The path to fame is rarely smooth. There are the embarrassing acting gigs, the appearances on gameshows and adverts for deeply unglamorous products.
For Bafta-winner and popular CBeebies Bedtime Stories narrator Tom Hardy, there was a pre-millennium rapping incident.
Hardy hasn't been shy about his urban music exploits. In 2011 he told the BBC about them, saying he started when he was 14, but struggled to gain much attention "Because I come from a nice middle-class neighbourhood... And I wasn't very good."
Hardy did, however, have some relatively fancy rap connections: "I used to be with the guy who managed Leela James and Lauren Hill, Pras, the Fugees and all that," he said. "I worked out with (Grammy winning producers) Warren Riker and Gordon Williams."
He even made a promise that, for the past seven years, many have hoped would come good: "I've recorded loads of stuff but it's never been released. I've got albums, man."