Film and television Jordan began his career in 1986, appearing as Malone in the adventure series
The Fall Guy. He quickly became recognizable in the industry for his diminutive size and Southern drawl. His television career includes guest appearances on
Murphy Brown,
Will & Grace,
Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman,
Star Trek: Voyager,
Caroline in the City, ''
Pee-wee's Playhouse, Reba, Boston Public, Boston Legal, Nash Bridges, American Horror Story, Perfect Strangers, and Hearts Afire. In 1990, Jordan portrayed the ski patrol director in Ski Patrol. In 2007, he guest-starred on the comedy drama Ugly Betty'' as celebrity-trasher Quincy Combs, and he starred as Jesse Joe in the short-lived CW television program Hidden Palms. On the television series
Will & Grace, Jordan played
Beverley Leslie,
Karen Walker's pretentious, poorly-closeted rival, Jordan starred in the pilot episode of
Laugh Out, the world's first interactive, gay-themed comedy show. On August 18, 2014, he became a housemate in the
fourteenth season of the British reality game show
Celebrity Big Brother. He was the second person to leave the Big Brother house (August 29, 2014). In January 2015, he guest-starred in the British sitcom
Benidorm for two episodes, as the character Buck A. Roo. On November 1, 2017, he appeared in the new British television drama
Living the Dream, produced jointly by
Sky and
Big Talk Productions but branded as a Sky Original Production. In 2018–2019, he starred in the
Fox sitcom
The Cool Kids, along with
Martin Mull,
Vicki Lawrence, and
David Alan Grier. On April 2, 2020, it was announced Jordan would play the series regular role of Phil in the Fox sitcom
Call Me Kat, along with
Mayim Bialik,
Swoosie Kurtz,
Kyla Pratt, and
Cheyenne Jackson. The show premiered in January 2021. In the same year, Jordan was a guest panelist on
season six of
The Masked Singer during Week 5 where he also did a performance of "
This Little Light of Mine" as "Soft Serve". He later returned as a guest panelist in
season seven and
season eight. A posthumously-airing holiday episode of
Lego Masters was one of his final works before his death.
Theater Jordan played Earl "Brother Boy" Ingram in
Sordid Lives and also portrayed this character in the popular
cult film of the same name. He reprised the role in a
televised spin-off of the movie, which aired on
Logo, where he played a character who is institutionalized in a mental hospital. He wrote and starred in the autobiographical play
Lost in the Pershing Point Hotel, which was made into a motion picture. In 2004, he toured the country performing his one-man stage comedy,
Like a Dog on Linoleum, to generally favorable reviews. Jordan's first autobiographical stage show was called
Hysterical Blindness and Other Southern Tragedies That Have Plagued My Life Thus Far, The production, in which Jordan was backed by a gospel choir singing satirical songs about racism and
homophobia, was produced
off-Broadway at the
SoHo Playhouse and ran for seven months. Next, he distilled his experiences growing up as an effeminate, tiny boy in
the South and in show business into an autobiographical one-man show,
My Trip Down the Pink Carpet. During the opening of
My Trip Down the Pink Carpet, Jordan's microphone stopped working, but he kept on with the show like nothing happened; the show was a success. After touring the nation for several months with the production, the show opened off-Broadway at the Midtown Theater on April 19, 2010. The show was produced by Jordan's friend, actress
Lily Tomlin. He announced on ''
The Paul O'Grady Show'' that he would be bringing his show to London's
Apollo Theatre.
Music Jordan released a
gospel music album, ''Company's Comin''' in 2021. ==Death==