

Scott Foley
Birthday
July 15, 1972 (52 years)
Place of Birth
Kansas City, Kansas, USA
Known For
Acting
Biography
Scott Kellerman Foley (born July 15, 1972) is an American actor and director. He is best known for his TV roles as Nick Blackburn on The Big Leap, Will Chase on Whiskey Cavalier, Henry Goodwin on the sitcom The Goodwin Games, Jake Ballard on Scandal, Patrick Devins on True Blood, Bob Brown on The Unit, Adam Sullivan on A.U.S.A., Sean Kelly on Scrubs, Noel Crane on Felicity, and a recurring role as Henry Burton on Grey's Anatomy. He wrote, produced, and directed the film Let's Kill Ward's Wife (2014). He starred in the film along with his wife, actress Marika Dominczyk and their son Keller; actor Patrick Wilson and his wife, actress Dagmara Dominczyk (Marika's older sister) and their son Kalin; actor James Carpinello and his wife, actress Amy Acker, and their daughter Ava; as well as actors Donald Faison, Greg Grunberg, Nicolette Sheridan, and Veronika Domińczyk (Marika's younger sister). He's been married to actress Marika Domińczyk since 2007 and they have 3 children. He was previously married to actress Jennifer Garner (m. 2000;div. 2004).
Scott Foley Movies & TV-shows on Netflix
Movies with Scott Foley
Scream 3
Feb 4, 2000
La Dolce Villa
Feb 12, 2025
Scream 7
Feb 25, 2026
Below
Aug 11, 2002
Naked
Aug 11, 2017
The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry
Oct 7, 2022
Let's Kill Ward's Wife
Dec 23, 2014
Rennie's Landing
Jun 15, 2001
Crowned and Dangerous
Jan 23, 1997
Firestorm: Last Stand at Yellowstone
Sep 4, 2006
Forever Love
Sep 27, 1998
Still Screaming: The Ultimate Scary Movie Retrospective
Apr 14, 2011
TV shows with Scott Foley
Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen
Jul 16, 2009
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit
Sep 20, 1999
Grey's Anatomy
Mar 27, 2005
LIVE with Kelly and Mark
Sep 5, 1988
LIVE with Kelly and Mark
Sep 5, 1988
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno
May 25, 1992
Jimmy Kimmel Live!
Jan 26, 2003
House
Nov 16, 2004
The Ellen DeGeneres Show
Sep 8, 2003
Dawson's Creek
Jan 20, 1998
Step by Step
Sep 20, 1991
Scrubs
Oct 2, 2001