He has also explored the stage, performing
stand-up,
sketch, and
improv comedy as a member of numerous troupes including Gotham City Improv, as well as acting in
off-Broadway and
regional theater in a handful of plays, including
Women Are Crazy Because Men Are A**Holes and
Mitch Albom's
Duck Hunter Shoots Angel. This followed with similar roles on TV shows including
Blue Bloods,
Person of Interest, and
Law & Order: SVU. His role as Toine Wilkins, a police officer, in
Ava DuVernay's
Queen Sugar, (
OWN), launched him into a series of high-profile roles including political strategist Pierce Williams in Showtime's
The L Word: Generation Q (2019) cast. Smith became the first Black openly
trans man in a series regular role on network television when he was cast as firefighter Paul Strickland in FOX's
9-1-1: Lone Star (2020). Other appearances include NBC's
Chicago P.D., HBO's
Girls and
Showtime's thriller
Homeland.
Queen Sugar In 2017, Smith was cast in the role of
Officer Antoine "Toine" Wilkins on
OWN's series
Queen Sugar. Toine is a
trans man. Executive-produced by
Ava DuVernay and
Oprah Winfrey, the
Louisiana-set drama focuses on the lives and loves of the estranged Bordelon siblings. The show is based on the novel
Queen Sugar by
Natalie Baszile. The role was one of Smith's first opportunities to play a
transgender character and explore his own life experiences in his acting. In 2019, Smith was cast Showtime's drama series
The L Word: Generation Q a follow-up to the original hit series,
The L Word starring
Jennifer Beals,
Leisha Hailey and
Kate Moennig. Smith played "'Pierce Williams', a buttoned-up, fastidious, expert political strategist and a veteran of LA politics. Unlike his colleagues, Williams is not quick to share details about his personal life, choosing to put all his energy into winning campaigns."
9-1-1: Lone Star In 2020, Smith was cast in
9-1-1: Lone Star as Paul Strickland, a transgender male firefighter. Through the role, Smith became the first Black openly
trans man cast as a series regular on broadcast TV. In 2021, Smith's performance as Strickland was praised by
People magazine, and he became the first trans man to be featured on their "Sexiest Man Alive" list. In 2022, Smith was featured again in
People Magazine's "Sexiest Man Alive" list. Speaking on his second year of inclusion, Smith said, "My hope is that my visibility can encourage and empower others who want to be their full selves but are afraid or can't see a future for themselves, to take a step towards being who they are." == Filmography ==