_
Stars aren't immune to the heartache, embarrassment or relief that comes with getting fired from a job. We're taking a look back at several famous faces who got the boot from high-profile projects — or left under pressure…
On Dec. 15, 2023, actress, neuroscientist and podcast host Mayim Bialik announced that she'd been fired from her job hosting the syndicated episodes of the game show "Jeopardy!"
"As the holiday break begins in Hollywood, I have some Jeopardy! news," she wrote on Instagram. "Sony has informed me that I will no longer be hosting the syndicated version of Jeopardy! I am incredibly honored to have been nominated for a primetime Emmy for hosting this year and I am deeply grateful for the opportunity to have been a part of the Jeopardy! family," she continued. "For all of you who have supported me through this incredible journey and to the fans, contestants, writers, staff and crew of America's Favorite Quiz Show, thank you."
Hours later, Sony explained its decision. "We made the decision to have one host for the syndicated show next season to maintain continuity for our viewers, and Ken Jennings will be the sole host for syndicated Jeopardy!," it said in a statement. "We are truly grateful for all of Mayim's contributions to Jeopardy!, and we hope to continue to work with her on primetime specials."
Keep reading to find out more and see who else has gotten fired from major projects…
MORE: Follow Wonderwall on MSN for more fun celebrity & entertainment photo galleries and content
_
Jann Wenner — who founded legendary music magazine Rolling Stone and co-founded the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1983 — was ousted from his position on the HOF's board in a unanimous vote after he made disparaging remarks about Black and female artists, claiming they're less intellectually articulate than the white men he selected to feature in his new book.
In a New York Times' interview published in September 2023, Jann explained why he only chose white male rock stars — Bono, Bob Dylan, Jerry Garcia, Mick Jagger, John Lennon, Bruce Springsteen and Pete Townshend — to celebrate in "The Masters."
Regarding female artists, Jann insisted to the Times, "just none of them were as articulate enough on this intellectual level" and took issue when the interviewer — who gave him several opportunities to backtrack — expressed disbelief that the Rolling Stone founder didn't find artists like Joni Mitchell, Janis Joplin, Madonna or Stevie Nicks worthy.
Jann also said Black performers of the time were not "in the zeitgeist," adding, "of Black artists — you know, Stevie Wonder, genius, right? I suppose when you use a word as broad as 'masters,' the fault is using that word. Maybe Marvin Gaye, or Curtis Mayfield? I mean, they just didn't articulate at that level."
Amid backlash, Jann apologized for his remarks, saying through his publisher that his choice of interviews included in the book "don't reflect my appreciation and admiration for myriad totemic, world-changing artists whose music and ideas I revere and will celebrate and promote as long as I live. I totally understand the inflammatory nature of badly chosen words and deeply apologize and accept the consequences."
_
In December 2021, Jeff Garlin abruptly left the hit sitcom "The Goldbergs" — some reports characterized it as a firing while others claimed it was a mutual parting of ways — in the wake of misconduct allegations and a network investigation into his on-set behavior, which Vanity Fair reported saw him engaged "in a pattern of verbal and physical conduct on set that made people uncomfortable" and contributed to a demeaning work culture, particularly for women who worked on the show. The "Curb Your Enthusiasm" star admitted that a human resources department probe had been ongoing for three years though he claimed he meant no harm with his "silly" behavior, insisting, "I'm on a comedy show. I am always a kind and thoughtful person. I make mistakes, sure. But my comedy is about easing people's pain. Why would I ever want to cause pain in anybody for a laugh? That's bullying. That's just uncalled for."
Sources who spoke to author Maureen Ryan for her June 2023 book "Burn It Down: Power, Complicity, and a Call for Change in Hollywood" claimed the culture at "The Goldbergs" allowed for Jeff to, as one insider put it, wield his "power and status to intimidate and demean everyone on this crew," People magazine reported. Alleged another insider, referring to the actor, showrunner Adam F. Goldberg and other high-powered men on the show, "It was a big boys club of men who were probably always kind of the dorks in high school that got picked on, then all of a sudden, they had this power."
MORE: Celebrity mug shots
_
"We all somehow or other got fired from a television show at some point," "Will & Grace" star Eric McCormack told People magazine in May 2023 while promoting "Eating Out with Eric & Steve," the podcast he hosts with "Wings" star Steven Weber. "I was let go after the pilot of 'Jenny' in 1997 starring Jenny McCarthy," he recalled. "I never got a full reason why because nobody else took over the part — they just cut the part from the show. But a year later, on the night that we shot the pilot for 'Will & Grace,' [former President of NBC Entertainment] Warren Littlefield came up to me and said, 'Aren't you glad I fired you?'"
Podcast partner Steven also shared a story about getting fired…
_
"Wings" star Steven Weber shared a firing story of his own with People magazine in May 2023 while promoting "Eating Out with Eric & Steve," the podcast he hosts with "Will & Grace" star Eric McCormack. "I was fired from 'As the World Turns' and my partner was Julianne Moore," he explained of what happened during his single-season run opposite the future Oscar winner when they both starred on the soap opera in the '80s. "I was on it for about nine months and the producer brought me in and said, 'We really love what you're doing, but your character's going to die.' I said, 'Really? But you said you liked it.' And essentially they fired me. It just wasn't working." Added Steven, "There's actually videos of me on YouTube acting along with Julianne Moore and I'm absolutely, out-of-my-mind terrible."
_
On Dec. 14, 2022, Henry Cavill confirmed he was out as Superman despite only a few months earlier announcing he was returning to the role for Warner Bros. "I have just had a meeting with [new Warner Bros. Discovery's DC Comics film and TV unit co-heads] James Gunn and Peter Safran, and it's sad news, everyone. I will, after all, not be returning as Superman," Henry — who, in a double blow, left his wildly popular Netflix series "The Witcher" and announced Liam Hemsworth would replace him, presumably as he prepared to put the Man of Steel's cape back on — shared with fans on Instagram. "After being told by the studio to announce my return back in October, prior to their hire, this news isn't the easiest, but that's life. The changing of the guard is something that happens. I respect that. James and Peter have a universe to build. I wish them and all involved with the new universe the best of luck, and the happiest of fortunes."
James tweeted that a new Superman project is being developed but that it "will be focusing on an earlier part of Superman's life, so the character will not be played by Henry Cavill." However, he added, the studio has hopes to bring the British actor back into the comic book fold somehow. "We just had a great meeting with Henry and we're big fans and we talked about a number of exciting possibilities to work together in the future," James wrote. Two days later on Dec. 16, Henry announced a new major project: He'll star in and executive produce projects to be part of a Warhammer Cinematic Universe — based on the science-fiction-fantasy miniature war game of which he's been a fan for decades — for Amazon.
_
In September 2020, Shia LaBeouf was reportedly fired from Olivia Wilde's 2022 film "Don't Worry Darling" — a claim he later denied. In August 2022, the actress-director implied that she canned Shia for being "combative." "I say this as someone who is such an admirer of his work. His process was not conducive to the ethos that I demand in my productions," she told Variety. "He has a process that, in some ways, seems to require a combative energy, and I don't personally believe that is conducive to the best performances." She added, "I believe that creating a safe, trusting environment is the best way to get people to do their best work." Shia was replaced by Harry Styles, whom Olivia began dating. After the Variety story came out, Shia reached out to the trade magazine, insisting he quit the production and was never fired. He provided text messages and pointed to a video Olivia send him in which she appeared to be trying to make things work. He also provided Variety with a letter he sent to Olivia in August 2022. "You and I both know the reasons for my exit. I quit your film because your actors & I couldn't find time to rehearse," he wrote, adding, "Firing me never took place, Olivia. And while I fully understand the attractiveness of pushing that story because of the current social landscape, the social currency that brings. It is not the truth."
_
In February 2021, Lucasfilm fired Gina Carano from the Disney+ series "The Mandalorian" after she posted what many felt was insensitive content on social media likening Republicans to persecuted Jewish people. This came after she previously mocked the use of preferred pronouns on social media and shared anti-mask memes amid the coronavirus pandemic as well as voter fraud theories. UTA, the agency that repped her, also dropped the mixed martial artist-turned-actress.
_
In January 2021, a 2017 interview resurfaced in which Armie Hammer suggested that he was fired from "Gossip Girl" in the midst of a multi-episode season 2 guest-starring arc. In 2009, he played a handsome but shady love interest for Blake Lively's Serena van der Woodsen on the hit CW series. "Let me just say, that was a tough show to film — and I didn't end up actually filming all the episodes I was supposed to because it was so tough," Armie said on an episode of "Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen." Andy pressed for more, asking, "Really? Literally, you said 'Get me out of this'?" to which Armie replied, "It was also like, 'Get him out of here.'" Unconfirmed online speculation claimed that Blake was behind Armie's ousting, with one anonymous source alleging to Instagram gossip account Deux Moi that Armie called the actress an "insufferable b****" in front of cast and crew members while filming a seder dinner scene, which led to his ouster.
But it's not the only time Armie was let go from a high-profile project…
_
In the wake of sexual assault allegations made against Armie Hammer by multiple women in early 2021 — which the actor has denied — he was fired or forced to drop out of the Jennifer Lopez movie "Shotgun Wedding"; Paramount's "The Offer" — a series about the making of "The Godfather"; and the Cold War thriller "Billion Dollar Spy." Dan Stevens replaced Armie on the 2022 Watergate series "Gaslit." Armie also announced in 2021 that he was dropping out of a Broadway production of "The Minutes" as he needed "to focus on myself and my health for the sake of my family." Since his Hollywood fall from grace, Armie went to rehab then, according to Variety, was spotted working as a timeshare salesman at a hotel resort in the Cayman Islands in the summer of 2022. The actor's lawyer told Entertainment Weekly he could not confirm or deny it since Armie hadn't addresed it and added to People magazine, "If Armie is, in fact, selling timeshares, I think it's s***** that the media seems to be shaming him for having a 'normal job.'"
In June 2023, Los Angeles prosecutors confirmed that Armie would not be charged following a long investigation into an allegation that he sexually assaulted a woman in 2017. Following his long public silence, Armie spoke out, saying, "I look forward to beginning what will be a long, difficult process of putting my life back together now that my name has been cleared."
_
Netflix fired Danny Masterson from "The Ranch," on which he also served as an executive producer, after reports surfaced in late 2017 revealing that four women had accused him of rape during the early 2000s. "As a result of ongoing discussions, Netflix and the producers have written Danny Masterson out of 'The Ranch,'" the streaming service said in a December 2017 statement. "Yesterday was his last day on the show, and production will resume in early 2018 without him."
In 2020, Danny was arrested and charged with the rapes of three women. His case ended in a mistrial in 2022 and after a retrial in 2023, he was found guilty on two counts of rape and sentenced to 30 years in prison. He's maintained his innocence.
_
During a March 2019 appearance on "Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen," Julianne Moore revealed that she got fired from the 2018 biopic "Can You Ever Forgive Me?" by the drama's original director, Nicole Holofcener, who also co-wrote the screenplay. "I didn't leave that movie; I was fired. Nicole fired me," she said. "I think she didn't like what I was doing [with the character]. … We'd just been kind of rehearsing and doing pre-production and stuff, and I think that her idea of where the character was was different than where my idea of the character was, and so she fired me." Julianne went on to say that she hasn't seen the movie yet "because it's still kind of painful." Added the actress, "It felt bad." Ultimately, the role went to Melissa McCarthy, who earned an Oscar nomination for her performance.
_
Johnny Depp was fired from not one but two major blockbuster franchises — "Pirates of the Caribbean" after ex-wife Amber Heard published an op-ed in 2018 painting him as a domestic abuser, and "Fantastic Beasts," from which he was asked by Warner Bros. to resign in 2020 after he lost a libel trial in Britain in which he sued a newspaper group that had labeled him a "wife beater." In 2022 — during Johnny and Amber's joint defamation trial in which he emerged victorious — Johnny said of Disney's decision to cut ties with him, "They didn't remove my character from the rides… They didn't stop selling dolls of Captain Jack Sparrow. They didn't stop selling anything. They just didn't want there to be something trailing behind me that they'd find."
_
On a September 2019 episode of First We Feast's "Hot Ones" YouTube series, Ashton Kutcher detailed how Orlando Bloom ended up replacing him in the role of Drew Baylor in Cameron Crowe's 2005 romantic dramedy "Elizabethtown." Said the "That '70s Show" alum, "Yeah, I'll say [I was] fired, sure." He then explained that the writer-director originally had his heart set on casting Orlando in the role, but the English actor was tied up shooting Ridley Scott's 2005 epic "Kingdom of Heaven" at the time and wasn't available. "So I went [to] audition, he cast me and then we started working on it. I think he wanted to see the character rehearsals all the way, and I probably wasn't disciplined enough as an actor to get myself to a point where I was able to do that and show it to him in a way that he felt comfortable," said Ashton, adding that he and the filmmaker ultimately came to the mutual conclusion that things weren't "working out." Coincidentally, right as Ashton left "Elizabethtown," Orlando became available to take over.
_
During a 2017 interview with Cosmopolitan UK, Megan Fox called getting fired from the "Transformers" franchise "absolutely the low point of my career." Director Michael Bay gave her the boot after she called him "a nightmare to work for" and said that he "wants to be like Hitler on his sets." He wrote her character out of 2011's "Transformers: Dark of the Moon," replacing her with Rosie Huntington-Whiteley's Carly. Megan previously starred in the first two installments in the blockbuster franchise: 2007's "Transformers" and 2009's "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen."
_
Eric Stoltz was originally cast as Marty McFly — Michael J. Fox's most iconic role — in 1985's "Back to the Future." But a few weeks into shooting the sci-fi comedy, director Robert Zemeckis and writer Bob Gale realized that the young method actor, who was known for his work in dramatic films, wasn't bringing the right comedic energy to the part. They replaced him with the "Family Ties" star, and the rest is history!
_
May 2019 was a rough month for Jenelle Evans. First, husband David Eason shot and killed their dog Nugget after the pup nipped at the couple's daughter. As backlash and concern grew, MTV dropped Jenelle from "Teen Mom 2" — on which she'd starred from the beginning. "I was upset, I'm still upset, but this is a new chapter for me and my family," Jenelle told Us Weekly at the time. "It's shocking still but I respect their decision and have nothing but love for MTV." Shortly after, it was reported that other reality TV shows were cautiously interested in working with the couple as long as David worked on his anger issues. But after Child Protective Services removed three of the couple's kids from the family home, those plans were seemingly put on the back burner.
_
Lisa Bonet shot into the spotlight starring as Denise Huxtable on "The Cosby Show." But after the first three seasons, she was pushed out of the family sitcom and moved onto "A Different World," which Bill Cosby also created. (When David Letterman asked her during a 1986 interview why she'd want to leave the hit series, she replied, "They told me to?") After just one season on the spinoff, Cosby had her character return to the original show, from which he soon fired her over "creative differences." The rumor mill has long maintained that her racy role in 1987's "Angel Heart," a topless photo shoot for a 1987 issue of Interview magazine and her 1988 pregnancy with daughter Zoe Kravitz were really to blame.
_
When Louis CK was accused of sexual misconduct in November 2017, the dominoes in his career empire quickly began to fall. The once-acclaimed comedian, who took accountability for his actions, was removed from a multitude of projects including "Better Things" and "The Secret Life of Pets 2" (Patton Oswalt took over the role of Jack Russell terrier Max in the animated film). FX, HBO and Netflix also all cut ties with him. He's since slowly started to return to the stand-up stage.
_
Eliza Dushku joined the CBS show "Bull" in 2017 but was fired after only appearing on three episodes. In December 2018, she revealed why, writing in an op-ed piece for the Boston Globe that she was let go because "I did not want to be harassed." Eliza — who ultimately reached a $9.5 million confidential settlement with the network after alleging that she'd endured on-set sexual harassment from "Bull" star Michael Weatherly — said that she was written off after confronting Michael about his behavior, which allegedly included comments about her appearance, inappropriate jokes and sexually charged remarks. "What is hardest to share is the way he made me feel for 10 to 12 hours per day for weeks," Eliza wrote. "This was classic workplace harassment that became workplace bullying. I was made to feel dread nearly all the time I was in his presence."
_
Although Terrence Howard originated the role of James Rhodes (aka War Machine) in the Marvel Cinematic Universe in "Iron Man," he was replaced by Don Cheadle due to conflict regarding salary. "It turns out that the person I helped become Iron Man… when it was time to re-up for the second one, [Robert Downey Jr.] took the money that was supposed to go to me and pushed me out," Terence claimed during an appearance on "Watch What Happens Live" in 2013. Entertainment Weekly reported that Hollywood insiders believed Terrence's exit had something to do with his difficult behavior in addition to director Jon Favreau's unhappiness with the actor's performance. Sources told the magazine that when Terrence's role was cut down in the second film — along with his salary — his team was taken aback, though it's unclear if they walked away or Marvel ended discussions first.
_
Netflix fired Kevin Spacey from the sixth and final season of "House of Cards" in late 2017 after he was publicly accused of multiple instances of sexual misconduct and sexual assault. The two-time Oscar winner, who executive produced the drama, won a Golden Globe and earned several Emmy nominations over the years for his work as ruthless politician Frank Underwood.
_
Lori Loughlin was a fixture on the Hallmark Channel, but that all changed in March 2019. That month, news broke confirming she had been charged with conspiracy to commit mail fraud in a college admissions cheating scheme in which she and her husband allegedly spent $500,000 to guarantee their daughters' admission to the University of Southern California by pretending they were crew team recruits. Shortly after word got out, Crown Media, Hallmark's parent company, announced that it was cutting all ties with Lori, who was promptly written out of the drama series "When Calls the Heart," on which she'd starred for six seasons. Lori and her husband struck a deal with prosecutors that saw them pleading guilty in May 2020 and heading to prison later that year.
_
Jussie Smollett's fate on "Empire" was unknown in the immediate wake of his arrest for allegedly staging a hate crime against himself in January 2019. But the actor, who starred as Jamal Lyon on the popular FOX series, ultimately got the boot. In February, news broke revealing he'd been suspended and that his character would not appear in the final two episodes of Season 5. Though the charges against him were ultimately dropped, in April, Fox Entertainment and 20th Century Fox TV said in a joint statement that "by mutual agreement, the studio has negotiated an extension to Jussie Smollett's option for Season 6, but at this time there are no plans for the character of Jamal to return to 'Empire.'" In other words, Jussie's run on the show was over. In May came the news that the sixth season would be the show's last.
_
Peter Jackson fired Ryan Gosling from 2009's "The Lovely Bones" after he gained 60 pounds to play grieving father Jack Salmon, a role that ultimately went to Mark Wahlberg. "We had a different idea of how the character should look," the Oscar-winning actor told The Hollywood Reporter in 2010, adding that he "really believed" the character "should be 210 pounds." The filmmaker apparently disagreed and gave Ryan the boot just days before production started in 2007. "We didn't talk very much during the pre-production process, which was the problem," the actor told THR. "It was a huge movie, and there's so many things to deal with, and he couldn't deal with the actors individually. I just showed up on set, and I had gotten it wrong. … Then I was fat and unemployed."
_
ABC didn't just fire Roseanne Barr from the reboot of her eponymous sitcom in mid-2018 after she tweeted a racist comment about former Obama adviser Valerie Jarrett. In addition to killing off her onscreen alter ego, the network also rebranded her show as "The Conners" and made sure that the controversial comedian couldn't benefit financially from the spinoff before moving forward with it — she's technically entitled to the characters because she created them. Ultimately, she gave up her stake in the spinoff so that her former co-workers could keep their jobs.
_
In early 2011, Warner Bros. fired Charlie Sheen from the hit sitcom "Two and a Half Men" following a series of bizarre headline-making incidents involving the four-time Emmy nominee — from publicly blasting showrunner Chuck Lorre to multiple rehab stints, a drug-related hospitalization, an assault arrest and more. The production company sent an 11-page letter to the actor's lawyer explaining that they gave him the boot because they had a "reasonable good faith opinion" that he "committed felony offenses involving moral turpitude" that "interfere[d] with his ability to fully and completely render all material services required" under his contract.
_
In 2013 — two years after he got the boot from "Two and a Half Men" — Charlie Sheen texted Selma Blair to tell her that he got her fired from the short-lived "Anger Management" TV series after he found out that she was complaining about his work ethic (or lack thereof) behind his back to crew members. Though there'd always been plans to eventually phase out her character from the show, that process was expedited after the troubled star gave producers of the FX sitcom an ultimatum: either fire the actress or he'd quit.
_
In July 2020, ViacomCBS fired Nick Cannon over anti-Semitic remarks the entertainer — who's long hosted shows on Nickelodeon and MTV like "Wild 'N Out" and "Lip Sync Battle Shorties" — made on his "Cannon's Class" podcast. ViacomCBS said in a statement that Nick "promoted hateful speech and spread anti-Semitic conspiracy theories." Page Six reported that Nick, who initially didn't apologize, did not think his words were hateful because Black people are "true Hebrews." Nick later posted a demand for full ownership of "Wild 'N Out" as well as a statement claiming that ViacomCBS is "on the wrong side of history." The network giant said in a statement of its own that execs were "deeply troubled that Nick has failed to acknowledge or apologize for perpetuating anti-Semitism." The entertainer finally did apologize, telling "my Jewish sisters and brothers" in a statement that he was sorry for "the hurtful and divisive words that came out of my mouth… They reinforced the worst stereotypes of a proud and magnificent people and I feel ashamed of the uninformed and naïve place that these words came from…" His willingness to walk back his comments and confirm he was educating himself saved his job as the host of "The Masked Singer" on another network, FOX.
_
Clayne Crawford got the boot from the "Lethal Weapon" TV series in mid-2018 following a string of bad behavior, including a highly publicized on-set blowup. (Co-star Damon Wayans Jr. later accused him of assault and emotional abuse.) Though the police procedural continued for another season without him, FOX ultimately canceled it in early 2019.
_
Janet Hubert lost the role of Aunt Viv on "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air" after three seasons due to her strained relationship with Will Smith. (The part went to Daphne Maxwell Reid.) "I can say straight up that Janet Hubert wanted the show to be 'The Aunt Viv of Bel-Air' show because I know she is going to dog me in the press," the A-list actor said during a radio interview at the time. "She has basically gone from a quarter of a million dollars a year to nothing. She's mad now, but she's been mad all along. She said once, 'I've been in the business for 10 years and this snotty-nosed punk comes along and gets a show.' No matter what, to her, I'm just the Antichrist."
_
Comedian Shane Gillis would have been a cast member on season 45 of "Saturday Night Live" if his bad behavior hadn't caught up to him. The almost-"SNL" newcomer was dropped from the NBC sketch-comedy series in 2019 after an old clip of him using a racial slur resurfaced. "We were not aware of his prior remarks that have surfaced over the past few days. The language he used is offensive, hurtful and unacceptable," an NBC spokesperson told Us Weekly. After news of his firing broke, Shane clapped back via Twitter, saying that "it feels ridiculous for comedians to be making serious public statements" and quipped that he "was always a 'Mad TV' guy anyway."
_
After a whopping 12 seasons on "Criminal Minds," Thomas Gibson got the boot following an alleged physical altercation with a writer on set — the writer claimed that the actor kicked him in the leg during a creative dispute. "There were creative differences on the set and a disagreement. I regret that it occurred. We all want to work together as a team to make the best show possible. We always have and always will," Thomas told TMZ. But ABC Studios and CBS Television Studios had other things in mind.
_
Peter Jackson strikes again! The Oscar-winning director fired Stuart Townsend from the role of Aragorn — which ultimately went to Viggo Mortenson — in "The Lord of the Rings." The Irish actor told Entertainment Weekly in 2002, "I was there rehearsing and training for two months, then was fired the day before filming began. … The director wanted me and then apparently thought better of it because he really wanted someone 20 years older than me and completely different."
_
After portraying the title character in 2008's "The Incredible Hulk," Edward Norton got the boot from the Marvel Cinematic Universe. In July 2010, Marvel Studios released a statement explaining why they decided to seek out another actor to bring Bruce Banner to life: "Our decision is definitely not one based on monetary factors, but instead rooted in the need for an actor who embodies the creativity and collaborative spirit of our other talented cast members. 'The Avengers' demands players who thrive working as part of an ensemble. … We are looking to announce a name actor who fulfills these requirements, and is passionate about the iconic role in the coming weeks." Mark Ruffalo ultimately won the part.
_
Shonda Rhimes gave Isaiah Washington the boot from "Grey's Anatomy" in 2007 after he used a homophobic slur on set and then repeated the word during a backstage interview at the Golden Globes. "After the incident at the Golden Globes, everything just fell apart. I lost everything," he told HuffPost Live in 2013.
_
Suzanne Somers got evicted from "Three's Company" after five seasons on the hit sitcom when she asked for equal pay to match what co-star John Ritter was making. "Being fired from 'Three's Company' took [a lot of] work from me … to not be angry," she told Yahoo Entertainment in 2018. "I was fired from the No. 1 show at the height of my success, and I couldn't get a job in television. … I couldn't get an interview, I was considered trouble."
_
During her 2015 Lifetime special, Tori Spelling admitted that she played a role in getting Shannen Doherty fired from "Beverly Hills, 90210" following the fourth season of the teen soap, which her father, Aaron Spelling, executive produced. According to Tori, after Shannen, who had a reputation for being difficult to work with, got into "a fistfight" with co-star Jennie Garth, Tori told her dad that Shannen had to go. "I felt like I was a part of something, a movement, that cost someone their livelihood," Tori said in 2015, adding that ultimately, she believes it was the right thing to do "as a co-worker."
_
Lisa Lampanelli told Us Weekly in May 2019 that she "got fired off 'Despicable Me 3' as the voice of Valerie, and Jenny Slate got the job." Said the retired stand-up comedian, "Joke's on her — I got paid anyway! She had to do the work. I love you, Jenny! Thank you for earning me some money! Isn't that amazing?" Lisa didn't specify why she got the boot from the 2017 cartoon.
_
Fans were outraged when CBS fired Erinn Hayes — who portrayed Donna Gable, the title character's wife — between the first and second seasons of "Kevin Can Wait." The writers unceremoniously killed off her onscreen alter ego, paving the way for Season 1 guest star Leah Remini to take over as the female lead on the second season of the sitcom, which failed to score a third season renewal.
_
After two seasons, he's out! Jason Mitchell was fired from the Showtime drama "The Chi" in May 2019 over allegations of inappropriate behavior. It's been reported that due to the serious nature of the claims against him, talent agency UTA dropped him as well. He was also fired from the Netflix movie "Desperados" in which he'd been cast as the lead, Deadline reported.
_
While Claire Danes ultimately took on the lead role of lovestruck Juliet in Baz Luhrmann's "Romeo + Juliet," she wasn't the film's first choice… Natalie Portman was! She was cast alongside Leonardo DiCaprio but ultimately left the project — though to be fair, she wasn't exactly fired — due to a big age gap with leading man Leonardo DiCaprio. "It was a complicated situation and … at the time I was 13 and Leonardo was 21 and it wasn't appropriate in the eyes of the film company or the director, Baz. It was kind of a mutual decision too that it just wasn't going to be right at the time," Natalie said in a TV interview.