Artist Profiles

Jimmy Smits

Proving that versatility is as important as skill in the acting profession, Jimmy Smits has built a career that allows him to move effortlessly between film, television and stage. The Emmy Award and Golden Globe winning actor continues to effectively navigate towards this goal. September 2012 will see the return of Smits to the small screen on the upcoming fifth season of the critically acclaimed FX show, Sons of Anarchy. Drawing on his villainous work from Dexter, Smits will once again show his darker side, this time as Neron "Nero" Padilla, a Latino gangbanger with an exit strategy who becomes a dangerous mentor for Jax (Charlie Hunnam). In 2010, Smits starred in the NBC drama Outlaw, portraying Supreme Court Justice Cyrus Garza, a playboy and risk-taker who has always adhered to a strict interpretation of the law until he realized the system he believed in was flawed. Smits also served as an Executive Producer on the show. He also co-starred in Mother and Child, directed by Rodrigo Garcia starring Annette Bening, Samuel L. Jackson and Naomi Watts. Smits has enjoyed an exemplary television career. In 2009, Smits finished a Guest Starring stint in Season 3 of Showtime’s hit series Dexter, for which he was recognized with his 12th Emmy nomination. In 2008, Smits' El Sendero Productions company co-executive produced the CBS series, Cane, in which he also starred. He also narrated the PBS documentary series, “Latin Music USA.” Coinciding with his West Wing Presidency, Smits was also seen in HBO’s multiple award-winning television movie Lackawanna Blues, George C. Wolfe's colorful tale of boarding house life, love, and blues in 1950’s New York. He received six consecutive Emmy nominations for his role as Victor Sifuentes on L.A. Law, winning the Emmy in 1990, and also five Emmy nominations for his role as Bobby Simone on the critically acclaimed, Emmy-winning drama, NYPD Blue. Additionally, he received an ALMA Award and an Imagen Award for Best Actor in The West Wing, has four Golden Globe nominations—winning as an Actor in a Leading Role, Drama Series, in 1995 for his role in NYPD Blue—and four SAG Award nominations.  His highly touted departure from NYPD Blue also won the Humanitas Award. Smits' filmography includes such early works as Peter Hyams' Running Scared with Gregory Hines and Billy Crystal; John Schlesinger’s The Believers; Old Gringo with Gregory Peck and Jane Fonda; Blake Edwards' comedy Switch; the critically acclaimed My Family/Mi Familia, directed by Gregory Nava, for which he received an IFP Spirit Award nomination; Carlos Ávila's Price of Glory, Chuck Russell's thriller Bless The Child; George Lucas' Star Wars: Episode II– Attack of the Clones and Star Wars: Episode III– Revenge of the Sith, Robin Swicord's The Jane Austen Book Club and El Traspatio (Backyard), directed by Carlos Carrera. Smits began his acting career in the New York theater and returns often. He most recently starred on Broadway in the critically acclaimed hit God of Carnage (2009). Prior to that he starred on Broadway in 2004 as the romantic new arrival in a Cuban-American cigar factory in Nilo Cruz's Pulitzer Prize-winning play Anna in the Tropics, preceded by the New York Public Theatre's Shakespeare in the Park presentations of Much Ado About Nothing (2004) and Twelfth Night (2002), just to name a few. Smits has involved himself in various charitable organizations over the years and has consistently been a strong advocate for education.   In 1997, he co-founded the National Hispanic Foundation for the Arts (NHFA), along with actors Esai Morales and Sonia Braga and Washington attorney Felix Sanchez, to promote Hispanic talent in the performing arts.  The organization offers graduate scholarships and cash grants at prominent colleges and universities in order to expand career opportunities and increase access for Hispanic artists and professionals while fostering the emergence of new Hispanic talent.

Member Profiles

Jimmy Smits

Jimmy  Smits