors listed here were at the peak of their fame when they decided the view wasn't worth the climb.
Daniel Day-Lewis
Daniel Day-Lewis is the only actor ever to have won three Academy Awards for Best Actor. In 2017, he was continuing to cement this legacy through his work on the set of "Phantom Thread," in which he was nominated again. His representative then told Variety the unembellished news: Day-Lewis' acting career was coming to an end.
He had spent his entire career immersing himself so much in his characters that calling him a "method actor" would be an understatement. By his own admission, he reached a stage in life where he felt he needed to stop.
After being in retirement for eight years, Day-Lewis returned in 2025 for the movie "Anemone," which he co-wrote and starred in, along with his son, Ronan, who directed it. Whether that counts as breaking his retirement or just making one exception for family is still up for debate.
Greta Garbo
Few actresses have shone as brightly before extinguishing their lights as swiftly as Greta Garbo. During 16 years in 28 films for MGM Studios, in such movies as "Anna Karenina," "Camille," and "Ninotchka," she cultivated a captivating on-screen presence.
But then there was "Two-Faced Woman" in 1941, a comedic effort intended to make her aloof persona less forbidding. The response was not kind, and Garbo, who was just 36 years old at the time, never appeared in another movie, though she stayed ambivalent about returning for years. According to actor David Niven, her reason for retiring was that she'd "made enough faces."
Rick Moranis
Rick Moranis was one of the most reliable names in comedy through the 1980s and early 90s. He was in "Ghostbusters," "Spaceballs," "Little Shop of Horrors," and "Honey, I Shrunk the Kids." But the death of his wife, Ann, from breast cancer in 1991 left him with the task of raising two small children on his own.
He continued to work for a while but then started to scale back his schedule, telling USA Today that he had stopped working around 1996 or '97 because it became too hard to combine being a single parent with making movies. His appearance as Dark Helmet in the "Spaceballs" sequel is his first major role in nearly three decades.
Gene Hackman
Hackman spent fifty years building one of the most respected bodies of work in Hollywood films, having two Oscar awards and films like "The French Connection," "Bonnie and Clyde," and "Unforgiven" in his credit list. The actor took part in his final film, "Welcome to Mooseport," starring alongside Ray Romano, in 2004 when he was seventy-four, and then quietly stopped taking roles.
Hackman never announced his retirement publicly but years later revealed it in a 2008 interview with Reuters, saying the job had just become "very stressful" and the constant compromises wore him out. In a separate interview with Empire, he cited his health problems, saying a stress test prescribed by a doctor had convinced him his heart couldn't handle it anymore.
He devoted his time to writing and wrote several books, including some on history and the Civil War era, living away from the industry before dying in 2025.
Cary Grant
Cary Grant starred in 72 films during his career spanning more than three decades, being able to retain the charm of a leading man who people never got tired of watching. He decided to suddenly retire from acting in 1966 at the age of 62, just after completing "Walk, Don't Run", which came as quite a surprise.
That very year, Cary Grant became a father for the first time, had a daughter named Jennifer, and wanted to devote his time to bringing up his daughter. Jennifer later wrote about growing up with her famous father fully present at home.
Grace Kelly
By the time she was 26, Grace Kelly had made 11 movies, three of which were directed by Alfred Hitchcock, making her one of the quintessential faces of the decade. The movies "Rear Window" and "To Catch a Thief" happened before she even had time to slow down a bit.
She met Prince Rainier III of Monaco while on vacation at Cannes, and in 1956, retired from film to marry him and become Princess of Monaco. When Hitchcock tried coaxing her out of retirement for his movie "Marnie" in 1964, officials from Monaco didn’t allow it, and the project fell through.
Sean Connery
As the first James Bond, Sean Connery remained one of cinema's most identifiable stars throughout his long career. From Bond through "The Untouchables" and "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade," he never once lost his ability to draw audiences to the movies. He was still a bankable star well into his 70s.
Connery's final major film, 2003's "The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen," became infamous for its troubled production and for problems happening on set between Connery and the director, leading the actor to decide he was finished with Hollywood movies, as he later described. The actor formally retired from the screen in 2006, complaining about politics in the movie business and scripts he no longer found any respect for. Connery has never made another live-action film since then. In 2012, he voiced a minor animated feature for friends, but that was it.
Cameron Diaz
Cameron Diaz was almost impossible to avoid for two decades, starting with her rise to fame in "The Mask" and continuing on through "Charlie's Angels," "There's Something About Mary," and "Shrek." She continued to play leading roles, like the 2014 film "Annie," before deciding to retire completely.
The actress would go on to explain that her decision was not due to any one negative experience but rather because of how much of her life other people had ended up in charge of while she was "the talent." She eventually came back ten years later in 2025's "Back in Action," saying the years off were exactly what she'd needed.
Frankie Muniz
Frankie Muniz played the lead character in "Malcolm in the Middle" for seven seasons, which is perhaps one of the best family sitcoms ever made. By the time the show ended in 2006, he was already the kind of person who could boast of an acting CV that would make any young actor jealous. He'd already been racing on the side, and once the show wrapped, he pursued it full-time.
This career path may be described as winding because it has included different stages, including open-wheel racing, a severe accident in 2009 that sidelined him for years, playing drums for a touring rock band, a season of "Dancing with the Stars," and eventually a return to stock cars.
Terrence Howard
Terrence Howard established himself as one of the most compelling dramatic actors of his generation, earning an Oscar nomination through "Hustle & Flow" and several seasons on Fox's highly successful drama series, "Empire." By the time the show wrapped its fifth season, he was as recognizable as he'd ever been.
Going into the series' sixth and final season in 2019, Terrence Howard told Extra flatly that he was done with acting, saying "done pretending," to describe his attitude toward the profession.
Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen
The Olsen twins were just as successful as any child actors in the history of television. Mary-Kate and Ashley launched their fashion line The Row in 2006 when they were still acting and began to leave the film industry behind over the following years. Ashley left after the 2004 movie "New York Minute," Mary-Kate a little later. Ashley Olsen would later say they wanted more creative control. The Row is now valued at over a billion dollars.
Doris Day
For a long time, Doris Day was one of America's favorite actresses, starring in uplifting films like "Calamity Jane" and "Pillow Talk." By the 1960s, she was one of the highest-grossing stars in the country. Her sitcom, "The Doris Day Show," ran through the early 1970s.
By the middle of the 1970s, Doris Day retired from entertainment almost completely. She dedicated herself to animal welfare and established what became the Doris Day Animal Foundation in 1978, becoming one of the greatest champions of the cause throughout the rest of her life.
Omar Sharif
Omar Sharif emerged as an international movie star in two iconic movies from the 60s, "Lawrence of Arabia" and "Doctor Zhivago," and then went on to act as a reliable lead across several films in the following decades.
His major filmmaking slowed after his appearance in the movie 'The 13th Warrior' in 1999, which flopped. The entire process was embarrassing for Sharif, starting with the poor script and finishing with the incompetent director who had no idea what he was doing. He walked away from major filmmaking as a result and stayed away for several years before returning in 2003's "Monsieur Ibrahim."
Norma Shearer
Norma Shearer was one of MGM's greatest stars during the 1930s. She was known as the studio's "First Lady of the Screen," married to production chief Irving Thalberg, who shaped much of her career. Shearer received an Academy Award for the movie "The Divorcee" and was a very popular actress even long after the sudden death of her husband in 1936.
Without Thalberg's guidance, Shearer turned down several great roles in films that proved to be huge successes later, such as that of Scarlett O'Hara in "Gone With the Wind" and the lead role in "Mrs. Miniver." Instead, she acted in two unsuccessful movies in 1942, which led her to retire that same year. She faded from public memory in a way that a star of her stature normally never does.
Amanda Bynes
Amanda Bynes was one of the hottest young stars of the 2000s, who went from Nickelodeon shows to starring in movies like "Hairspray," "Easy A," and "She's the Man" without missing a step. In "Easy A," she got to work with then-rising star Emma Stone. She announced her step back the same year through a single social media post, explaining that acting no longer held any appeal for her. It's a reminder that walking away doesn't always need a dramatic reason.