Tate Donovan

A handsome player in both film and television, actor Tate Donovan first gained wide notice for his portrayal of the charismatic, yet self-centered co-pilot in the ensemble period drama "Memphis Belle" (1990) – but it was for his work on the small screen which Donovan was best known. Among the actor’s most notable television works were his Cable ACE-nominated performance in the HBO series, "Vietnam War Story" (1988) and his starring turn in the well-received, but ratings-challenged sitcom “Partners” (Fox, 1995-96) opposite Jon Cryer. For the most part, however, Donovan enjoyed a successful, if somewhat low-key career. Almost equally as popular for the female company he kept off-camera, as he was for any roles he played on-screen, Donovan’s romantic attachments included such A-List beauties as Sandra Bullock, Jennifer Aniston and Lauren Graham.

The youngest of seven children born to surgeon J. Timothy Donovan, and his wife, Eileen McCallister, Tate Buckley Donovan arrived on Sept. 25, 1963. A native of New York City, NY, Donovan was raised in Tenafly, NJ, where he attended public high school. An actor since his teens, Donovan attended the University of Southern California to study theatre in the early-1980s. It was there that he met fellow actor and future lifelong friend, George Clooney. Donovan made his big-screen debut right out of college with a small role in the 1984 comedy “No Small Affair,” starring Jon Cryer and Demi Moore, followed by the substantial role of Kevin Donaldson, the cocky older camp vet in the sophomoric sci-fi adventure, "SpaceCamp" (1986). Two years later, Donovan turned heads with his gripping portrayal of a recovering drug addict in director Glenn Gordon Caron’s "Clean and Sober" (1988), starring Michael Keaton. This led to Donovan landing a solid supporting role opposite Don Johnson in “Dead Bang” (1989), a competent, if uninspired action-thriller directed by the late John Frankenheimer.

Continuing to enjoy steady employment well into the next decade, Donovan shined brightly in his co-starring roles as WWII bomber pilot Lieutenant Luke Sinclair in “Memphis Belle,” a B.A.F.T.A.-nominated war drama directed by Michael Caton-Jones. Though “Memphis Belle” failed to live up to studio expectations, the film helped Donovan seize his first leading role in the charming, but minor "Love Potion No. 9" (1992). Donovan next appeared in three independent art-house features: "Inside Monkey Zetterland" (1992), "Ethan Frome"(1993) and director Alan Rudolph's "Equinox" (1993), before following up with a role in the Disney family comedy, "Holy Matrimony" (1994).

In the mid-1990s, Donovan reunited with former co-star Jon Cryer to headline the delightfully funny, but tragically short-lived sitcom, “Partners” (Fox, 1995-96). A bigger hit with critics than with viewers, “Partners” was unfortunately canned after only 22 episodes. In 1997, Donovan returned to Disney for his highest profile effort at that point, providing the adult voice for the title character in the animated feature, "Hercules.” That same year, Donovan returned to TV, joining his "Memphis Belle" co-stars Eric Stoltz and Reed Diamond to play three troubled brothers in a memorable episode of "Homicide: Life on the Street" (NBC, 1993-99), while simultaneously juggling a recurring role as a client-turned- potential love interest for Calista Flockhart's titular lawyer on "Ally McBeal" (Fox, 1997-2002). Switching back and forth between networks, Donovan also won a recurring role as the love interest of his then-real life girlfriend, Jennifer Aniston, on her smash hit series "Friends" (NBC, 1994-2004).

Donovan's career went through a slight cooling period with the dawn of the new millennium. During the early 2000s, the actor appeared in a string of experimental short films – such as 2000’s one-joke pony, "Jesus and Hutch," in which he played the Son of God as a 1970's-style crime fighter – and leading parts in low-rent films such as Christopher Coppola's "G-Men from Hell" (2000). Even so, Donovan wisely kept one foot in the mainstream, taking small supporting roles in more commercial fare like the techno-thriller "Swordfish" (2001). Two years later, Donovan returned to series television to take a supporting role in the short-lived political drama, "Mister Sterling" (NBC, 2003-04). Fortunately for this veteran of cancelled series and almost-hits, a hit proved just around the corner. In 2003, Donovan courted a hip, young audience on his first bona fide hit series when he took on the role of Jimmy Cooper, the Newport Beach-based dysfunctional dad of heroine Marissa (Mischa Barton), on "The O.C.” (Fox, 2003-07). During his three season tenure on the hit drama, Tate even found time to direct a few episodes.

Donovan’s newfound popularity also resulted in higher-profile film roles, including playing the late father of the brood Vin Diesel must protect in the Disney comedy "The Pacifier" (2005). Growing progressively more comfortable playing mature, but hip patriarch roles, Donovan eased into his next role as Carson Drew, the father of America’s favorite teen detective in the eponymous “Nancy Drew” (2007), starring Emma Roberts.

  • Also Credited As:
    Tate Buckley Donovan
  • Born:
    Tate Buckley Donovan on September 25, 1963 in New York, New York
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Still photographer, Musician
Family
  • Father: J Timothy Donovan.
  • Mother: Eileen Donovan.
Significant Others
  • Companion: Lauren Graham. Met in 2002, when they appeared together in the play "Once in a Lifetime"; no longer together
  • Companion: Plum Sykes. Dated in 2000; no longer together
  • Companion: Whitney Allen. Dated in 2001; no longer together
  • Wife: Corinne Kingsbury. Married on a Malibu, CA beach in 2005; separated in early 2008
  • Companion: Jennifer Aniston. together from November 1995; separated in April 1998
  • Companion: Sandra Bullock. met while co-starring in "Love Potion No. 9"; together four years, no longer together
Education
  • University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, theater
Milestones
  • 1984 Feature acting debut, "No Small Affair" opposite Jon Cryer
  • 1985 TV-movie debut, "Not My Kid" (CBS)
  • 1986 Episodic TV debut, "Magnum, P.I."
  • 1988 Worked as a still photographer on two wildlife documentaries for "Mutual of Omaha's Spirit of Adventure"
  • 1990 First film in a featured role, "Memphis Belle"
  • 1992 Had first leading role in "Love Potion No. 9"
  • 1994 Broadway debut in the Roundabout revival of "Picnic"; played opposite Ashley Judd
  • 1995 Starred in the Fox sitcom "Partners" with Cryer
  • 1996 Had memorable guest role on "Homicide: Life on the Street" (NBC) as the brother of Det. Kellerman (Reed Diamond)
  • 1997 Provided the voice for Disney's animated feature "Hercules"; also voiced the character for the ABC animated TV spin-off, "Hercules: The Wonder Boy Years"
  • 1998 Played the boyfriend of Jennifer Aniston's character in a few episodes of the NBC sitcom "Friends"
  • 1998 Returned to series TV playing a priest in an Irish Catholic family in "Trinity" (NBC)
  • 1999 Had featured role in the Broadway production of "Amy's View" starring Judi Dench
  • 2001 Appeared in the Off-Broadway production of "Lobby Hero"
  • 2003 Portrayed Jimmy Cooper on the Fox teen drama "The O.C."
  • 2005 Starred in the George Clooney-directed “Goodnight, and Good Luck,” a 1950s-era drama that chronicles broadcaster Edward R. Murrow’s campaign to bring down Senator Joseph McCarthy
  • 2007 Cast as the title character's father in the big-screen adaptation of "Nancy Drew"
  • 2007 Cast in the FX legal drama, "Damages" as Tom Shayes, a partner at the firm of Glenn Close's character, Patty Hewes
  • Raised in Tenafly, New Jersey

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