Before the white-hot glare of movie stardom often comes the slow simmer of TV. And, like Bruce Willis ("Moonlighting") and Clint Eastwood ("Rawhide"), many of the current Oscar nominees also cut their teeth on the tube:
-BEST ACTOR
Bradley Cooper ("Silver Linings Playbook"). Cooper starred as chef Jack Bourdain, based on the real-life Anthony Bourdain, in the 2005 Fox sitcom "Kitchen Confidential." It ran four episodes.
Joaquin Phoenix ("The Master"). Then known as Leaf Phoenix, he played Doug Roberts, one of several orphans living alongside seniors in a retirement home in the 1986 CBS drama "Morningstar/ Eveningstar."
Denzel Washington ("Flight"). Playing Dr. Phillip Chandler, he became an ensemble star of the 1982-86 NBC hospital drama "St. Elsewhere."
-BEST ACTRESS
Jennifer Lawrence ("Silver Linings Playbook"). In the 2007-09 TBS sitcom "The Bill Engvall Show," she played Lauren Pearson, teenage daughter of a family counselor (Engvall) and his wife (Nancy Travis).
-SUPPORTING ACTOR
Tommy Lee Jones ("Lincoln"). Like many actors, he got his screen start on a soap opera, as Dr. Mark Toland from 1971 to 1975 on ABC’s "One Life to Live."
-SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Amy Adams ("The Master"). In the 2004 CBS drama "Dr. Vegas," starring Rob Lowe and Joe Pantoliano, she played Alice Doherty until being let go in a contract dispute.
Sally Field ("Lincoln"). After "Gidget" (ABC 1965-66) and "The Flying Nun" (ABC 1967-70), she starred with John Davidson as a wife who could read minds in "The Girl with Something Extra" (NBC 1973-74).
Anne Hathaway ("Les Misirables"). Still in high school, she played the sister of Eric Christian Olsen and Jesse Eisenberg in Fox’s 1999-2000 family comedy-drama "Get Real."
Helen Hunt ("The Sessions"). Everyone knows her from "Mad About You," but a year earlier, she co-starred as a wife in 2035 whose retired-journalist husband reflects on "My Life and Times" (ABC, 1991).
-AND …
Ben Affleck Although he’s not nominated in an acting or directing role, his "Argo" is the best picture front-runner. He co-starred in NBC’s 1993 "Against the Grain," the first attempt at a TV series based on "Friday Night Lights."Before the movies, these Oscar nominees were on TV