๐ŸŽญ Actors

Han Solo Was A Carpenter With A Broom In His Hand โ€” Here's How That Actually Happened

Before he was the biggest star in a galaxy far, far away, Harrison Ford was getting fired from bellhop roles, building cabinets to pay rent, and reading OTHER actors' lines for a movie he didn't even know he was in.

Han Solo Was A Carpenter With A Broom In His Hand โ€” Here's How That Actually Happened

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1

He Wasn't 'Discovered' โ€” He Was Literally Just The Guy Fixing The Door

The self-taught carpenter who quietly ran Hollywood's side hustle
The self-taught carpenter who quietly ran Hollywood's side hustle
One of the directors who hired Ford's carpentry crew
One of the directors who hired Ford's carpentry crew

Struggling to book steady acting work in the late '60s and early '70s, Ford taught himself carpentry from library books and quietly became Hollywood's go-to craftsman, building sets and cabinetry for the very people who'd later make him famous. He later admitted he took the trade seriously enough that it became his real job while acting was just a side hustle.

2

His FIRST Movie Role Ever Was A Bellhop Nobody Even Credited

Ford's uncredited screen debut as a bellhop
Ford's uncredited screen debut as a bellhop
Ford's actual breakout role, as Bob Falfa
Ford's actual breakout role, as Bob Falfa

Ford's actual screen debut wasn't Star Wars or even American Graffiti โ€” it was a blink-and-you-miss-it, uncredited turn as a bellhop in the 1966 James Coburn crime caper Dead Heat on a Merry-Go-Round. Seven years and several tiny parts later, Lucas gave him his real breakout as swaggering drag racer Bob Falfa in American Graffiti.

3

He Only Showed Up To Read Lines FOR Other People Auditioning For Star Wars

Called in to read lines, walked out with Han Solo
Called in to read lines, walked out with Han Solo
The role he almost didn't even audition for
The role he almost didn't even audition for

In 1976, Ford was on-site doing carpentry work when George Lucas walked in to start Star Wars casting sessions and asked him to help by reading lines opposite the actors actually trying out for the parts. Ford has said there was no indication he himself was being considered โ€” he was just doing a favor โ€” until Lucas abruptly offered him Han Solo.

4

That Chin Scar? Not A Whip Accident. Not A Bar Fight. A Fender Bender.

The scar that became a permanent part of the face
The scar that became a permanent part of the face

Ford's trademark chin scar has been blamed on everything from a fencing duel to Indiana Jones's own bullwhip mishap on-screen, but the real story is much more ordinary: he hit his chin on the steering wheel during a car crash in his early 20s while driving to a day job. He's since joked that it was "a real mundane way of earning it."

5

He Made About $10,000 Total For The Movie That Made Him A Legend

His $10,000 paycheck for the film that changed everything
His $10,000 paycheck for the film that changed everything
Even Hamill and Fisher out-earned Ford on the first film
Even Hamill and Fisher out-earned Ford on the first film

Because he was still an unproven working actor, not a star, Ford was paid roughly $1,000 a week for the original Star Wars โ€” around $10,000 total. Compare that to the $15โ€“25 million he pocketed just to reprise Han Solo for The Force Awakens nearly four decades later.

6

Indiana Jones Was Supposed To Be Tom Selleck. A TV Contract Ruined It.

The original Indiana Jones, until Magnum P.I. got in the way
The original Indiana Jones, until Magnum P.I. got in the way
The role Ford became "second choice" for
The role Ford became "second choice" for

George Lucas and Steven Spielberg actually offered the whip and fedora to Tom Selleck first, and he wanted the part โ€” but CBS had just picked up his Magnum, P.I. pilot and wouldn't release him from the contract. Ford, who Spielberg had just watched steal scenes in The Empire Strikes Back, became the fallback who ended up defining the franchise.

7

At 84, He's Somehow More Everywhere Than Ever

Still working, still trending, still not slowing down at 84
Still working, still trending, still not slowing down at 84

Ford just picked up a lifetime achievement honor at the 2026 Actor Awards, is a real contender for his first-ever Emmy for playing a Parkinson's-diagnosed therapist on Shrinking, and still made headlines this year for a shirtless bike ride days before turning 84. He even used his own carpenter-to-superstar origin story in a 2026 commencement speech, telling grads that "passion and purpose are not the same thing."

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