Brian Krause

Actor

Birthday February 1, 1969

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace El Toro, California, United States

Age 55 years old

Nationality United States

Height 5′ 10″

#21664 Most Popular

1969

Brian Jeffrey Krause (born February 1, 1969) is an American actor.

1987

In his teens, he studied karate and attended El Toro High School, where he graduated in 1987.

He continued his education at Orange Coast College.

1989

Krause landed his first role in 1989 as a student in the TV series TV 101.

1991

He then starred in the made-for-TV-movie Match Point, the CBS Schoolbreak Special "American Eyes", and An American Summer, before landing his first major role as Richard Lestrange, Jr. in the film Return to the Blue Lagoon (1991).

1998

He is known for his role as Leo Wyatt on The WB television series Charmed (1998–2006) and for portraying the lead role of Charles Brady in the 1992 horror film Sleepwalkers.

Krause was born in El Toro, California, the son of Alice and Jeff Krause.

He has a brother named Patrick.

Krause was adopted.

He grew up in Southern California and took his first acting class at The Actors Workshop while in junior high.

He was a co-star in the Bandit series prior to his most notable role of Leo Wyatt, in The WB Network series Charmed (1998–2006).

Krause originally auditioned for the role of Andy Trudeau but was cast as Piper's handyman/whitelighter love interest.

2005

Due to budget restrictions in the eighth season (2005–06), he only appeared in the first 10 episodes and last two episodes.

After Charmed, he has appeared in made-for-TV-movies and TV shows such as Mad Men (episode 2x12 The Mountain King), The Closer (episode 4x01 Controlled Burn), and Castle (episode 3x03 Under the Gun).

2012

He lent his voice and image to portray a minor character (Clem Feeney) in the videogame L.A. Noire, and he appeared in the YouTube video series Chad Vader, in Season 4, Episode 4: "The Return of Brian" (uploaded July 10, 2012), as himself, a former employee of Empire Market.

He starred as Ben in the 2012 film Ben and Becca, directed by Victor Alferi, written and produced by Bibi Amos, who also starred as Becca.