Brian Van Holt


Actor

About

Birth Place
Waukegan, Illinois, USA
Born
July 06, 1969

Biography

A striking surfer boy, Brian Van Holt moved from modeling to small roles in "A Very Brady Sequel" (1996) and a slew of television shows, including "Sex and the City" (HBO, 1998-2004) and a starring turn in the short-lived sitcom "Love & Money" (CBS, 1999-2000). Although he made the occasional foray into comedy, including "Whipped" (2000) with then-girlfriend Amanda Peet, and into horror,...

Family & Companions

Amanda Peet
Companion
Actor. Appeared together in "Whipped" (2000); separated as of late 2001.

Biography

A striking surfer boy, Brian Van Holt moved from modeling to small roles in "A Very Brady Sequel" (1996) and a slew of television shows, including "Sex and the City" (HBO, 1998-2004) and a starring turn in the short-lived sitcom "Love & Money" (CBS, 1999-2000). Although he made the occasional foray into comedy, including "Whipped" (2000) with then-girlfriend Amanda Peet, and into horror, including the Paris Hilton vehicle "House of Wax" (2005), he was mostly cast as soldiers or cops in films such as "Black Hawk Down" (2001), "Windtalkers" (2002), "Basic" (2003) and "S.W.A.T." (2003). After an acclaimed turn as Butchie Yost, a heroin-addicted surfer haunted by his own personal demons on "John from Cincinnati" (HBO, 2007), Van Holt won the role of goofy good ole' boy Bobby Cobb, the delightfully dimwitted ex-husband of Jules (Courteney Cox) on "Cougar Town" (ABC, 2009-12; TBS, 2013-15). Effortlessly stealing scenes but also supplying much of the show's heart, Van Holt's profile enjoyed a subsequent substantial boost. Talented and handsome, Brian Van Holt may have proved massively charming as less-than-brilliant characters, but he grounded all his performances with an impressive humanity.

Born July 6, 1969 in Waukegan, IL, Brian Van Holt was raised in California and grew to embody the surfer boy ideal. Discovered at an Orange County strip mall, Van Holt entered and won a sportswear-modeling contest, earning a contract. He put himself through UCLA thanks to modeling work and began to amass small credits, including guest spots on "Flipper" (syndicated, 1995-2000), "Beverly Hills, 90210" (Fox, 1990-2000) and in the big screen comedy "A Very Brady Sequel" (1996). Working steadily, Van Holt booked jobs on "Spin City" (ABC, 1996-2002), "Homicide: Life on the Street" (NBC, 1993-99) and "Sex and the City" (HBO, 1998-2004), where he played a movie star who adds Charlotte (Kristin Davis) to his entourage. He replaced Dash Mihok as the romantic male lead of the rich girl/poor boy sitcom "Love & Money" (CBS, 1999-2000) and shot a small role in the mean-spirited, battle-of-the-sexes comedy "Whipped" (2000), which starred his then-girlfriend Amanda Peet.

A series of action-heavy roles as soldiers or similarly tough guys followed, with Van Holt appearing in "Black Hawk Down" (2001), "Windtalkers" (2002), "Basic" (2003) and "S.W.A.T." (2003). He flexed his comedic muscles in the Tommy Lee Jones sorority comedy "Man of the House" (2005) and then did double duty as a pair of murderous twins in the Paris Hilton-starring horror flick "House of Wax" (2005). Van Holt played another military operative in the sci-fi series "Threshold" (CBS, 2005-06), but earned his best reviews to date as the heroin-addicted, tormented professional surfer Butchie Yost on the mystical-tinged drama "John from Cincinnati" (HBO, 2007). Riding high, Van Holt booked another flurry of guest spots, including episodes of "Sons of Anarchy" (FX, 2008-15), "Entourage" (HBO, 2004-11), "CSI: Miami" (CBS, 2002-12) and "Burn Notice" (USA Network, 2007-13).

His profile hit a peak when he was cast as Bobby Cobb, the quasi-homeless, good ole' boy ex-husband of Jules (Courteney Cox) on "Cougar Town" (ABC, 2009-12; TBS, 2013-15). Although the premise of the series involved Jules's return to dating after divorcing the unfaithful Bobby, Van Holt's charm helped make his character a lovable and vital addition to the show's "Cul-de-sac Crew," and he managed to nail both the comedy and drama of his sweet-but-stupid character's relationship with his gawky son Travis (Dan Byrd). Grounding his goofiness in an unexpected amount of heart, Van Holt proved enormously charming. While "Cougar Town" took a lengthy hiatus as the show moved from ABC to TBS, Van Holt co-starred in the Sylvester Stallone action flick "Bullet To The Head" (2012). Between seasons of "Cougar Town," Van Holt played a considerably more sinister character in the dark procedural drama "The Bridge" (FX 2013-14). In September 2014, it was announced that Van Holt's character was going to be written out of "Cougar Town" early in the show's final season.

Life Events

1996

Debuted on TV in an episode of "Flipper" (syndicated)

1996

Had a small role in "A Very Brady Sequel"

1999

Guest starred on an episode of HBO's "Sex in the City"

1999

Replaced Dash Mihok as the lead in the CBS sitcom, "Love & Money"

2000

Made major film debut, opposite Amanda Peet, in the romantic comedy, "Whipped"

2001

Starred opposite Josh Hartnett in Ridley Scott's "Black Hawk Down"

2002

Played a young U.S. Marine officer assigned to protect a Navajo code-talker in John Woo's "Windtalkers"

2003

Co-starred with Colin Farrell and Samuel L. Jackson in "S.W.A.T."

2003

Teamed with Edward Burns to swindle money from Dustin Hoffman in "Confidence"

2003

Starred in director John McTiernan's military-thriller, "Basic"

2005

Cast as paramilitary operative Sean Cavennaugh in the short-lived CBS drama, "Threshold"

2005

Starred opposite Tommy Lee Jones in the Stephen Herek directed, "Man of the House"

2005

Portrayed the dual roles of Bo and Vincent in the horror film, "House of Wax"

2007

Cast in David Milch's HBO series, "John from Cincinnati," as Butchie Yost, son of surfing legend Mitch Yost

2008

Had a small role, as an actor-playing a firefighter, in the Fifth Season of HBO's "Entourage"

2009

Cast as Bobby in the ABC comedy, "Cougar Town"

Companions

Amanda Peet
Companion
Actor. Appeared together in "Whipped" (2000); separated as of late 2001.

Bibliography