Gregory Buck Kinnear (born June 17, 1963) is an American actor,
producer and television personality. He was nominated for an Academy
Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role in As Good as It Gets (1997).
Kinnear has appeared in many popular films, including Sabrina (1995), You've Got Mail (1998), Nurse Betty (2000), Someone like You (2001), We Were Soldiers, Auto Focus (both 2002), Stuck on You (2003), Robots (2005), Little Miss Sunshine, Invincible (both
2006), Green Zone, The Last Song (both
2010), Heaven Is for Real (2014), Misbehaviour (2020) and television roles, such
as Friends, Talk Soup, Modern Family, House of Cards, Rake and the
miniseries The Stand (2020).
Kinnear has portrayed John F. Kennedy in The Kennedys (2011),
and Joe Biden in Confirmation (2016).
Kinnear was born in Logansport, Indiana, to Suzanne (née Buck),
a homemaker, and Edward Kinnear, a career diplomat who worked for the US State Department. He has two older brothers, James (born 1957)
and Steven (born 1959). He is of Scottish-Irish descent. Kinnear grew up a "Foreign Service brat",
having moved around frequently, from Beirut to Athens. While a student at the American Community Schools in
Athens, Kinnear first ventured into the role of talk show host with his radio
show School Daze With Greg Kinnear. Returning to the United States for a university
education, he attended the University of Arizona,
graduating in 1985 with a degree in broadcast journalism.
While there, he was a member of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. Kinnear
hosted a short-lived game show, College Mad House, which was spun off from the kids'
show Fun House. He became
the creator, co-executive producer and host of Best of the Worst,
which aired from 1991 to 1992. In 1991, Kinnear became the first host of Talk Soup,
which he hosted until 1995, when he left the show for the NBC late-night
talk show Later with Greg Kinnear (1994).
After his film debut, Blankman, Kinnear won the part of
David Larrabee in Sydney Pollack's 1995
remake of Billy Wilder's 1954
classic Sabrina. He played the
lead role in the 1996 comedy Dear God. In 1997, he was cast in James L. Brooks' comedy-drama As Good as It Gets,
and received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. He also starred
in A Smile Like Yours with Lauren Holly, as part of a couple trying to have a baby. His
next film was the popular You've Got Mail as Kathleen's (Meg Ryan) significant other. Other films are Mystery Men, Nurse Betty, Loser, The Gift and Someone Like You.
Kinnear often alternated roles, often playing good guys like a righteous
principal in The Gift or a gay painter in As Good as
It Gets, to bad guys such as a sleazy college professor in Loser,
a womanizer in Someone Like You as well as Sabrina and
an egotistical soap opera star in Nurse Betty. In 2002 Kinnear
starred in Auto Focus about
the life and murder of actor Bob Crane. Kinnear portrayed Crane. In 2003, he starred in the
comedy Stuck On You,
with Matt Damon as a conjoined twin who pursues his dream of
becoming a Hollywood actor in spite of his joined brother's desire for a
different kind of life. In 2005, he starred in the black comedy The Matador with Pierce Brosnan and voiced Phineas T. Ratchet in the computer-animated film Robots. Kinnear
co-starred with Steve Carell in
the Oscar-winning comedy-drama Little Miss Sunshine in
2006, and with Mark Wahlberg in Invincible, based on
the true story of a bartender who tries out for the Philadelphia Eagles football
team. He also appeared in Fast Food Nation,
playing a fast food executive who discovers
secrets about his company. In 2008, he starred in Flash of Genius, a
docudrama about Robert Kearns who
invented the intermittent windshield wiper. His portrayal of then-Major Bruce P. Crandall in 2002's We Were Soldiers brought public attention to
Crandall's heroism during the 1965 Battle of Ia Drang. (On February
26, 2007, Crandall was awarded the Medal of Honor by President
Bush.) In Baby Mama Kinnear played Rob, a local smoothie shop
owner and the romantic interest of Kate (Tina Fey). In 2010, he starred as the estranged father
of Miley Cyrus' character in The Last Song. In
2011, Kinnear starred in the miniseries The Kennedys playing
the lead role as John F. Kennedy. It was
originally planned to air on the History Channel; however,
it was announced in January 2011 that the miniseries had been pulled from that
network.[7] It was subsequently picked up by ReelzChannel and then first aired on April 3, 2011.
Kinnear played a famous novelist in the Josh Boone's directorial
debut film Stuck in Love, which
followed his relationships with his former wife (Jennifer Connelly) and teenage children.