Why Ian Somerhalder, Josh Hartnett & More Stars Left Hollywood Behind

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Originally appeared on E! Online

Remember the early aughts when everyone was trying to figure out which of the crop of new heartthrobs was destined to be the next Brad Pitt or Leonardo DiCaprio? And what an embarrassment of riches, the hot actor class at the turn of the millennium including Josh Duhamel, Tyrese Gibson, Ryan Phillippe and Orlando Bloom.

Then there was Josh Hartnett, who very much wanted to be excluded from that narrative.

Just 22 at the time, he was poised to follow up 1999's The Virgin Suicides with a turn in 2001's splashy war epic Pearl Harbor.

A sure-to-be blockbuster with a $135 million budget and a cast that included Kate Beckinsale, Cuba Gooding Jr. and Ben Affleck, it was the type of film, Vanity Fair wrote in a 5,000-word opus, "that will virtually overnight make an international movie star out of a comparative unknown—who, in this case, would be Josh Hartnett, a kid whose dark good looks are of the type usually referred to as brooding, and whose eyes, though squinty, can read on film as having profoundly soulful depths."

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The piece was filled with predictions about how the Minnesota native's life would change, from producer Jerry Bruckheimer saying he'll have "girls and people wanting his autograph running after him" to costar Affleck insisting, "Simply put, Josh will get very famous very quickly and runs the very real risk of becoming a sort of one-man embodiment of the Backstreet Boys to hormone-crazed 15-year-old girls from Minnetonka to Tarzana."

Even Beckinsale gushed that her counterpart was "earth-shatteringly handsome in a slightly surprised way—he can't quite believe when everyone is falling over him and teasing him about being so good-looking."

Josh Hartnett, Pearl Harbor
Touchstone/Jerry Bruckheimer Inc/Kobal/Shutterstock

And Hartnett absolutely hated it.

"Oh, that was an awful piece," Hartnett, now a 45-year-old married dad of four living in Surrey, England, reflected to The Guardian in 2020. "Was there even a quote from me in it, or was it just everyone talking about how hot I was? People got a chip on their shoulder about me after that. They genuinely thought I'd been thrust on them. It was a very weird time."

Bristling at the lofty expectations it created, he said, "It's just that it happened at a time when I wasn't that famous, and it seemed to already be asking whether I should be or not. I felt like: 'Oh my God! I'm not the tallest poppy yet—don't cut me down!' I was being compared to Tom Cruise and Julia Roberts and that's insane. It was a set-up-to-fail moment."

Facing a fork in the road—take a stab at mega-fame and everything that includes or run, fast, in the opposite direction—he went with the latter.

He turned down the lead role in 2006's Superman Returns and avoided any other parts that would continue him down the path of magazine covers and persistent, trailing paparazzi. He made a series of indies and a life for himself across the pond with British actress Tamsin Egerton and their four children.

Though the actor noted that some saw his retreat as "someone who had bitten the hand that fed me," he simply wasn't interested in becoming this blockbuster-starring brand name guy. "I'm happy to be done with that era and to be making films that are more personal to me," explained Hartnett, taking part in the interview to talk up his new thriller Target Number One. "Directors are coming to me to play characters as opposed to versions of a hero I played in a movie once."

Not that he had any qualms about saying yes to something as big as, say, Oppenheimer. Having director Christopher Nolan choose him for the blockbuster, that's earned 13 Oscar nods "was the winning goal," Hartnett exclusively told Live From E!: SAG Awards host Laverne Cox before joining his cohorts to accept a trophy for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture at the Feb. 24 SAG Awards. "We had a fun time making the film and then for it to be so phenomenally received and to have it be nominated by our peers for acting categories, across the board, is great."

And Hartnett certainly wasn't the first—or the last—star to take a breather from the biz.

Ian Somerhalder revealed to E! News last November that he "stepped away from acting," following his turn on Netflix's V-Wars in 2019. And IMDB is filled with well-known names that have defected from the Hollywood fraternity.

Some have returned for guest appearances and one-off performances (hi, Cameron Diaz!) or gone on to even more high-profile parts (cough, Meghan Markle), but at one point or another they've all made the declaration that they're done. Here's what inspired them to explore new roles.

<p>Ian Somerhalder</p>

<p>Ian Somerhalder</p>


Jennette McCurdy

Jennette McCurdy


Meghan Markle

Meghan Markle


Cameron Diaz

Cameron Diaz


Terrence Howard

Terrence Howard


Jack Gleeson

Jack Gleeson


Phoebe Cates

Phoebe Cates


Rick Moranis

Rick Moranis


Leelee Sobieski

Leelee Sobieski


<p>Portia de Rossi</p>

<p>Portia de Rossi</p>


Daniel Day-Lewis

Daniel Day-Lewis


<p>Bridgit Mendler</p>

<p>Bridgit Mendler</p>


(This story was originally published on Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2020 at 12 a.m. PT.)