A-Z Movies Database

Bradley Cooper Biography

Bradley Cooper Navigation

Biography

Trained at the renowned Actors Studio but seasoned in the irreverent comic stylings of New Yorks STELLA comedy troupe, Bradley Coopers career progressed from TV guest spots to memorable comedic support in features in a relatively short amount of time. He fearlessly made his first major big screen impression as an unlikable (if handsome) groom in Wedding Crashers (2005) but regained audiences affection in Failure to Launch (2006) before ensuring his own launch with a string of four high-profile co-starring roles in 2008, including All About Steve with Sandra Bullock and Yes Man with Jim Carrey.

Born Jan. 5, 1975 in Philadelphia, PA, Cooper was inspired to pursue acting after watching John Hurt play the title role in David Lynchs The Elephant Man (1980) a role Cooper would later tackle for his thesis performance at the Actors Studio Drama School. After graduating from Georgetown University in 1997 with a degree in English, he relocated to New York City and enrolled in the Master of Fine Arts program at the Actors Studio at New School University. While still a student, Cooper made his television debut on a 1999 episode of Sex and the City (HBO, 1998-2004) and snared a hosting gig on the Travel Channel series, Treks in a Wild World (2000). Sex and the City creator Darren Star remembered Coopers work and cast him in the financial drama, The $treet (Fox, 2000-01) which lasted only 12 episodes. But the actor was not unemployed for long, taking part in the cult comedy Wet Hot American Summer (2001) and appearing with the films creative team, comedy troupe STELLA, in a series of short films released on DVD as Stella Shorts: 1998-2002.

Roles in several independent films followed, including the unsettling horror film My Little Eye (2002) and the unreleased Carnival Knowledge, as well as likable turns in TV movies, The Last Cowboy (2003) opposite $treet co-star Jennie Garth and I Want to Marry Ryan Banks (ABC, 2004), a romantic comedy with Jason Priestly that spoofed reality television shows. Coopers first high-profile gig was playing reporter Will Tippin in the first two seasons of Alias (ABC, 2001-06). He left the show in 2003 and stepped into recurring roles on Touching Evil (USA, 2004), Jack and Bobby (WB, 2004-05), and a two-part Law and Order story that carried over from Special Victims Unit (NBC, 1999- ) to Trial By Jury (NBC, 2005).

In 2005, Cooper landed his biggest feature role to date in the raunchy summer smash Wedding Crashers. Cast as Rachel McAdams obsequious, cheating fiancée, Cooper showcased both his comedic and dramatic skills in a single role, sometimes even stealing scenes from his gifted co-stars, Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson. After this knockout role, his talent was not overlooked by the industry. Cooper was soon cast as the lead in Foxs Kitchen Confidential (2005), a sitcom based on Chef Anthony Bourdains best-selling tell-all novel. Despite his charming presence and a fine supporting cast, the show floundered and was cancelled after 13 episodes. Cooper rebounded with another amusing turn as one of Matthew McConaugheys eccentric friends in the hit romantic comedy Failure to Launch (2006), where many critics singled out Coopers performance in otherwise lukewarm reviews. Jumping from screen to stage in early 2006, Cooper appeared on Broadway alongside Paul Rudd and Julia Roberts, in the actresss much publicized and sold out Broadway debut "Three Days of Rain."

The steadily working actor ramped up his visibility in 2008, beginning with a recurring role on the FX series Nip/Tuck (2003- ). His starring role in an adaptation of Clive Barkers thriller The Midnight Meat Train only made it to DVD, but Yes Man (2008), in which he co-starred as the best friend of an agreeable Jim Carrey, debuted at number one at the box office. Cooper kicked off a lucrative 2009 with a role as a husband with a wandering eye in the ensemble comedy Hes Just Not That Into You (2009) amidst rumors he was dating co-star Jennifer Aniston off-screen but that film was quickly eclipsed by the monster summer hit, The Hangover (2009). Cooper shared the lead with Ed Helms and Zach Galifianakis in the buddy comedy about bachelor partygoers trying to piece together the events of a drunken blackout gone wild, and aside from a strong box office take, it earned excellent critical reviews. Cooper stayed in the public eye with his follow-up All About Steve (2009), starring as a cameraman overzealously pursued by a woman (Sandra Bullock) after just one blind date. He rounded out his breakout year with a role in the ensemble New York, I Love You (2009).

Copyright © Baseline 2009.



A-Z Movies Database