David Lee Smith is an actor (61 years) born in Birmingham, Alabama, USA on sunday, september 08, 1963.
David Lee Smith appears in: CSI: Miami (2002), Fight Club (1999) and Mank (2020), among others.
Accumulated a total of 2 positive votes in 8 shows.
If you're interested, you can read more information about David Lee Smith on their Wikipedia page.
Known for
- watched
- 45min
- Seasons: 10
- Episodes: 232
- Trailer
- watched
- 2hs 19min
- Trailer
- watched
- 2hs 12min
- watched
- 45min
- Seasons: 7
- Episodes: 168
- watched
- 45min
- Seasons: 15
- Episodes: 335
- watched
- 45min
- Seasons: 10
- Episodes: 240
- watched
- 45min
- Seasons: 10
- Episodes: 227
- Trailer
- watched
- 45min
- Seasons: 1
- Episodes: 8
Follows an elite group of Crime Scene Investigators (CSI's) from the Miami-Dade Police Department (MDPD), which uses advanced forensic science to solve complex crimes in cross-cultural Miami, Florida.
Not protagonic
as Walter
An insomniac office worker and a devil-may-care soap maker form an underground fight club that evolves into much more.
Fight Club
movie United States 1999
Not protagonic
1930s Hollywood is re-evaluated through the eyes of scathing social critic and alcoholic screenwriter Herman J. Mankiewicz as he races to finish the screenplay of Citizen Kane (1941).
Mank
movie United States 2020
Pulled to the far side of the galaxy, where the Federation is seventy-five years away at maximum warp speed, a Starfleet ship must cooperate with Maquis rebels to find a way home.
Follows a group of Crime Scene Investigators (CSI's) who work with the Las Vegas Police Department (LVPD) to solve crimes by meticulously examining evidence by using advanced scientific methods and technology in Las Vegas, Nevada.
When Steve McGarrett returns home to Oahu to find his father's killer, the Governor offers him the chance to run his own task force: Five-0.
The cases of Harmon Rabb, former Navy fighter pilot, and his fellow lawyers of the U.S. Navy's Judge Advocate General's office.
About the legendary lawman of the wild West, Bass Reeves, the first Black deputy U.S. marshal west of the Mississippi River.