Hollywood has always had a short memory for talent and a long one for disgrace. Careers built over decades can collapse in a matter of days, sometimes hours, once the wrong headline lands. It doesn’t always take a conviction. Sometimes, a single credible allegation, a leaked recording, or a viral moment is enough to make studios go quiet and agents stop returning calls. These seven cases are among the most striking examples of that reality. Each name below was once a recognizable face, a bankable draw, or at the very minimum a working professional with real momentum. Then something happened, and the industry moved on without them.
Kevin Spacey: From Two Oscars to Italian TV
Kevin Spacey won two Academy Awards: Best Supporting Actor for The Usual Suspects in 1995 and Best Actor for American Beauty in 1999. He was the lead of one of Netflix’s most prestigious original series and widely regarded as one of the finest screen actors of his generation. That reputation made his fall all the more dramatic.
During 2017, Spacey faced various allegations of sexual assault and sexual harassment. On October 29, 2017, actor Anthony Rapp was the first to accuse Spacey of sexual misconduct. In the wake of these claims, Netflix cut ties with Spacey, shelving his biopic and removing him from the last season of House of Cards. His completed role as J. Paul Getty in Ridley Scott’s All the Money in the World was reshot with Christopher Plummer. By late 2025, Spacey was performing a cabaret show at a resort in Cyprus, and in an interview described himself as “living in hotels” and performing where he could find work due to his financial situation following his legal battles.
Danny Masterson: A Sitcom Star Behind Bars
Masterson starred in all eight seasons of That ’70s Show as Steven Hyde. The role made him a recognizable face on American television throughout the late 1990s and early 2000s, and he later landed a steady role on the Netflix comedy The Ranch. It seemed like a durable, if unspectacular, career. Then allegations from multiple women changed everything.
In December 2017, Netflix fired Masterson from The Ranch, saying “Yesterday was his last day on the show, and production will resume in early 2018 without him.” A new trial was held between April and May 2023, and on May 31, Masterson was convicted of two of the three counts of forcible rape. The jury was hung 8 to 4 in favor of conviction on the third charge. On September 7, 2023, Masterson was sentenced to the maximum allowed by law: 30 years to life in prison, with eligibility for parole after serving roughly 25 and a half years. His acting career is, by any measure, finished.
Stephen Collins: The TV Preacher Who Confessed
Stephen Collins was a staple of television for years, primarily known for his role as Reverend Eric Camden on 7th Heaven. His career ended abruptly in 2014 when audio recordings surfaced in which he admitted to past misconduct involving minors. The irony of a man famous for playing a wholesome, family-values pastor being exposed this way was not lost on the public. The backlash was instant and total.
He was immediately fired from Ted 2 and his recurring role on the series Devious Maids was terminated. Syndicated reruns of his most famous show were pulled from several networks following the revelations. He has not appeared in any professional acting roles since the scandal became public. In December of 2014, Collins told People magazine that he had committed serious sexual crimes dating back to the early 1970s, after both the NYPD and LAPD revealed they were investigating him for inappropriate sexual behavior. The actor was never legally punished, but his career came to an end following that admission.
Armie Hammer: Hollywood’s Next Leading Man Who Vanished
Tall, handsome, and charming, Armie Hammer seemed like Hollywood’s next leading man. He starred in critically acclaimed films and landed major roles. Then, in 2021, leaked messages containing disturbing content about cannibalism fantasies and abuse appeared online. Multiple women came forward with allegations of emotional abuse and coercion. The speed at which the industry distanced itself was remarkable.
Studios immediately dropped him from high-profile projects. His agents and publicist cut professional ties swiftly. The allegations were so shocking that his career evaporated within weeks. He was dropped by his talent agency and removed from several high-profile projects. Hammer has largely remained out of the public eye and has reportedly worked in non-entertainment industries since the scandal. What had looked like the beginning of a long, prestigious career simply stopped.
Isaiah Washington: One Slur, One Career
Isaiah Washington was an original cast member on the hugely successful medical drama Grey’s Anatomy. His time on the show ended abruptly in 2007 after he used a homophobic slur in reference to a co-star. The incident caused a significant public outcry and led to the termination of his contract with the network. Washington’s case is a reminder that a career can end not from a legal verdict, but from a moment that reveals character.
Despite several attempts to revive his career through independent projects, he never returned to mainstream television stardom. He has since announced his retirement from the acting profession altogether. The role on Grey’s Anatomy was the peak of his visibility, and losing it set off a gradual but permanent slide out of the industry. For Washington, there was no second act.
Michael Richards: A Comedy Legend Undone in Minutes
Michael Richards became a household name for his portrayal of Cosmo Kramer on the iconic sitcom Seinfeld. His transition to a successful solo career was cut short after a 2006 incident at a comedy club, during which he directed a series of racial slurs at members of the audience. The footage spread quickly, and the reaction from the public and the comedy industry was unequivocal.
His career ended almost immediately as the comedy world condemned his actions. Apologies on Late Show with David Letterman could not undo the damage done. Richards essentially disappeared from Hollywood afterward, and the incident overshadowed decades of talented work. He remains one of the clearest examples of how a single public moment, captured and shared, can permanently define a person far more than years of professional achievement.
Jussie Smollett: A Hoax That Cost Everything
Jussie Smollett was a rising talent on the Fox drama Empire, playing a musically gifted character that earned him genuine critical attention. In January 2019, he reported being the victim of a hate crime in Chicago, a story that generated enormous media sympathy. Within weeks, the account began to unravel, with Chicago police concluding that Smollett had orchestrated the attack himself.
Smollett’s fake hate crime hoax in 2019 made headlines and ended his role on Empire. The public and industry turned on him almost instantly. His acting career effectively ended as the entertainment industry turned its back. The scandal destroyed his credibility completely. Smollett’s name became synonymous with deception rather than talent, making any comeback nearly impossible in Hollywood. The cruel twist was that a fabricated story about injustice became one of the most damaging self-inflicted wounds the industry had seen in years.
