Donald Trump and other stars' dramatic career changes
Changes in direction
Does the thought of going to work make you not want to get out of bed in the morning? Well, you're not alone. But it's never too late to change paths. Click or scroll through 18 famous people who made major career changes, some many years into their lives, and came out the other end even more successful.
All dollar values in US dollars.
Martha Stewart: model to stockbroker to cookbook author and TV show host
New Jersey-born Martha Stewart, 79, changed direction a couple of times before becoming the homemaking icon we all know today. While attending college, she earned extra money as a model, working for industry giant Chanel.
Martha Stewart: model to stockbroker to cookbook author and TV show host
Then, after a stint as a Wall Street stockbroker, Stewart turned her love of gourmet cooking and creative presentation into what is now Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia. Despite a stretch in prison for insider trading and fraud, Stewart has bounced back and her lifestyle brand has brought her wealth of more than $600 million (£479m).
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Vera Wang: ice skater to journalist to fashion designer
The 71-year-old New York-based fashion designer has a degree in art history and worked as a journalist for Vogue before entering the fashion design industry, aged 40. She has made wedding gowns for the likes of Chelsea Clinton, Ivanka Trump, Mariah Carey, Victoria Beckham and the Kardashians, and her net worth is estimated at $270 million (£200m), according to Forbes. However, fashion wasn't always Wang's major passion…
Vera Wang: ice skater to journalist to fashion designer
While in high school, Wang hoped to make a career out of ice skating, training with pairs partner James Stuart, and competing at the 1968 US Figure Skating Championships. However, when she failed to make the US Olympics team, she decided to enter the fashion industry.
Jane Fonda: actress to fitness star
Not content with being a two-time Academy Award winner (for Klute and Coming Home), the now 83-year-old New York-born actress and daughter of actor Henry Fonda rose to fame in the 1960s with films such as Cat Ballou, Barefoot in the Park and Barbarella. However, she had another career trick up her sleeve...
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Jane Fonda: actress to fitness star
In 1982, the actress released her first exercise video, Jane Fonda's Workout, inspired by her hit book, which became the highest-selling VHS of all time. It would be the first of 22 workout videos released by her over the next 13 years which would collectively sell over 17 million copies. After a 15-year hiatus, she released two new fitness videos on DVD in 2010, aiming at an older audience. Her net worth is in excess of $200 million (£160.4m).
Jorge Paulo Lemann: tennis player to billionaire businessman
One of the richest men in Brazil with an estimated net worth of $19.6 billion (£14.5bn), Lemann's business empire includes fast food chain Burger King, ketchup brand Heinz, the world's largest brewer Anheuser-Busch and many more. The self-made billionaire founded the 'Brazilian Goldman Sachs' Banco Garantia in 1971 and had always been very good at mergers and acquisitions. However, initially, the now 81-year-old planned on pursuing a different career...
Jorge Paulo Lemann: tennis player to billionaire businessman
Lemann was once an avid tennis player and even had a brief professional career. The Swiss-Brazilian won the national championships five times, participated in the Davis Cup twice and also played at Wimbledon. But when he realised the competition was hard to beat, he developed new ambitions. "I quit playing professional tennis when I realised it would be hard to be among the 10 best in the world," Lemann once said. He then moved onto becoming one of the best businessmen in the world.
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Sting: teacher to singer
Sting: teacher to singer
However, his career decision proved to be a wise one as the Police went on to sell 75 million records worldwide and Sting's solo career another 25 million. The man formerly known as Mr Sumner is now estimated to be worth $300 million (£240.6m). Sting has said that his children will not inherit his fortune, saying his riches are "albatrosses round their necks", and that "there won't be much money left because we are spending it".
Jessica Alba: actress to entrepreneur
Alba, 39, began acting in Hollywood in 1994 and went on to find success in roles in TV shows such as Dark Angel, as well as films including Fantastic Four, Honey and Into The Blue. Although she didn’t completely set aside her showbiz career, she did shift focus in 2012...
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Jessica Alba: actress to entrepreneur
Alba founded The Honest Company in 2012. The firm sells toxin-free household goods, nappies, and body care products, an idea inspired by Alba's desire when pregnant to use non-toxic products for her new child's wellbeing. In 2015, The Honest Company was valued at over $1 billion (£819m), although it's now said to be worth less than that figure. Alba owns between 15% and 20% of the firm.
Harrison Ford: carpenter to actor
Harrison Ford: carpenter to actor
After his performance in American Graffiti, Ford gave up acting for the financial stability of carpentry. But he was fortuitously hired to build sound stages for George Lucas. Impromptu script readings for Lucas led to Ford's casting as Han Solo in Star Wars. The rest, as they say, is Hollywood history and Ford is now worth around $230 million (£188m).
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Arnold Schwarzenegger: bodybuilder to actor to politician
Austrian-born Schwarzenegger, 73, who is aptly known for the catchphrase "I’ll be back", has made not one, but two major career changes. First, he transitioned from world champion bodybuilder in his 20s to Hollywood actor in his 30s, starring in blockbusters such as True Lies, Total Recall and The Terminator movies, and amassing a fortune of $400 million (£306m). However, Arnie’s biggest transformation was still to come…
Arnold Schwarzenegger: bodybuilder to actor to politician
Schwarzenegger had it all: wealth, fame, a hugely successful career as a Hollywood film star. But, aged 56, he set aside his acting career to vie for Gubernatorial office in California's 2003 election. Running as a Republican, Schwarzenegger won with more than 48% of the popular vote. He remained in office until 2011, but left with a career-low 23% approval rating.
Jerry Springer: mayor to news anchor to chat show host
He was the king of trashy talk shows during the 1990s, amassing a net worth of $60 million (£46m). However, before he was on TV refereeing arguments and giving viewers his Thought for the Day, Springer, now 76, was involved in plenty of debates of a political nature himself.
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Jerry Springer: mayor to news anchor to chat show host
Springer served as Mayor of Cincinnati and ran for Governor of Ohio. After he lost that bid, he was offered a job as a local news anchor because the station thought that as a former mayor he would know the city. It was from there that his showbiz career took off.
Donald Trump: actor/TV personality to POTUS
Before being elected president of the United States, Donald Trump wasn't only a billionaire real estate mogul but also a star of the screen. The businessman cameoed on TV shows Spin City, Sex and the City and The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, as well as popping up on the big screen in Zoolander and Home Alone 2: Lost in New York. However, his most memorable TV role was as star of The Apprentice. Let’s not forget, he was also involved in sports entertainment before entering the White House…
Donald Trump: actor/TV personality to POTUS
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George Foreman: boxer to health grill seller
George Foreman: boxer to health grill seller
By the time Foreman retired from boxing for the second time in 1997, his little sideline had developed into a hugely successful business. Two years later, he sold the naming right of his grill firm to Salter for $138 million (£84.7m). All in all, the ex-champ has earned $200 million (£152m) for the endorsement, eclipsing the prize money he won during his boxing career, and then some.
Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen: actors to fashion designers
Twins Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen found fame in the 1990s starring in the TV sitcom Full House, and the enterprising siblings set up a production company in 1993 called Dualstar, significantly boosting their income. But the big bucks really flowed when they quit acting and moved into fashion.
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Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen: actors to fashion designers
Jessica Simpson: pop star to clothes designer
The former pop star released her debut album in 1999 and scored several top 20 hits in the US before starring with her then-husband Nick Lachey in popular MTV reality show Newlyweds: Nick and Jessica, which ran from 2003 to 2005, as well as the 2005 Dukes of Hazzard movie.
Jessica Simpson: pop star to clothes designer
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Kathy Ireland: supermodel to businesswoman
Kathy Ireland was a supermodel during the 1980s and early 1990s, walking in top shows and gracing the cover of Sports Illustrated magazine multiple times. The runway and cover star made a decent living from her modelling gigs but really started bringing home the bacon when she founded her brand marketing company kathy ireland Worldwide (kiWW) in 1993.
Kathy Ireland: supermodel to businesswoman
Ireland was coached by close friend Warren Buffett and the investment guru's business advice has certainly paid off. Now one of the world's richest former models, Ireland was worth $360 million (£266m) in 2016, according to Forbes. Her business, which markets everything from clothing to homeware, has generated billions of dollars.
Ronald Reagan: actor to president
Ronald Reagan was a Hollywood actor prior to his presidency. He began as a radio announcer at several stations in the early 30s, before being offered a seven-year contract with Warner Brothers studios where he is pictured here with actress Margaret Lindsay. His best film is considered to be King's Row, where he played a double amputee, and said the line "Where's the rest of me?", which he used as the title of his autobiography. Reagan really entered American hearts as the host of TV show General Electric Theater in the 1950s.
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Ronald Reagan: actor to president
However, Reagan was always interested in politics and joined several political committees. But it was in 1967 when he was elected Governor of California that his political aspirations started to become a reality. He was elected President of the United States in 1980, with his first term starting in 1981 when he was aged 69. He served two terms and is best remembered for his contribution to the end of the Cold War and his 'War on drugs'.
George Weah: soccer player to president
George Weah: soccer player to president
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Professor Brian Cox: musician to physicist
The English physicist, 52, is Professor of Particle Physics in the School of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Manchester and has been the author or co-author of over 950 scientific publications. He is best known as the presenter of The Wonders of... BBC TV series, with his fame boosting his coffers to the tune of around $8 million (£6.4m). However, before he was on TV discussing stars, he was actually a star in his own right…
Professor Brian Cox: musician to physicist
Cox first enjoyed fame as the keyboard player with band DARE (pictured far right, with the rest of the group), and later D: Ream, who are now best remembered for their hit Things Can Only Get Better, which was adopted as the anthem of Tony Blair’s New Labour when he swept to power in the UK election of 1997. "When you're 18, 19, 20 years old, you're not thinking: pop music is a waste of my intellect. You're thinking: this is brilliant,” Cox told The Guardian.
Ion Țiriac: tennis player to billionaire businessman
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Ion Țiriac: tennis/ice hockey player to billionaire businessman
Having won the ping pong championship as a child, Țiriac first switched to ice hockey before he decided to become a professional tennis player. In the 1960s and 1970s, he participated in all four Grand Slam tournaments, played three Davis Cup finals (the 1972 final is pictured here) and won the men's doubles in the 1970 French Open with compatriot Ilie Năstase. Even though tennis is only a small part of his portfolio as a businessman today, Tiriac supports smaller tournaments across Europe and still enjoys attending matches.
Now read about the famous people who made even more money after giving up the day job
Or see which rich and famous people who refuse to spoil their kids
Or discover the jobs least likely to be replaced by robots
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