Think fame and textbooks don’t mix? Think again. From astrophysicists with arena tours to comedians with law degrees, these celebs took surprising academic detours. Meet the stars whose majors—yes, real ones—make their résumés even more delightfully unexpected.
1. Natalie Portman’s Harvard Psychology Degree
Natalie Portman didn’t just ace the acting world—she aced academia, too. The Oscar winner graduated from Harvard University in 2003 with a degree in psychology, balancing coursework with early career buzz from the Star Wars prequels. Portman even co-authored scientific papers and later took graduate classes at Hebrew University. Her choice of major makes sense: she’s long been fascinated by how people think and behave.
This arguably deepened roles like Black Swan. Portman famously skipped a Star Wars premiere to study for finals—a very Jedi move, but also a very Harvard one.
2. Allison Williams, Yale English Grad
Before Girls and Get Out, Allison Williams graduated from Yale in 2010 with a B.A. in English. On campus, she performed with the improv group Just Add Water and appeared in musical and sketch shows, sharpening the timing she’d later bring to screen. A viral YouTube performance helped her break through soon after graduation. Williams has said close reading and literary analysis translate directly to script work.
It helps in spotting motivations, structure, and subtext. It’s a practical humanities success story: turn seminar smarts into scene-stealing poise, then keep mixing prestige projects with delightfully dark twists.
3. Sacha Baron Cohen Studied History at Cambridge
Yes, the man behind Borat and Ali G is a bona fide history graduate. Sacha Baron Cohen earned a degree in history from Christ’s College, Cambridge, where he also performed in the Cambridge Footlights. After university he trained in clowning under Philippe Gaulier, blending scholarly curiosity with fearless comedic craft. That historical lens—and habit of research—shows up in his mockumentary setups, where characters test real social boundaries.
It’s an unlikely pipeline: from medieval chronicles to mankini diplomacy. But with Baron Cohen, rigorous prep meets audacious improvisation, and history winds up making hysterically uncomfortable headlines.
4. Will Ferrell’s USC Sports Information Degree
Before cowbell and Anchorman glory, Will Ferrell graduated from the University of Southern California with a degree in sports information—a communications major focused on athletics. He even interned in a sports department, clocking time writing and on the mic. The training stuck: Ferrell’s comfort spoofing broadcasters and athletes (hello, Ron Burgundy’s dramatic sign-offs) feels like a mischievous remix of those early days.
He also joined a campus comedy troupe, finding the sweet spot between stats and shtick. If you’ve ever thought his sports parodies seem strangely authentic, that’s because they’re rooted in real press-box experience.
5. Mayim Bialik, PhD in Neuroscience
Mayim Bialik doesn’t just play a scientist—she is one. After child-star fame in Blossom, she earned a B.S. and then a Ph.D. in neuroscience from UCLA, researching Prader–Willi syndrome. That academic depth informed her portrayal of Amy Farrah Fowler on The Big Bang Theory, lending rare specificity to a TV scientist. Bialik has written about science education and advocates for STEM engagement, especially for girls.
While most of us retire the lab coat after freshman bio, Bialik kept going all the way to the dissertation—then brought that rigor right back to primetime.
6. Ashton Kutcher’s Biochemical Engineering Studies
Surprise: Ashton Kutcher once pursued biochemical engineering at the University of Iowa, motivated by a desire to help his brother who has cardiomyopathy. He left before graduating when modeling—and then acting—took off. Still, that early scientific bent pops up in his later life: Kutcher has invested in tech startups and frequently talks about product design, data, and systems thinking. It’s a left-brain origin story for a right-in-front-of-the-camera career.
While he didn’t finish the degree, the analytical mindset clearly stuck—and it quietly powers the venture-capital half of his Hollywood-and-tech double act.
7. David Duchovny: Princeton BA, Yale MA
David Duchovny earned an A.B. in English from Princeton, followed by an M.A. in English literature at Yale, where he began (but did not complete) a Ph.D. His academic interests included modernist writers like Samuel Beckett, and that scholar’s lens—curious, skeptical, and precisely worded—permeates his later work. Before becoming Mulder on The X-Files, he was already steeped in close reading and layered interpretation.
Those skills map neatly onto parsing conspiracies and character psychology. Duchovny later expanded into novels and music, an Ivy-honed multitasker who treats scripts like texts: analyze, interrogate, and find the human thread.
8. Carrie Underwood’s Broadcast Journalism Degree
Before storming American Idol in 2005, Carrie Underwood was finishing a B.A. in mass communication (broadcast journalism) at Northeastern State University, graduating in 2006. She performed in campus shows and even won Miss NSU. That media training paid off: Underwood’s interviews and hosting gigs have a practiced ease, while her control over narrative—onstage and off—is top-tier.
The degree also reflects her small-town-to-spotlight story: learning how stories get told, then becoming one. Today she’s a multi-Grammy superstar with the poise of a seasoned anchor—just with more sequins, higher notes, and a lot more pyro.
9. Bradley Cooper: Georgetown English to MFA
Bradley Cooper studied English at Georgetown University, graduating in 1997, before earning an MFA in acting from the Actors Studio Drama School at The New School. The literature foundation sharpened his script sense; the conservatory training refined craft. That blend shows up in A Star Is Born and Maestro, where storytelling, performance, and meticulous prep fuse.
Cooper has said he fell in love with acting after seeing The Elephant Man, later performing it on Broadway—a full-circle, textbook MFA move. From Chaucer seminars to exacting biopics, his path is equal parts bookworm and perfectionist.
10. Rebel Wilson’s Law and Arts Double Degree
Rebel Wilson completed a double degree—a Bachelor of Arts and a Bachelor of Laws (BA/LLB)—at the University of New South Wales. She also studied theater and performance, then trained further with the Australian Theatre for Young People. The legal education shows in her sharp business instincts as a writer, producer, and star, while the arts side fuels her fearless, specific comedic choices.
It’s a delightfully studious route to big, scene-stealing laughs: case briefs by day, punchlines by night. Wilson’s career proves you can love footnotes and improv—and make both work on your terms.
11. J. K. Rowling’s French and Classics Degree
Before Harry Potter bewitched the planet, J.K. Rowling studied French and Classics at the University of Exeter, including a year in Paris. That classical grounding shows in the series’ Latin-based spells and mythic structures—Cerberus, Hippogriffs, and all. Her language training gave her a feel for etymology and tone, while the humanities lens shaped themes of power, prejudice, and moral choice.
The path from declensions to Diagon Alley isn’t obvious, but it makes sense: steep in ancient stories, then spin your own. The result: a literary phenomenon with roots in the oldest tales.
12. James Franco: UCLA English, Columbia MFA
James Franco famously returned to school mid-career, completing a B.A. in English at UCLA and then an MFA in writing from Columbia University, with further graduate study at NYU and Yale. He’s acted, taught, written fiction, and directed, often blurring boundaries between academia and art. Love him or side-eye the workload, Franco’s classroom detours were real and rigorous.
The English training boosted his literary adaptations; the MFA fed his directing and fiction. He’s a case study in the actor-as-student archetype—ambitious, eclectic, and always juggling more syllabi than seems humanly possible.
13. Danai Gurira: Psychology BA to NYU MFA
Before unsheathing a katana as Michonne or commanding Wakanda’s Dora Milaje, Danai Gurira earned a B.A. in psychology from Macalester College, then an MFA at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts. She’s also an acclaimed playwright (Eclipsed reached Broadway), where that psychology background helps craft layered, interior characters. Gurira’s work often explores identity, trauma, and resilience—terrain where behavioral insight matters.
The result is a performer who can anchor action and nuance with equal power. From cognitive theories to cultural narratives, her degrees shaped an artist who cuts deep in every medium.
14. Brian May’s Astrophysics PhD, Completed
Queen’s legendary guitarist also happens to be Dr. Brian May. He began doctoral research in astrophysics at Imperial College London in the 1970s, paused for rock stardom, then returned to complete his PhD in 2007. His thesis focused on interplanetary dust and the zodiacal cloud. May co-authored astronomy books, supported public science outreach, and even worked with NASA’s New Horizons mission team.
It’s a career arc with serious range: shredding on Bohemian Rhapsody, then calculating dust particle velocities. When May sings “’cause this is the real life,” the astrophysics diploma says: absolutely.
15. Ken Jeong, Actual MD Turned Comedian
Ken Jeong earned his M.D. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and completed his internal medicine residency at Ochsner in New Orleans. He later practiced as a physician in California before comedy took over, giving his on-screen medical bits real-world accuracy. Jeong’s breakout in The Hangover led to Dr. Ken, where clinic life and sitcom timing collided perfectly.
He’s continued to advocate for public health, using humor to demystify medicine. The résumé isn’t a gimmick—he’s genuinely Dr. Jeong—bringing bedside precision and chaotic energy to every set and stage.
16. Lionel Richie’s Economics Degree at Tuskegee
Long before “All Night Long,” Lionel Richie studied at Tuskegee Institute (now University), graduating with a B.S. in economics. He helped form the Commodores there, turning dorm-room jams into a launchpad for funk and soul success. The econ degree sounds unexpected, but it tracks with Richie’s savvy songwriting catalog and long career of rights management, touring, and entrepreneurship.
Knowing supply and demand doesn’t hurt when you’re, well, supplying hits the world demands. From campus gigs to global stages, Richie combined theory and groove—and proved balance sheets and ballads can, in fact, harmonize.
17. “Weird Al” Yankovic, Architecture Grad
Before parody royalty, “Weird Al” Yankovic earned a bachelor’s degree in architecture from Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. He was recording comedic songs in dorm rooms while studying load-bearing walls and floor plans—a wildly useful metaphor for how he builds airtight parodies. The architectural mindset shows in his meticulous arrangements and lyrical symmetry: everything fits, nothing sags, and the punchlines have perfect cantilevers.
He later chose music full-time, but the design discipline stuck. It’s why a “Weird Al” track feels engineered for maximum delight—satire with structural integrity and a very sturdy accordion.
18. David Spade’s Business Degree From ASU
David Spade graduated from Arizona State University with a business degree while honing stand-up at campus clubs. That combo—spreadsheet brain meets sarcasm—makes sense of his career longevity. He understands the entertainment business side, from pilot seasons to syndication checks, and brings a wry, economical style to roles in SNL, Tommy Boy, and sitcoms. Spade’s comedy often skewers status and money, which a business curriculum undoubtedly helped him read.
Consider him proof that marketing plans and deadpan one-liners can peacefully coexist—and occasionally even file joint taxes.
19. Freddie Highmore’s Double First at Cambridge
Freddie Highmore—of Finding Neverland, Bates Motel, and The Good Doctor—graduated from Emmanuel College, Cambridge with a double first in Spanish and Arabic. He balanced studies with acting, even taking time off to focus on exams. The languages degree expanded his worldview and helps explain the thoughtfulness he brings to characters. Highmore has written and produced as well, where analytical skill meets storytelling instinct.
It’s a classically British path: elite academics plus craft. And yes, that calm, careful diction? It sounds exactly like someone who’s survived oral exams in two languages.
20. Julia Stiles, Columbia English Graduate
Julia Stiles earned a B.A. in English from Columbia University in 2005, continuing to act while taking seminars and writing papers. The degree gave her a literary backbone that fits an actor known for sharp, articulate roles—from 10 Things I Hate About You to Silver Linings Playbook. Stiles has spoken about the value of staying grounded through school while navigating fame.
Columbia’s core curriculum also broadened her tastes beyond scripts, fueling interest in global literature and ideas. It’s the rare star who can quote Shakespeare and MLA-format her bibliography, stress-free.
21. Gene Simmons Majored in Education and Taught Sixth Grade
Long before KISS, Gene Simmons studied at Richmond College (now the College of Staten Island) and Brooklyn College, where he majored in education. He even taught sixth grade briefly before music claimed him for good. The classroom-to-stadium pivot sounds wild, but the skill set carries: lesson planning becomes set planning, crowd control becomes crowd command, and a teacher’s patience morphs into a marketer’s persistence.
Simmons later built a branding empire with the same methodical approach. No need to claim a specific degree—his education studies and short teaching stint alone explain a lot about his disciplined showmanship.
22. Rooney Mara’s NYU Gallatin Degree
Rooney Mara graduated from NYU’s Gallatin School of Individualized Study with a focus that blended psychology, international social policy, and nonprofits. Before taking on The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, she founded the charity Faces of Kibera (now integrated into Uweza Foundation), reflecting those academic interests. Gallatin’s build-your-own-curriculum style suited her thoughtful, off-center career choices—arthouse roles with real emotional stakes.
The degree isn’t a neat single label, but that’s the point: it mirrors a filmography that refuses easy boxes. Call it a custom major in intensity and impact.
23. Lisa Kudrow’s Biology Degree From Vassar
Lisa Kudrow graduated from Vassar College with a B.A. in biology and worked in her neurologist father’s research lab. She co-authored a 1994 paper in Cephalalgia examining handedness and headache—a very un-Phoebe Buffay line on the CV. That scientific training honed her persistence and curiosity, traits that served her well in the grind of auditions and improv before Friends.
Kudrow’s characters often hide depth beneath quirks, much like her résumé: laughs layered over lab work. She didn’t abandon science so much as reroute it—testing hypotheses about what makes people giggle, episode after episode.
24. Eva Longoria: Kinesiology BA, Master’s Later
Eva Longoria earned a Bachelor of Science in kinesiology from Texas A&M University–Kingsville, then later completed a Master’s in Chicano Studies at Cal State Northridge. The kinesiology background informed her fitness advocacy and entrepreneurial ventures, while graduate work deepened her activism and research on representation in media. Longoria’s shift from Desperate Housewives star to producer and director reflects that scholarly curiosity—asking who gets seen and how.
She’s proof that red-carpet glamour and academic grit can share the same planner, color-coded and goal-driven. She completed the CSUN program in 2013, focusing her thesis on Latina representation and STEM opportunities.
25. Gabrielle Union’s UCLA Sociology Degree
Gabrielle Union graduated from UCLA with a degree in sociology after transferring from the University of Nebraska and Cuesta College. The major centers on how groups, power, and identity interact—perfect terrain for someone who’d later navigate Hollywood and advocate for equity. Union’s memoir and producing choices reflect that lens, interrogating who gets the mic and why. It’s also quietly practical: understanding social dynamics is half of acting.
Whether she’s delivering a cutting cheer captain monologue or negotiating a production deal, there’s a sociologist’s clarity under the sparkle.
26. Wanda Sykes, Hampton University Marketing
Wanda Sykes earned a B.S. in marketing from Hampton University and worked as a contracting specialist for the NSA before comedy called. That resume screams “spreadsheet by day, punchlines by night,” and it tracks with her sharply structured sets. Marketing trained her to spot angles and audience—skills she now flips into political and cultural commentary. The NSA stint gave her discipline and an eye for detail.
When Sykes dissects a topic onstage, it feels like a brief turned roast: research, positioning, then the kill shot—delivered with that trademark arched eyebrow.
27. Chris Martin’s First-Class Degree in Greek and Latin
Coldplay’s frontman didn’t just form a band at University College London; he also graduated with first-class honors in Greek and Latin. Studying ancient languages honed his ear for rhythm and metaphor, which sneak into the band’s poetic turns of phrase. UCL is where he met bandmates, too—student halls turned rehearsal rooms. Martin often credits university with shaping both his craft and friendships.
So while stadiums chant “Viva la Vida,” somewhere a classics professor is smiling: those cadences were conjugated in lecture halls long before they echoed in arenas.
28. Rowan Atkinson, Oxford Electrical Engineering MSc
Mr. Bean with a master’s in electrical engineering? Correct. Rowan Atkinson studied electrical engineering at Newcastle University, then earned an MSc at The Queen’s College, Oxford, where he also dove into performing with Oxford University Dramatic Society and the Experimental Theatre Club. The engineering mindset—precise, methodical—paradoxically fuels his physical comedy: every eyebrow, pause, and pratfall is calibrated like circuitry.
Atkinson co-writes meticulously, too, which makes sense for someone trained to debug systems. His career suggests a delightful theorem: great comedy often equals rigorous design plus exquisite silence.
29. John Cleese’s Law Degree at Cambridge
Before dead parrots and Ministry of Silly Walks, John Cleese studied law at Downing College, Cambridge. He joined the Footlights, eventually writing and performing in the 1963 revue A Clump of Plinths (retitled Cambridge Circus), a launchpad to Monty Python. Legal training didn’t lead to courtrooms, but you can hear its imprint: precise language, airtight logic twisted into absurdity, and devastating cross-examinations disguised as sketches.
Cleese’s later work in corporate training and communication loops back to that foundation—clarity, structure, persuasion—delivered with beautifully barbed wit.
30. Hugh Laurie Studied Archaeology and Anthropology
Hugh Laurie read archaeology and anthropology at Selwyn College, Cambridge, where he also became an elite rower and met future comedy partner Stephen Fry through Footlights. Though he earned a third-class degree, the anthropologist’s eye is everywhere in his work—observing status rituals, decoding gestures, and mimicking accents with forensic skill. Laurie later added bestselling novelist and blues musician to the CV.
She seems to have a mind that collects cultures and refracts them into character. From ancient tools to diagnostic puzzles on House, he’s always been studying people—he just swapped the fieldwork site.





























