She began her acting career in theatre appearing in plays
Henry IV, Part 1 and
Eclipsed. In 2003, she made her television debut in the recurring role of HBO drama series
The Wire. She later guest-starred on
Law & Order,
Law & Order: Trial by Jury,
Conviction,
New Amsterdam, and had a recurring role in the ABC daytime soap opera,
One Life to Live in 2005. In 2011, she also appeared as Jill in the fifth season of the ABC series,
Brothers & Sisters. Findley had a recurring role of Davina Lambreaux in the HBO drama series,
Treme, from 2010 to 2013. She co-starred opposite
Emayatzy Corinealdi and
Lorraine Toussaint in the 2012 independent film
Middle of Nowhere written and directed by
Ava DuVernay. She also appeared in
Sympathetic Details (2008),
Red Tails (2012) and
Insidious: Chapter 2 (2013). '' (2012) premiere In 2014, she was cast as one of leads in the
Oprah Winfrey Network prime time soap opera,
If Loving You Is Wrong alongside
Zulay Henao,
Heather Hemmens,
April Parker Jones, and
Amanda Clayton. The series ended in 2020 after five seasons and 102 episodes. In 2015, Findley played the lead in the independent film
Free in Deed, and
Kevin Hart's character wife in
Get Hard, a comedy film directed by
Etan Cohen. In 2016, she was cast in the
Fox event series Shots Fired starring
Sanaa Lathan and created by
Gina Prince-Bythewood. In 2017, she was cast in
AMC's
Fear the Walking Dead and
The CW's superhero series
Black Lightning playing Tori Whale. In 2019, she had a recurring role in the NBC medical drama,
Chicago Med. In 2019, Findley appeared in the drama film
Goldie directed by
Sam de Jong and starring
Slick Woods, and the independent film
Same Difference starring
Essence Atkins. In 2020, she co-starred opposite
Brian Geraghty in the crime drama film
Blindfire. In 2022, she appeared in the biographical mystery drama
Rogue Agent starring
James Norton. In 2023, she starred in the
Amazon Prime Video science fiction drama series,
The Power. In 2023, she was cast as one of the leads in the Netflix murder-mystery series
The Residence, produced by
Shondaland and starring
Uzo Aduba. == Filmography ==