James Roday Rodriguez
American actor (born 1976)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
James Roday Rodriguez (born James David Rodriguez; April 4, 1976) is an American actor, director, and screenwriter. He is best known for portraying Shawn Spencer, a hyper-observant consultant detective and fake psychic, in USA Network series Psych and the subsequent Psych film series. He also starred in A Million Little Things which debuted in 2018, playing Javier "Gary" Mendez.
April 4, 1976
(professional name 1998–2020)
James Roday Rodriguez
(changed legal name)
- Actor
- director
- screenwriter
James Roday Rodriguez | |
|---|---|
Rodriguez at the 2013 San Diego Comic Con | |
| Born | James David Rodriguez April 4, 1976 San Antonio, Texas, U.S. |
| Other names | James Roday (professional name 1998–2020) James Roday Rodriguez (changed legal name) |
| Alma mater | New York University (BFA) |
| Occupations |
|
| Years active | 1999–present |
| Partner | Maggie Lawson (2006–2014) |
Early life
Rodriguez was born in San Antonio, Texas, as James David Rodriguez.[1] His father, James "Jim" Rodriguez, a retired Air Force master sergeant,[2][3] is of Mexican descent. His mother, Deborah Collins, has English, Irish, and Scottish ancestry.
He attended Taft High School in San Antonio[4] and studied at NYU TISCH's Experimental Theatre Wing, earning a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree.[5]
Stage name
At the age of 22, Rodriguez selected the professional name James Roday. In a July 2020 interview,[6] he explained the decision was mainly driven by producers and casting directors feeling his appearance clashed with his Latino family name. The characters he read for up until that point were not written with a Latino background in mind. In order to book his first job, he legally changed his middle name, David, to Roday (picked from an Anton Chekhov play he was starring in at the time), and omitted Rodriguez from his screen name. In the same interview, he stated regret that he "sold out [his] heritage in about 15 seconds."
Rodriguez announced in that interview that going forward, he would use his full legal name of James Roday Rodriguez.
Career
Theatre
Rodriguez first decided to make acting his fulltime career in high school, where he was part of the theatre department run by James Buchanan, who would later become co-founder of the Communications Arts High School.[7] Rodriguez cites Buchanan as "the architect behind [his] love for art and the belief [he] could make a run at making it for a living". While at Taft, he became a UIL State Champion, being named best actor for his performance in the play The Elephant Man.[8]
On Buchanan's advice, Rodriguez went on to study at NYU, where he starred in various theatrical productions, including Three Sisters, A Respectable Wedding, and Severity's Mistress.
In 1999, Rodriguez co-produced a production of Henry V at the Mazer Theatre in New York City, starring Brad Raider whom he had attended NYU with. Afterward, the two friends founded Red Dog Squadron, a non-profit, Los Angeles-based theater company, both acting as co-artistic directors. With his company, Rodriguez produced several plays, the most recent of which was CAL IN CAMO in 2018. In addition to his producing capacity, he took on leading roles in Sexual Perversity in Chicago and Extinction (which had runs in both Los Angeles and off-Broadway in New York), wrote and directed the one-act play Sustenance, and directed the play Greedy.[9]
In December 2016, Rodriguez starred in the New York production of White Rabbit Red Rabbit by Iranian playwright Nassim Soleimanpour.[10]
Rodriguez is a member of the board of trustees at the Legacy Theatre in Branford, Connecticut,[11] which was co-founded by Keely Baisden Knudsen, a fellow NYU graduate.
For the Legacy Theatre, Rodriguez produced the world premiere of Laurence Davis's play Masters of Puppets in 2023. In 2024, Rodriguez and Baisden Knudsen co-starred in a performance of A.R. Gurney's Love Letters. In 2025, Rodriguez led a sold-out run of “the funniest farce ever written,” Noises Off.
1999–2005: Big screen and television beginnings
Rodriguez's big screen debut was in the 1999 film Coming Soon alongside Gaby Hoffmann, Bonnie Root, Ryan Reynolds and Ashton Kutcher.
Other early film credits include the 2003 film Rolling Kansas and the 2005 film adaptation of The Dukes of Hazzard.
Rodriguez's early television credits include starring roles in 2001's First Years and NBC's Miss Match in 2003.
Behind the scenes, he and high school friend/writing partner Todd Harthan wrote a sequel script to April Fools Day, which "gained momentum" but was never produced.[12] Together with James DeMonaco, Rodriguez and Harthan went on to write the screenplay for the 2006 film Skinwalkers and also worked on an unused script for the film adaptation of the video game Driver.[12]

2006–present: Psych franchise
Rodriguez's big break came on July 7, 2006, with the series premiere of USA Network's original series Psych. Airing following the season premiere of USA's other comedic success, Monk, it was the highest-rated scripted basic cable TV show premiere of 2006.[13] Psych ran for eight seasons until 2014.
In 2017, Rodriguez returned to his most famous role in Psych: The Movie, which he also executive produced and co-wrote with Psych's series creator Steve Franks. It aired on USA Network in December 2017.
A sequel, Psych 2: Lassie Come Home, debuted July 15, 2020 on NBCUniversal's streaming service Peacock.[14][15] It was the first project crediting him as James Roday Rodriguez. Psych 3: This Is Gus was released on Peacock on November 18, 2021.[16] On both projects, he once again served as co-writer and executive producer.
As of May 2023, the script for a fourth Psych movie is done but has not been greenlit yet.[17]
Post-Psych
After Psych the series ended, Rodriguez starred in various pilots and independent films, most notably Pushing Dead by independent filmmaker Tom E. Brown, which accumulated a number of awards at film festivals in the US and elsewhere.[18]
In 2018, Rodriguez returned to network television, starring as Gary Mendez on ABC's dramedy A Million Little Things, which ran for 5 seasons. He co-wrote the series' final episode, "One Big Thing", with series creator DJ Nash.
Rodriguez branched out into voice acting in the 2021 animated feature Night of the Animated Dead, an adaptation of George A. Romero's Night of the Living Dead.
Focus on directing and writing
Since Psych, Rodriguez has spent more time behind the camera as a director, writer and producer. He directed episodes for Battle Creek, Rush Hour, Rosewood, Blood Drive, The Resident, The Crossover and High Potential. He also developed, wrote, and directed the pilots Shoot the Moon for USA and Quest for Truth for E!.
Rodriguez released his first feature directorial debut, Gravy, in 2015, co-written by him and Todd Harthan. He co-wrote (once again with Todd Harthan) and directed his second film Treehouse as part of Hulu's monthly horror movie anthology Into the Dark, which aired in March 2019.
In 2025, Rodriguez published his first short story titled "The Long Straw" in the fantasy and horror anthology magazine Weird Tales, issue #371.[19]
In recently, Rodriguez directed, and co-written with Harthan Rule of Three, the first movie in a planned trilogy, based on a novel The Rule of Three by Sam Ripley. Filming started in January 2026, with an as of yet unknown release date.[20]
Personal life
Rodriguez dated his Psych co-star Maggie Lawson throughout most of the series run. They broke up in 2013, before the final season aired.[21]
Filmography
| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1999 | Coming Soon | Chad | |
| Ryan Caulfield: Year One | Vic | Series regular | |
| 2000 | Believe | Bruce Arm / Agent Johnny | Short |
| Get Real | Trent Sykes | ||
| 2001 | First Years | Edgar | Series regular |
| 2002 | Driver | N/a | Unused first draft, co-written with James DeMonaco and Todd Harthan |
| Repli-Kate | Max | Lead role | |
| Providence | Alexander Conrad | ||
| Showtime | 'Maxis' Cameraman | ||
| Rolling Kansas | Dick Murphy | ||
| 2003 | Miss Match | Nick Paine | Series regular |
| 2005 | Don't Come Knocking | Mickey, First Assistant Director | |
| The Dukes of Hazzard | Billy Prickett | ||
| 2006 | Skinwalkers | N/a | Co-writer with James DeMonaco and Todd Harthan |
| Beerfest | German Messenger | ||
| 2006–14 | Psych | Shawn Spencer | Also writer of 16 episodes, director of 8 episodes, and producer |
| 2008 | Fear Itself | Carlos | Episode: "In Sickness and in Health" |
| 2009 | Gamer | News Co-Host #1 | |
| His Name Was Jason: 30 Years of Friday the 13th | Himself | Documentary | |
| 2011 | WWE Tough Enough | Himself | Episode: "I've Been Bamboozled & Flabbergasted" |
| Love Bites | Jeff | Episode: "TMI" | |
| 2012 | WWE Raw Super Show | Himself | Special guest ring announcer |
| 2013 | Mr. Payback | Malikai | Short |
| 2014 | Shoot the Moon | N/a | Director, writer and executive producer; unaired pilot[22] |
| 2015 | Battle Creek | N/a | Director of 1 episode |
| Gravy | Marty | Also director and co-writer with Todd Harthan | |
| Good Session | Joel | Lead role, unaired pilot | |
| Christmas Eve | B | a.k.a. Stuck | |
| Baby Baby Baby | J.B. | ||
| The Nerd Herd | Kip Mitchell | Lead role, unaried pilot | |
| 2015–16 | Rosewood | N/a | Director of 5 episodes |
| 2016 | Quest For Trtuh | N/a | Director and co-writer with Ben McMillan; unaired pilot[23] |
| Rush Hour | N/a | Director of 1 episode | |
| Pushing Dead | Dan Schauble | Lead role | |
| 2017 | Blood Drive | N/a | Director of 2 episodes |
| Psych: The Movie | Shawn Spencer | TV film, also co-writer with Steve Franks and executive producer | |
| 2018–23 | A Million Little Things | Gary Mendez | Series regular; also co-writer of series finale with DJ Nash[24] |
| 2018 | Fortune Rookie | Roday | Recurring[25] |
| 2018–19 | The Resident | N/a | Director of 3 episodes |
| 2019 | Buddy Games | Zane | |
| Berserk | Officer Duane | ||
| Treehouse | N/a | Director and co-writer with Todd Harthan | |
| 2020 | Psych 2: Lassie Come Home | Shawn Spencer | TV film; also co-writer with Steve Franks and Andy Berman, and executive producer |
| 2021 | Psych 3: This Is Gus | TV film; also co-writer with Steve Franks, and executive producer | |
| 2023 | The Crossover | N/a | Director of 2 episodes |
| Buddy Games: Spring Awakening | Zane | ||
| 2024–present | High Potential | N/a | Director of 4 episodes |
| TBA | Rule of Three | N/a | Director, co-writer with Todd Harthan, and executive producer; in post-production |
Awards and nominations
| Year | Award | Category | Nominated work | Result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | Satellite Awards | Best Actor in a Series, Comedy or Musical | Psych | Nominated | |
| 2008 | NCLR ALMA Awards | Outstanding Actor in a Drama Television Series | Nominated | [26] | |
| Online Film & Television Association | Best Actor in a Comedy Series | Nominated | |||
| 2009 | EWwy Award | Best Actor in a Comedy Series | Nominated | [27] | |
| NCLR ALMA Awards | Outstanding Actor in a Comedy Series | Nominated | |||
| Imagen Awards | Best Actor – Television | Nominated | [28] | ||
| Online Film & Television Association | Best Actor in a Comedy Series | Nominated | |||
| 2010 | NAACP Image Awards | Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series | Psych (for episode "High Top Fade Out", shared with Saladin K. Patterson) | Nominated | [29] |
| 2011 | NCLR ALMA Awards | Favorite TV Actor – Leading Role | Psych | Nominated | |
| Imagen Awards | Best Actor – Television | Nominated | [28] | ||
| 2012 | NCLR ALMA Awards | Favorite TV Actor – Leading Role | Nominated | ||
| Imagen Awards | Best Actor – Television | Won | [30] | ||
| 2023 | HCA TV Awards | Best Writing in a Broadcast Network or Cable Drama Series | A Million Little Things (for episode 5x13 One Big Thing, shared with DJ Nash) | Nominated | [31] |
| Humanitas Prize | Drama Teleplay | A Million Little Things (for episode 5x13 One Big Thing, shared with DJ Nash) | Nominated | [32] | |
| 3rd Astra TV Awards | Best Writing in a Broadcast Network or Cable Series, Drama | A Million Little Things (for episode 5x13 One Big Thing, shared with DJ Nash) | Nominated |