Relationships and children Quaid has been married four times and has three children. He met his first wife, actress
P. J. Soles, on the set of the film
Our Winning Season. They were married in 1978 and divorced in 1983. On February 14, 1991, Quaid married actress
Meg Ryan. Quaid and Ryan fell in love during the shooting of their second film together,
D.O.A. They have a son,
Jack Quaid (born 1992). Quaid and Ryan announced their separation on June 28, 2000, saying they had been separated six weeks by then. Quaid dated model
Shanna Moakler from February to October 2001. Quaid married
Texas real estate agent Kimberly Buffington on July 4, 2004, at his ranch in
Paradise Valley, Montana. The babies recovered, but Quaid filed a lawsuit against the drug manufacturer,
Baxter Healthcare, claiming that packaging for the two doses of heparin are not different enough. In May 2008, the Quaids testified before the
United States House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, asking the
U.S. Congress not to
preempt the right to sue drug manufacturers for
negligence under state law. The incident led Quaid to become a patient-safety advocate, producing a series of documentaries on preventable medical errors that aired on the
Discovery Channel, as well as co-authoring a medical-journal article addressing the positive influence of patient stories in motivating change in healthcare. The first documentary,
Chasing Zero: Winning the War on Healthcare Harm, aired on the
Discovery Channel in 2010, Buffington filed for divorce from Quaid in March 2012. Buffington's attorney then withdrew the divorce papers on April 26, 2012. That summer, Quaid and Buffington moved to California. In October 2012, he and Buffington again decided to separate, and Buffington filed for legal separation, seeking joint legal and sole physical custody of the twins. After waiting to establish the required six months of residency in California, Quaid filed for divorce on November 30, 2012, asking for joint legal and physical custody of the children and offering to pay spousal support to Buffington. On June 28, 2016, the couple announced in a joint statement that they were divorcing, citing "
irreconcilable differences" as the reason, with Buffington asking for full physical custody and joint legal custody. The divorce was finalized on April 27, 2018. Following his separation from Buffington, Quaid dated model Santa Auzina from July 2016 to 2019. On October 21, 2019, Quaid confirmed his engagement to Laura Savoie. Their original wedding plans were postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Savoie is a CPA and yoga instructor, 39 years his junior, who shares his Christian faith. Quaid says, "God is in the relationship. I've never had a relationship like that before." Together, they launched the production company Bonniedale Films, based in Nashville, where they live.
Religious beliefs Quaid is a Christian, coming to faith around 1990 after struggling with addiction. He wrote the Christian song "On My Way to Heaven", dedicated to his mother and included in the film
I Can Only Imagine, in which Quaid starred.
Interests In addition to acting, Quaid is a musician and plays with his band, the Sharks. Quaid wrote and performed the song "Closer to You" in the film
The Big Easy (1987). He also has a pilot's license and owned a
Cessna Citation. Quaid is also a one-handicap golfer, and in 2005, he was named the top golfer among the "Hollywood set" by
Golf Digest magazine. Quaid is a fan of the
Houston Astros, and after the team's
2005 National League Championship-winning
season, he narrated their commemorative DVD release. After the filming of
The Express: The Ernie Davis Story, Quaid went to
Cleveland Browns Stadium to dedicate Davis's jersey. Quaid began podcasting in 2020, starting
The Pet Show with Dennis Quaid and Jimmy Jellinek. Its first episode premiered on July 10, 2020. During that podcast, Quaid learned of a
shelter cat in
Lynchburg, Virginia, also named Dennis Quaid. He adopted the cat and flew it out to California to live at his recording studio.
Substance use There have been extensive stories about Quaid's past abuse of
cocaine. In a 2002 interview with
Larry King on his talk show, after King asked about his motives for using drugs, Quaid responded, "Well, you got to put it in context. Back in the late 1960s, early 1970s. That was back during the time where, you know, drugs were going to expand our minds and everybody was experimenting and everything. We were really getting high, we didn't know it. And cocaine at that time was considered harmless. You know. I remember magazine articles in
People magazine of doctors saying it is not addicting. It is just—alcohol is worse. So I think we all fell into that. But that's not the way it was." When Quaid was asked if he believed he had ever been addicted to the drugs, Quaid responded, "It was a gradual thing. But it got to the point where I couldn't have any fun unless I had it. Which is a bad place to be." Later in the interview, he said, "But I saw myself being dead in about five years if I didn't stop."
Political views In a 2018 interview with the
New York Post, Quaid stated he was a registered
independent and has voted for both
Democratic and
Republican candidates, saying that he did not consider himself an adherent to any particular ideology; though he did opine that
Ronald Reagan was his favorite president of his lifetime. In April 2020, during the
COVID-19 pandemic, Quaid stated that President
Donald Trump was handling the pandemic well, calling him "involved." Quaid subsequently recorded an interview with infectious-disease expert
Anthony Fauci as part of an advertising campaign by the
Department of Health and Human Services to "defeat despair" surrounding COVID-19. In May 2024, Quaid endorsed Donald Trump for President during an interview on
Piers Morgan Uncensored, and later spoke at Trump’s rally in
Coachella, California, on October 12, 2024. In late February 2026, Quaid was travelling on
Air Force One when President Trump issued the final approval to military leaders for the bombing of Iran, launching the
2026 Iran war. Quaid was on board along with the President,
US Senator Ted Cruz, and
US Senator John Cornyn. == Filmography ==