logo
Will Smith, Johnny Depp and Alec Baldwin hope for comebacks. Can they succeed?

Will Smith, Johnny Depp and Alec Baldwin hope for comebacks. Can they succeed?

USA Today18-05-2025

Will Smith, Johnny Depp and Alec Baldwin hope for comebacks. Can they succeed?
Show Caption
Hide Caption
'Rust' movie trailer: See Alec Baldwin as a Western outlaw
Alec Baldwin's Western drama "Rust" is out May 2.
Hollywood loves a good comeback story.
But what about real-life rebounds? That, it turns out, is an iffier proposition and one that's about to be tested by three bold-faced names: Alec Baldwin, Johnny Depp and Will Smith.
All three were at different points lead players in the cultural zeitgeist. And all three lost that role, admittedly for vastly different offenses that nonetheless had the same career-dinging effect. Baldwin after Halyna Hutchins was fatally shot with a gun he held on the set of 'Rust' in 2021, Depp after a protracted and tawdry 2022 lawsuit with his ex Amber Heard and Smith after slapping Chris Rock at the 2022 Oscars.
Can this trio win back the hearts and wallets of fans with their new projects? Will Hollywood's gatekeepers stand ready with open arms?
Not surprisingly, the latter is highly dependent on the former, industry experts say. If you can still turn a buck with your talents, watch your Tinseltown dance card fill up.
'If people have a loyal fan base, they'll always get a second and even third shot,' says Stacy Jones, CEO of pop culture marketing firm Hollywood Branded. 'Look at Robert Downey, Jr. His drug addiction crashed his career more than 20 years ago. And now..?'
Well, now the 'Ironman' star's movies have grossed more than $14 billion and he has a best supporting actor Oscar for 'Oppenheimer.' Point taken.
A rebound for Depp, Smith and Baldwin depends on a shifting calculus
So is that sort of about-face a possibility for Baldwin, Depp and Smith? Experts say the calculus for rebounding from scandal involves factors such as what you did, who you did it to, and to what degree people still care.
'If you think about MeToo and cancel culture and people being publicly shamed, while that was strong in recent years, for me the question is, is that sentiment as strong today?' says Todd Boyd, who holds the Katherine and Frank Price Endowed Chair for the Study of Race and Popular Culture at the University of Southern California.
For Michael Schulman, author of 'Oscar Wars: A History of Hollywood in Gold, Sweat and Tears,' fans are the critical factor.
'Stars come back to the extent that they're profitable,' he says. He laughs, adding, 'I hope you can hear the cynicism.'
One thing that could help a comeback is playing to your scandalous side, Schulman says. His examples include Rob Lowe, who, after an '80s sex tape scandal, won back fans by playing a sleazy villain in the comedy "Wayne's World." Even Baldwin himself, who was in the tabloids for his raucous 2002 divorce from Kim Basinger and then scored a hit by playing a hilariously morals-free executive in the NBC comedy, "30 Rock."
Schulman, who keeps a keen eye on Hollywood for The New Yorker, did a 2021 piece for the magazine called 'Fatty Arbuckle and the Birth of the Celebrity Scandal,' about the silent movie star who was acquitted of rape and murder in the 1920s and never regained his popularity. Today, more than a century later, Schulman says social media connects fans more intensely to celebrities, creating a bond that can help launch a comeback.
'Each of these three stars has a fan base on their side,' he says. 'Will's slap for many was just a man standing up for his wife. With Alec, there's a widespread sense he shouldn't even have been charged. And Johnny had wide online support during that trial. Studios will take the temperature, and when needed can reintroduce people with the help of marketing and publicity.'
A look at what's coming up for Alec Baldwin and Johnny Depp
Let's open our inquiry into these three comeback cases by looking at what each is working on and whether these roles could prove enough to reignite their personal spotlights.
For Baldwin, whose Western "Rust" debuted in theaters and video on demand May 2 to poor sales, his new output consists of playing himself in the TLC reality series 'The Baldwins.'
Although it's an attempt to showcase the actor as a loveable dad to his brood of seven, the series hasn't made a mark. In fact, unless Baldwin, whose standout movies include 'Glengarry Glen Ross' and 'The Hunt for Red October,' returns with a dramatic flourish, his relaunch could be on permanent hold, experts say.
'Ironically, if Alec is guilty of anything it's coming back as a cringeworthy dad,' says Schulman. 'It's a naked attempt at rebranding. Why not come back as an actor?'
Baldwin is starring in "Hollywood Heist" with Nick Cannon, with Deadline reporting the film is being introduced to buyers in Cannes. But USC's Boyd argues that Baldwin's name was never as lofty in the culture as Depp or Smith, and that could hurt his chances of a comeback. 'He's just not as relevant anymore,' he says.
The public seems to agree, says Jones. 'Even if 'The Baldwins' is atrocious, you should have had a lot of haters tuning in,' she says. 'But the public response was indifferent.'
Depp's offense was not an on-set tragedy but rather an incendiary 2022 court battle with his actress ex wife, who had accused him of being abusive during their relationship. He sued her for damaging his reputation, and won.
Depp is currently filming 'Day Drinker,' a thriller with Penelope Cruz. It's his first movie since appearing in the little seen 2023 French-language film 'Jeanne du Barry,' in which he played King Louis XV.
Recently released photos from the new production show a gray-haired and bearded Depp who appears to be acting his age, 61. That pivot could be a smart way to reinvent himself.
'Depp won the court of public opinion (in his case against Heard), but the bigger issue is simply whether he is still the big star he once was," Boyd says of 'Pirates of the Caribbean' icon. "Does he mean the same to audiences now that he did in the past?'
Depp has said before he wasn't interested in doing a sixth installment in Disney's lucrative "Pirates" franchise, but 'he's still the face of that ride at Disney, and I bet he would totally do another if offered,' says Jones. The response to 'Day Drinker' could sink or revive those piratical conversations.
For some Hollywood experts, the surest comeback bet is ... Will Smith
And then there's Smith. The talented rapper-turned-TV-star-turned-Oscar-winner (a title he earned on the very night he struck Chris Rock for making a joke about his wife's shaved head, a result of her alopecia) is planning to bombard his fans with fare soon.
Upcoming Smith films in various phases of development are a remake of the 1987 John Candy and Steve Martin comedy 'Planes, Trains, and Automobiles,' co-starring Kevin Hart; a post-apocalyptic action thriller sequel 'I Am Legend 2' with Michael B. Jordan; and a super hero redemption sequel "Hancock 2.'
With these movies, Smith has a chance to recement his bond with audiences, which didn't happen with two post-Slap movies, 'Emancipation,' about a runaway slave, and the popular but critically panned 'Bad Boys 4,' as well as a new album, 'Based on a True Story.'
But for those reading Hollywood tea leaves, Smith has the greatest chance of mounting a strong industry comeback.
'He was a gigantic star and people really aren't that angry about that slap and some saw it as noble even,' says Schulman. 'Plus, we all saw it happen, it was no secret. There was no mystery.'
For Boyd, 'it comes down to who he slapped, which was Chris Rock, a comedian, and comedians often say things that people don't like.'
Jones agrees on Smith's good odds, adding what was most shocking about the slap was that it was done 'by someone who comes across to us as such a nice guy" through roles such as TV's "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air."
For her, what Smith did was more a direct result of the pressure-cooker spotlight and "all-out mania' of Hollywood's awards season.
Smith is "fundamentally a kingmaker who can likely still make billions in profits for someone," she says. "Plus, let's remember, he slapped someone across the face, he didn't kill someone.'
We'll give Boyd the final word here. And the final word is: cash.
'In any performance based industry, and this comes up in sports a lot, if someone is very good at what they do and they have a strong following and someone can profit off those talents, those things will be factored into consideration when it comes to giving people another chance,' he says.
'Anyone looking at talent that is trying to come back from something is thinking: 'Is the risk of taking on this person bigger than the profit we stand to make?' You figure that out, and go from there.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Arnold Schwarzenegger's Look-Alike Son Left Out Of Family Photo With Half-Siblings At The Actor's Event
Arnold Schwarzenegger's Look-Alike Son Left Out Of Family Photo With Half-Siblings At The Actor's Event

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Arnold Schwarzenegger's Look-Alike Son Left Out Of Family Photo With Half-Siblings At The Actor's Event

Arnold Schwarzenegger appeared with most of his family, including his youngest son, Joseph Baena, at the season 2 premiere of his hit Netflix series, "FUBAR." However, Joseph was notably excluded from group photos with his half-siblings and only posed with Arnold, who warmly engaged with him and his girlfriend. While Arnold Schwarzenegger shares a close bond with his son Joseph Baena, the 27-year-old's half-siblings have remained distant from him, with some reports linking their cold treatment to the actor's affair while married to their mother, Maria Shriver. At the star-studded premiere of Netflix's "FUBAR" Season 2 on Wednesday, Arnold Schwarzenegger was joined by all of his family. Unfortunately, one key figure was noticeably left out of the main spotlight. The 77-year-old Hollywood icon was all smiles on the red carpet alongside his children Katherine, 35, Christina, 33, Patrick, 31, and Christopher, 27, as well as son-in-law Chris Pratt, 45. The appearance marked a rare public gathering for the Schwarzenegger-Shriver clan. However, his youngest son, Joseph Baena, the product of a past affair with the family's longtime housekeeper, Mildred Baena, was noticeably absent from the family group photos. Although Baena attended the premiere, he didn't pose with his half-siblings. Instead, he appeared separately with his father, sharing lighthearted and affectionate moments on the red carpet. Arnold also showed warmth toward Joseph's girlfriend, Dutch model Mel, who was seen resting her head on his shoulder inside the theater. For the red carpet event, Arnold looked sharp in a dark blue suit with a subtle sheen, styled with a pale blue button-down shirt, no tie, black leather shoes, and a statement Western belt featuring an oversized buckle. His children appeared in complementary all-black ensembles. Christopher chose a classic black suit with a white shirt with no tie for a clean, relaxed look. Christina opted for a tailored black pantsuit. Patrick, known for his stylish flair, wore a double-breasted pinstriped blazer with a matching striped tie, plain black trousers, and black brogues with a modest lift. Katherine stood out in an elegant one-shoulder black blouse tied at the waist with a bow, paired with tailored black pants and white pointed-toe heels. Pratt tied it all together with a cool-toned blue-gray suede jacket. Though excluded from the group photo, Baena made a distinct fashion statement of his own. He wore a charcoal cardigan over high-waisted trousers, a dark sweater draped over his shoulders, and black leather loafers. The "FUBAR" Season 2 premiere echoed an all-too-familiar dynamic for the Schwarzenegger family. Despite Baena attending the event, his siblings continued to keep their distance, a repeat of what had played out at the debut season premiere over two years ago. While Patrick once appeared to make an effort, as the two were seen working out together in 2021, no public sign of closeness between the half-brothers has emerged since. Katherine, Christina, and Christopher have likewise shown no public connection to their youngest sibling. In 2023, Page Six reported that Arnold and Joseph are "very close," but the bond hasn't extended to the rest of the family. An insider claimed that "the other kids don't love Joe" and suggested that the lingering resentment over Arnold's affair has unfairly been directed at Joseph himself. "The other kids take [the affair] out on Joe," the source said. Despite the controversy, Arnold has consistently shown support for his youngest son. He has reportedly covered Baena's school tuition and even purchased a home for his mother. Arnold, in Netflix's revealing docuseries titled "Arnold," didn't shy away from addressing the most painful chapters of his personal life. The iconic actor and former California governor reflected candidly on the fallout from his past mistakes, particularly the affair that led to the birth of his son, Joseph. "I think that I have caused enough pain for my family because of my f-ck up. Everyone had to suffer. Maria had to suffer. The kids had to suffer. Joseph. His mother. Everyone," he admitted, per People Magazine. He acknowledged that the consequences of that decision are something he'll carry for the rest of his life. "I am going to have to live with it the rest of my life," Arnold noted. "People will remember my successes, and they will also remember my failures. This is a major failure. I had failures in the past in my career, but this is a whole different ball game, a dimension of failure." Despite the apparent rift between Joseph and his older half-siblings, Arnold continues to speak with deep admiration for him, describing the fitness model as a "fantastic man" who "makes me proud." "It was wrong what I did. But I don't want to make Joseph feel that he is not welcome in this world — because he is very much welcome in this world," the actor admitted. "I love him and he has turned out to be an extraordinary young man," Arnold added about his look-alike son.

Another Harvey Weinstein Rape Retrial Could Start This Fall, Judge Says; Current Case Ends In Mistrial As Jury Foreman Won't Return To Deliberations
Another Harvey Weinstein Rape Retrial Could Start This Fall, Judge Says; Current Case Ends In Mistrial As Jury Foreman Won't Return To Deliberations

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Another Harvey Weinstein Rape Retrial Could Start This Fall, Judge Says; Current Case Ends In Mistrial As Jury Foreman Won't Return To Deliberations

(Updated with more details) The rape retrial of Harvey Weinstein is over with the New York jury foreman refusing to return to deliberations, but the much accused producer remains incarcerated and another trial is on the horizon. The judge in Weinstein's retrial declared a mistrial this morning on the remaining, undecided charge of third degree rape involving accuser Jessica Mann. Judge Curtis Farber's ruling came after the jury's foreman, who claimed again told the judge in open court — and away of the other jurors — that he did not want to go rejoin his colleagues into the jury room. More from Deadline Patricia Clarkson Recalls Harvey Weinstein Telling Her She'd 'Never Work Again' Graydon Carter Reveals Why Harvey Weinstein Was 'Banned' For Life From Vanity Fair Oscars Party House Set To Vote On Bill To Rescind Funding To PBS, NPR And Public Broadcasting Stations Are you willing to go back into the jury room today and continue deliberations?' Judge Farber asked Juror No. 1 today. 'No, I'm sorry,' he replied from his seat alone on the jury bench. Yesterday in a near unprecedented move, the jury found Weinstein guilty of a first-degree criminal sexual act against Miriam Haley and not guilty of the same act against Kaja Sokola. In this retrial that started in late April, the single count of third-degree rape the ailing 73-year-old Weinstein faces carries a maximum sentence of four years. However, each first-degree criminal sexual act count carries a maximum sentence of 25 years. Judge Farber has said that the Haley and Sokola verdicts will stand regardless of today's partial mistrial. Once clarification was given on the state of the other verdict delivered on Wednesday, prosecutors told the court that Mann is 'ready and willing' to testify again in a retrial. In response Judge Farber set July 2 as the next hearing date, which could see a start date penciled in for the next retrial. Judge Farber guessed from the bench that the next retrial would happen in the fall. Weinstein's defense lawyers were quick to urge the judge to speed up sentencing on the single guilty count. However, interestingly, Judge Farber declined. In another dramatic move on a dramatic morning, he told the courtroom Thursday he would not separate the Mann charge from the indictment under which he was convicted Wednesday of assaulting Haley. Which means Harvey Weinstein won't know for many months how long he is going to sit in a New York state prison on this Empire State sex crimes. With Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg expected to address today's events soon, lead defense lawyer Arthur Aidala said outside the courthouse that Weinstein will be appealing the Haley verdict. The attorney stated that jury misconduct would form the basis of the appeal. Every before today's shocking developments, the foreman had come before the judge repeatedly since Friday, in court and in chambers, to say he felt threatened by other jurors. After declaring the mistrial, Judge Farber brought the full jury out to tell them he was ending their deliberations. 'I understand this particular deliberation was more heated than some others,' he said, with some understatement. When Judge Farber excused the jury, the foreman exited first, walking through a side door at a noticeably quicker pace than the other men and women behind him. Judge Farber also left the courtroom for a brief spell. When he returned, the judge said to the lawyers and others in the court that he had spoken to the other eleven jurors to thank them for their work. Judge Farber added that 'all eleven' spontaneously expressed to him that they were 'extremely disappointed' they did not get to complete their deliberations. 'They did not understand why the foreperson bowed out,' Farber proclaimed 'They thought they were still in the course of deliberations and were hopeful to reach a verdict.' He continued with some lament: 'They did not describe anything that rose to the level of threats.' Up until this unique morning, to put it mildly, the seven-woman, five-man panel have been in deliberations since June 4 with tensions emerging repeatedly. It took five days for a previous Empire State jury took to reach a verdict in Weinstein's 2020 sex crimes trial. Sentenced to 23 years in state prison five years ago, Weinstein saw that case tossed out last year by a New York Court of Appeals based on its decision of the improper inclusion of prior bad acts testimony by the previous judge. After days of open tension out of the jury room, the foreman Wednesday came to Judge Farber expressing frustration and even fear in what was going on behind closed doors. Amid all that drama, the judge rejected the foreman's efforts to exit the case and denied a defense motion to get a mistrial declared. However, to cool things off a bit, Judge Farber did send the panel home early on June 11. Weinstein may not have taken the stand, but he was very vocal in court Wednesday. 'This is my life that's on the line, this is not fair,' he proclaimed. 'I'm not getting a fair trial.' Judge Farber's early exit decision on June 11 was preceded by getting a partial verdict out of the jurors. Having created a possible legal mess, the jury found Weinstein guilty on Count 1 of a criminal sexual act in the first degree against Miriam Haley. Pressed by the judge for an answer, the jury also found the ex-mini-mogul not guilty of the same charge involving Sokola, and offered no verdict Wednesday on Jessica Mann. RELATED: Still incarcerated due to his 16-year sentence on a 2022 rape conviction in Los Angeles, the much-accused Weinstein and his team have spent the past several months trying to rehabilitate the ex-Miramax boss' reputation with the anticipation of the #MeToo backlash of the past year or so. Weinstein had a self-pitying and widely covered jailhouse conversation with right-wing commentator Candace Owens in March. That effort saw the likes of the hugely influencial Joe Rogan express a reassessment of Weinstein. Ignoring the fact that Weinstein's case is in state court, not federal, some have even floated that Donald Trump could pardon the one-time big-time Democratic donor. On June 6, via phone, Weinstein told Fox 5's Good Day New York that while he acted 'immorally, nothing he ever did was 'illegal.' This is despite the fact that more than 100 women, from the famous to interns and others, have come forward since the deeply sourced 2017 New York Times exposé of Weinstein to tell their tales of abuse and assault by him. Allegations that Weinstein has been convicted of on both coasts and settled in several civil cases with big payoffs. It is money and fame that is behind most of these claims, the defense has been asserting in the retrial. Last week, defense lawyer and frequent CNN guest Arthur Aidala told the jury in his closing argument that accusers Jessica Mann, Miriam Haley and Kaja Sokola are 'all women with broken dreams … they're all women who wanted to cut the line.' Portraying the trio of accusers as having engaged in consensual sex with Weinstein, Aidala, who represented Steve Bannon in the MAGA warlord's fundraising fraud case, attempted to make his client the real victim. The lawyer pointed the finger at Mann, former Project Runway production assistant Haley and Polish model Sokola for using 'their youth, their beauty, their charm, their charisma to get stuff' from Weinstein. In the prosecution's closing argument, with her boss Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg looking on in the courtroom, Assistant DA Nicole Blumberg offered a perspective on Weinstein's decades of power in Hollywood, making and breaking careers. 'He also used that same power to isolate women, to trap women into places where he'd be alone with them and to rape them,' she told the jury. 'That's not fame,' Blumberg added of the trio coming forward to tell their stories publicly — again, in two cases. 'Nobody wants that.' Making that point more bluntly, Haley at one juncture in her highly emotional testimony called Weinstein a 'f*cking assh*le' on the stand. The witness later ran out of the courtroom crying under intense questioning from defense lawyer Jennifer Bonjean over what she was wearing the night in 2006 when she claims Weinstein forced himself on her in his Soho apartment. Regardless of the verdict the New York jury could have delivered and a new jury may deliver on the next retrial, Weinstein still has his L.A. conviction to deal with. If the Oscar-winning Shakespeare in Love producer is found innocent on all the East Coast charges, he will be packed on a plane in a matter of days to sit in a cell on the West Coast while the appeal of his L.A. case continues. Which is to say, despite the partial mistrial today Harvey Weinstein isn't going to be a free man anytime soon. Best of Deadline 'Stick' Release Guide: When Do New Episodes Come Out? 'Stick' Soundtrack: All The Songs You'll Hear In The Apple TV+ Golf Series 2025 TV Series Renewals: Photo Gallery

Hot night at the honky tonk on new Bruce Springsteen song 'Repo Man' from 'Tracks 2'
Hot night at the honky tonk on new Bruce Springsteen song 'Repo Man' from 'Tracks 2'

Yahoo

time8 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Hot night at the honky tonk on new Bruce Springsteen song 'Repo Man' from 'Tracks 2'

Emilio Estevez, eat your heart out. The new Bruce Springsteen song 'Repo Man' is a rollicking jam of Western swing with a beaut of a steel guitar and crackling piano that gets the heart pumping. Kind of like a repo man on assignment. The repossessed car is apparently outside a honky tonk. You can listen at 'Repo Man' is part of the unreleased 'Somewhere North of Nashville' album, which will be included on the 'Tracks II: The Lost Albums,' out Friday, June 27, via Sony Music. The 'Nashville' album was inspired by the sounds of 'honky tonk, rockabilly and uptempo country,' according to a Shore Fire Media release, and recorded simultaneously with 'The Ghost of Tom Joad' in the summer of 1995. The players include the late Danny Federici, Garry Tallent and Gary Mallaber — and a pedal steel from Marty Rifkin and fiddle from Soozie Tyrell. 'What happened was I wrote all these country songs at the same time I wrote 'The Ghost of Tom Joad.' Those sessions completely overlap each other," Springsteen said in a statement. "I'm singing 'Repo Man' in the afternoon and 'The Line' at night. So the country record got made right along with 'The Ghost of Tom Joad.' ' 'Streets of Philadelphia' got me connected to my socially conscious or topical songwriting," the statement continued. "So that's where 'The Ghost of Tom Joad' came from. But at the same time I had this country streak that was also running through those sessions, and I ended up making a country record on the side.' The duel album recording method was not new to the Boss. 'Born in the U.S.A.' was recorded at the same time 'Nebraska' was recorded in the early 1980s. As such, two tracks recorded for 'Born in the U.S.A.,' 'Stand On It' and 'Janey Don't You Lose Heart,' are included on 'Somewhere North of Nashville.' Springsteen has previously released the singles 'Rain In The River,' 'Blind Spot' and 'Faithless' from the upcoming 'Tracks 2.' Elsewhere, Springsteen and the E Street Band kick off 'The Land of Hope and Dreams Tour' on Wednesday, May 14, at the Co-op Live in Manchester, England. The 16-date tour is the final leg of the critically acclaimed E Street tour that began Feb. 1, 2023, at the Amalie Arena in Tampa, Florida. As for Estevez, he's the star, along with Harry Dean Stanton, of the 1984 cult classic 'Repo Man.' Subscribe to for the latest on the New Jersey music scene. Chris Jordan, a Jersey Shore native, covers entertainment and features for the USA Today Network New Jersey. Contact him at cjordan@ This article originally appeared on Asbury Park Press: Bruce Springsteen brings honky-tonk heat on new Repo Man

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store