Leslie Jordan

Actor

Birthday April 29, 1955

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace Chattanooga, Tennessee, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2022-10-24, Los Angeles, California, U.S. (67 years old)

Nationality United States

Height 4 ft

#6468 Most Popular

1935

Jordan said his mother, Peggy Ann Jordan (née Griffin; 1935–2022), was supportive and accepting, despite never truly understanding him.

1955

Leslie Allen Jordan (April 29, 1955 – October 24, 2022) was an American actor, comedian, writer, and singer.

Jordan was born on April 29, 1955, and was raised in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

He graduated from Brainerd High School.

1967

Jordan's father, Allen Bernard Jordan, was a major in the United States Army Reserve and died, along with two others, in the crash of a civilian Beechcraft Debonair airplane at Camp Shelby, Mississippi, on March 31, 1967, when Jordan was almost 12 years old.

1982

Jordan moved to Los Angeles in 1982, where he became involved with drugs and alcohol and was arrested several times.

He began to journal daily, which helped him recover from drug and alcohol abuse.

1986

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.

He appeared as newspaper editor Mr. Blackly in the movie The Help.

His television career includes guest appearances on Murphy Brown, Designing Women, 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.

1990

In 1990, Jordan portrayed the ski patrol director in Ski Patrol.

1996

On stage, he played Earl "Brother Boy" Ingram in the 1996 play Sordid Lives, later portraying the character in the 2000 film of the same name.

2001

His television roles include Beverley Leslie on Will & Grace (2001–2006 and 2017–2020), several characters on television in the American Horror Story franchise (2013–2019), Sid on The Cool Kids (2018–2019), Phil on Call Me Kat (2021–2022), and Lonnie Garr on Hearts Afire (1993–1995).

2004

In 2004, he toured the country performing his one-man stage comedy, Like a Dog on Linoleum, to generally favorable reviews.

2006

On the television series Will & Grace, Jordan played Beverley Leslie, Karen's pretentious, poorly-closeted rival, for which he received an Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series at the 58th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards in 2006.

His Emmy Award earned him an invitation to present the awards for Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series and Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series at the 2006 Emmy Awards with Cloris Leachman a week later.

Jordan starred in the pilot episode of Laugh Out, the world's first interactive, gay-themed comedy show.

2007

In 2007, he guest-starred on the comedy drama Ugly Betty as celebrity-trasher Quincy Combs, and starred as Jesse Joe in the short-lived CW television program Hidden Palms.

2010

In 2010, Jordan told talk show host Wendy Williams that he had been sober for 13 years.

In the same appearance, Jordan said that before he gave up drinking, he once shared a cell with Robert Downey Jr., and when they both appeared later on Ally McBeal, Downey couldn't quite place where they had met before.

Jordan was gay.

Early in the AIDS crisis, Jordan became involved in AIDS Project Los Angeles (APLA) as a buddy and as a food delivery-person for Project Angel Food.

2014

In a 2014 interview, Jordan said that he had a difficult time growing up Southern Baptist.

"I was baptized 14 times. Every time the preacher would say, 'Come forward, sinners!' I'd say, 'Oooh, I was out in the woods with that boy. I better go forward.'"

On August 18, 2014, Jordan 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).

2015

In January 2015, Jordan guest-starred in the British sitcom Benidorm for two episodes, as the character Buck A. Roo.

2017

On November 1, 2017, Jordan 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.

2018

In 2018–2019, Jordan starred in the Fox sitcom The Cool Kids, along with Martin Mull, Vicki Lawrence, and David Alan Grier.

2020

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Jordan became an Instagram contributor, amassing 5.8 million followers in 2020, and published his autobiography ''How Y'all Doing?

Misadventures and Mischief from a Life Well Lived'' in April 2021.

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.

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.

Jordan played Earl "Brother Boy" Ingram in Sordid Lives, and also portrayed this character in the popular cult film of the same name.

Jordan 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 also made into a motion picture.