Holly Marie Combs


Holly Marie Combs Ryan is an American actress. She gained recognition for playing Kimberly Brock in the CBS series Picket Fences and had her first leading film role in the slasher Dr. Giggles. The former earned her a Young Artist Award and a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination.
Her breakthrough came with the leading role of Piper Halliwell in the WB fantasy drama series Charmed, which introduced her to a wider audience. After appearing in a number of television films, she returned to attention with the role of Ella Montgomery in the Freeform drama thriller series Pretty Little Liars. Her other projects include a 2015 Great American Country travel documentary series with Charmed costar Shannen Doherty, and a podcast titled House of Halliwell.

Early life

Combs was born in San Diego, California, and is of Irish descent. At the time of her birth, her mother, Lauralei Combs was 15 years old, and her father was 17. Combs' biological parents married, but the two split up after two years, feeling they were too young to make a marriage work.
While Combs was learning to walk, she fell and hit her head on a marble table, resulting in a noticeable 'split' at the top of her right eyebrow. She lived in many different homes with her mother, near the beach in San Diego, often having very little privacy, while her mother attempted to pursue an acting career. When Combs was seven, she and her mother moved to New York City where she spent most of her growing years. Combs was 12 when her mother married her stepfather. In New York City, Combs attended Beekman Hill Elementary and then the Professional Children's School. In an interview when she was in Sydney, Australia, for Supanova Expo, she said that she was a certified scuba diver at 13.

Career

1985–1992: Career beginnings

When she was 14 years old, Combs landed her first major role in Sweet Hearts Dance, a comedy drama film directed by Robert Greenwald. She played Debs Boon, the daughter of Wiley Boon and Sandra Boon. Her next major role was in Oliver Stone's Born on the Fourth of July, a film adaptation of the best selling autobiography of the same name by Vietnam War veteran Ron Kovic. Combs portrayed Jenny in the film, which also starred Tom Cruise. Her other roles included Helena in the 1989 anthology film New York Stories, and Kim Fields in Hal Hartley's Simple Men. Also in 1992, Combs made an appearance in Temístocles López's Chain of Desire as Diana, and in the slasher film Dr. Giggles, in which she played Jennifer Campbell, the 19-year-old daughter of Tom Campbell and girlfriend of Max Anderson.

1993–2000: Breakthrough to stardom with ''Picket Fences'' and ''Charmed''

Combs's first major breakthrough as an actress came at the age of 18, in the CBS television series Picket Fences. She portrayed Kimberly Brock, the daughter of Sheriff Jimmy Brock and his first wife Lydia for the show's four seasons. Jimmy's second wife, Dr. Jill Brock, was her character's stepmother. Combs auditioned for the role in New York. The casting director told her that she wasn't right for the part because she "didn't have a big enough heart." Combs retorted, "If you're looking for someone with a big heart, what the hell are you doing in New York?" She was later called back and offered the job. Combs won a Young Artist Award for her performance on the show. During 1996, Combs starred as Sophie DiMatteo in Sins of Silence, a drama/horror television film directed by Sam Pillsbury. The following year, Combs portrayed real-life convicted murderer Diane Zamora in the television film Love's Deadly Triangle: The Texas Cadet Murder, and appeared in the fact-based drama film Daughters as Alex Morell, one of the two daughters of a murdered heiress.
In 1998, Combs landed a lead role in The WB television series Charmed, in which she portrayed Piper Halliwell, the middle of three sisters who are witches. Following Shannen Doherty's departure after season three, Combs's character became the eldest sister for the remaining five seasons of the show. Combs also became a producer for Charmed from season five onwards. The series ended its eight-season run on May 21, 2006. In 2007 and 2008, AOL named Combs's character Piper the third-greatest witch in television history. Combs was the only cast member to appear in every episode of the series, including the original unaired pilot.

2001–2009: Career expansion

During Charmed, Combs made an uncredited cameo appearance in Steven Soderbergh's Ocean's Eleven, and starred opposite Charisma Carpenter in the romantic comedy film See Jane Date, portraying the role of "a struggling actress whose career benefits from an affair with an A-list actor." In 2007, she starred in the Lifetime television film Point of Entry as Kathy Alden, a wife and mother of a single child whose family moves to a "beautiful and supposedly secure gated community after she's the victim of a violent house break-in." The following year, Combs signed a contract with Lifetime to produce and star in a series Mistresses, based on the British series of the same name. However, that version of the show never made it to air.

2010–present: ''Pretty Little Liars'' and beyond

In 2010, Combs was cast in the Freeform series Pretty Little Liars as Ella Montgomery, the mother of one of the main characters, Aria Montgomery. Combs was a series regular for the first three seasons, but became credited as a special guest star from season four onwards. Pretty Little Liars ended after seven seasons, and Combs returned for the show's final episode on June 27, 2017.
Combs and Doherty starred in their own road trip reality show Off the Map with Shannen & Holly, which premiered on Great American Country on January 2, 2015. The six-episode series followed the pair traveling across southeastern United States, with stops in Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia and Florida. Viewers were able to vote on activities Doherty and Combs would partake in at each destination on Great American Country's official website. In January 2016, Combs starred in the Hallmark Channel television film Love's Complicated, playing the lead role of Leah Townsend, a big city novel writer and senator's daughter who is "known for being a people pleaser."

Personal life

In 1993, Combs married actor Bryan Travis Smith; they divorced in 1997.
On February 14, 2004, she married her long time boyfriend and the former Charmed key-grip David Donoho. They have three sons together. In November 2011, she filed for divorce from Donoho, citing irreconcilable differences.
In 2016, Combs began dating restaurateur Mike Ryan. On September 3, 2017, Combs announced their engagement. On September 7, 2019, it was reported that they married in Carmel, California. Through this marriage, Combs has one stepdaughter.

Filmography

Film

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1990Guiding LightLouisa Young2 episodes
1991–1994As the World TurnsDenise Jones5 episodes
1992–1996Picket FencesKimberly BrockMain role
1994A Perfect StrangerAmanda HaleTelevision movie
1994Island CityErin SloanTelevision movie
1996Sins of SilenceSophie DiMatteoTelevision movie
1997Love's Deadly Triangle: The Texas Cadet MurderDiane ZamoraTelevision movie
1997Our Mother's MurderAlex MorellTelevision movie
1997RelativityAnne PryceEpisode: "Billable Hours"
1998–2006CharmedPiper HalliwellLead role 179 episodes
Producer
2003See Jane DateNatasha NutleyTelevision movie
2007Panic Button Katherine AldenTelevision movie
2010–2017Pretty Little LiarsElla MontgomeryMain cast
Special guest star
2016Love's ComplicatedLeah TownsendTelevision movie
2019Grey's AnatomyHeidi PetersonEpisode: "Reunited"

Reality TV Shows

Internet

Producer

YearTitleRoleNotes
2002–06CharmedProducer90 episodes
2008Zack's LifeExecutive producer
2009MistressesCo-producerTelevision film
2011Summer of LoveExecutive producer
2012"Naked in Venice"ProducerMusic video by Radical Something
2014"You Feel Amazing"ProducerMusic video by Radical Something
2014"Pure"ProducerMusic video by Radical Something
2015Off the Map with Shannen & HollyExecutive producerEpisode: "Kentucky Bourbon & Broncos"
2016Why Just One?Associate producerDocumentary
2018Sharkwater ExtinctionProducerDocumentary

Awards and nominations