BEVERLY HILLS, California 鈥 Scott Foley knew he wanted to be an actor all his life. But he spent part of his teens ruining his chances.
His mother died when he was 15, and he dropped out of school and drifted. 鈥淲hen you lose a parent at a formative age like your teens, you鈥檙e acting out anyway, but when that happens, there鈥檚 anger and confusion,鈥 he says in a sunlit hotel room. 鈥淚 remember drinking. I got arrested once for possession of alcohol.鈥
But rescue arrived from an unexpected source. 鈥淥ne of my friends鈥 father and mother pulled me aside after a couple months of me drifting around, and they said, 鈥榃hat are you doing?鈥 I said, 鈥榃hat do you mean? I鈥檓 not going to school. I鈥檓 going to figure it out.鈥
鈥淭hey said, 鈥楧on鈥檛 be an idiot. You鈥檙e going to come live with us. You鈥檙e going to go to high school, and we鈥檒l take care of you.鈥 I think when these friends of mine said, 鈥榃e鈥檒l take care of you鈥 that showed me a compassion I鈥檇 never known before.鈥
Though they already had four children, they became Foley鈥檚 legal guardians and through them, he graduated. 鈥淚 was very fortunate,鈥 he nods.
Though he has travelled a bumpy road to be an actor, Foley is starring in one of his best roles yet. He鈥檚 portraying the real-life Green Beret surgeon, Jeffrey MacDonald, who was convicted of murdering his pregnant wife and two children in Final Vision. Viewers also know Foley from his role as the naval consort on Scandal, which returns to ABC on Jan. 18, and as the hunky leading man on Felicity.
Foley was 18 when he hauled off for Los Angeles to become an actor. 鈥淣ot knowing anybody, and not knowing anything about Los Angeles,鈥 he says. He says he gradually acclimated. 鈥淵ou meet one person. You find one job, and they introduce you to someone else, and you say you鈥檙e an actor 鈥 and everybody鈥檚 an actor out here 鈥 and they say, 鈥榃ell, I know an agent鈥 or 鈥業 know an acting class.鈥 You get in an acting class with other actors and you network.鈥
It sounds easy. But it took Foley six years to land a paying job as an actor. His first role was on Sweet Valley High, and he rode the bus to the audition because he didn鈥檛 have a car for several years.
鈥淚 made 230 bucks for that episode and quit my job waiting tables and thought, 鈥楾his is it!鈥 Little did I know it鈥檇 be another four years before I got another acting job.鈥
He landed a job selling insurance and was able to walk to work. Chuckling, he says, 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know a thing about selling insurance. But those are the days that give you the character and the fortitude to really decide is this what I want to do? Because you really gotta stick it out.鈥
At one point he decided not to stick it out. 鈥淐hristmas was coming up, and a relative I鈥檇 never met sent me a cheque for Christmas, $2,500. This was 1992 and I think I had $20 to my name. I thought, $2,500 that鈥檚 amazing! So I packed up all my stuff and bought a ticket to the Virgin Islands to St. John and was going to go live the island life. I was going to tend bar or do something but live on an island. It鈥檚 always been a dream of mine.鈥
He planned to camp on the beach until he found a job. But when he arrived, the campsites were full and he blew half of the $400 he had left for a hotel room for one night. He was forced to bivouac in the National Park, which was illegal. And the donkeys that had once served the now-defunct sugar plantations ate the strings to his tent, so it would no longer stand.
In desperation, he phoned his father. I said, 鈥楧ad, I鈥檓 homeless. I鈥檓 in St. John. I鈥檒l do whatever you want. I鈥檒l come back to St. Louis, I鈥檒l go to college.鈥 He said, 鈥楢re you kidding me? You鈥檙e not coming home, go back to L.A. I鈥檒l buy you a ticket.鈥 So I went back to L.A. And it鈥檚 the best thing he ever did for me. That鈥檚 the only time I wanted to quit.鈥
Foley has been married to his second wife, actress Marika Dominczyk (his first wife was actress Jennifer Garner) for 10 years.