Hugh Jackman Tells New Grads the Most 'Painful Lesson' He's Learned
Hugh Jackman has had a packed schedule lately — headlining a new Off-Broadway production, filming an upcoming mystery-comedy called The Sheep Detectives — but the X-Men star made time to deliver a commencement address at Ball State University, offering graduating students something rarer than career advice: an honest account of his own stumbles.
"I could cherry-pick stories that illustrate that with strong goal-setting, hard work, and a touch of luck, you too will reach the top," Jackman told the crowd. "But I'm here to tell you that life just doesn't work out like that."
Jackman's own path was anything but linear. He coasted through college doing the bare minimum — and didn't walk into his theater appreciation elective until the fourth week of the semester. That late arrival changed everything. He was cast as the lead in a class production and fell instantly in love with acting. From there, he chased the craft wherever it led: plays, musicals, even a brief flirtation with modeling that ended with a blunt verdict from an agency head: the camera didn't love him, and he should move on.
"That comment stuck with me long into my film career," he admitted. "It made me feel like I didn't belong for a long time. So just be careful what you let in."
After graduation, a seemingly impossible chain of events — a dropped classmate, a grandmother's inheritance arriving at exactly the right moment — landed him a spot at the Actors Centre Australia. He never missed a class.
The heart of his speech, though, was about instinct. He described accepting a role his gut told him to refuse, and passing on another he later deeply regretted — two missteps that taught him the same lesson. "I learned a painful lesson in listening to that voice inside," he said. When that second role resurfaced as a Broadway opportunity, he said yes immediately, ignoring the skeptics around him. The result was a Tony Award for The Boy From Oz.
Jackman closed by urging graduates to let go of the pressure of a perfect plan. "A lot of the best things that have ever happened to me have been mistakes, or failures, or random classes I joined just to get me across the finish line," he said. "Throw away perfect. Our minds want a plan — but if we're listening, if we open our hearts, that voice inside is trying to show us something a little more magical, a little more mysterious, and surprising."
