Before this hottie landed his role as Dan on Hellcats, he was on Friday Night Lights, One Tree Hill and Harper's Island. Matt Barr takes Uinterview user questions here.

Leave a comment

Read more about:

Q: You had a little dancing incident with ['Hellcats' co-star] Ashley Tisdale. What happened? - Alex Murry

It’s funny, it’s always the simplest things when accidents happen. We were doing a spin, and I kind of spun her left, and she was trying to spin right, and somehow I accidentally punched her in the face. We had to go to the ER, and kind of fractured something, but all is well…

Q: Will she talk to you again? - Alex Murry

It’s funny; she was bitter at me for maybe 48 hours, and then she came back and gave me a hug. Sort of like, “I’m ok now.”

Q: What's it like working with Ashley on the show? Do you have any experiences with her or memories that stand out for you? - jeff

She’s — well I don’t know where to begin. Her energy is so high. She’s a big prankster. She’ll play jokes on me, and I’ll play jokes on her. It keeps the set really fun and really light, and I like working in that environment. We’ll do some things involving food. We’ll leave food in each other’s trailer. Also she’ll make up stories about what the press are saying. Things that are written about me. She’ll talk about me having my shirt off, because I’m always working out on set for fun, and so she’ll call me Matt McConaughey, cause I’ll do push-ups during lunch, and stuff like that.

Q: What kind of pranks has she pulled on you? - Uinterview User

Ha! Well, we’ll do some things involving food. We’ll leave food in each other’s trailer. Also she’ll make up stories about what the press are saying. Things that are written about me. She’ll talk about me having my shirt off, because I’m always working out on set for fun, and so she’ll call me Matt McConaughey, cause I’ll do push-ups during lunch, and stuff like that.

Q: You’ve gotten a lot of attention from TMZ. Do you like to work out without your shirt on? - sarah

If the sun is shining. Yeah. You take your shirt off. Growing up, all summer I think all I wore was a bathing suit. I could live life in flip-flops and shorts. In fact I prefer it. So I like to be naked, what can I say?

Q: Do you have a regular work out regimen? - jeff

Yeah I do. I run every morning, and do weights a few times a week. It’s just fun. I don’t have any goals or anything. I just like being physical.

Q: Are you really like Dan, your character? - Sandy

I think I am. Maybe it’s because we’re both from the South, but Dan’s sort of a no BS kind of guy, and that’s just how I was raised. Getting right to the point. Not playing games with people. Dan’s really brutally honest, and I find myself acting like that sometimes. That’s sort of a good news/bad news thing, because it can get you in trouble sometimes — when you say exactly what’s on your mind. But I think there’s sort of an authenticity in Dan that I see in myself.

Q: How did you grow up and get into acting? - samantha

Well, my family wasn’t involved in that world at all. My dad was a football coach, and my mom was a portrait artist. I think I came out of the womb wanting to act. I guess being a kid, I always wanted to be everything. I wanted to be an astronaut/ninja/fireman, so I guess I just discovered at a young age that, by becoming an actor, I could live all those fantasies. And I've just loved it ever since.

Q: When did you get into acting and move to L.A.? - SHARON

I started doing theater at 6 or 7, till I graduated high school. Then I did a movie called 'Levelland' in Austin, Texas, and packed my Jeep up and went out to L.A. I was about 18. I skipped out on college and thought, I’m just going to go for this. Never looked back.

Q: Your character in Hellcats is a step up, or at least less controversial, than previous roles. What did you think about playing more of a normal guy instead of a psychopath? - SHARON

Well my mom and my grandma like it a lot more. They can actually watch it. But there’s something more fun about playing the more trivial guys. You can really step outside yourself, and it’s a challenge and it’s scary. I have a lot of fun playing the crazy psychos. I hope I get a chance to play those more often. But it’s also fun getting a chance to play a guy who’s closer to yourself, and the fans can sort of relate to. And when they come up to me on the street they don’t give me bad looks like, “Are you going to kill me?”

Q: When you’re done with the season what’s next for you? - Uinterview User

Oof, we’ve just been so tied up with 'Hellcats' lately, but I’m producing a movie called '12 Muddy Orphans.' It’s about an orphanage during the Great Depression, and this football team that’s created there. True story. These orphans went on to inspire the nation by going all the way to the state championship. Its one of those extraordinary, 'Seabiscuit'-type, great underdog stories. It’s everything I love about movies.