These days, Colman Domingo carries himself with the kind of confidence that feels almost untouchable.
Whether he’s dominating red carpets, collecting award nominations, or effortlessly becoming one of Hollywood’s best-dressed men, Domingo projects total self-assurance. But according to the actor himself, it took years to fully grow into that version of himself.
In a revealing new interview with Men’s Health UK, Domingo reflected on what it was like coming out to his family in the early 1990s and how those experiences shaped the person he eventually became.

Before the Fame, He Was “Very Shy”
It’s almost hard to picture now, but Domingo described his younger self as awkward, introverted, and unsure of where he fit in.
The Oscar-nominated actor said he struggled with a lisp growing up and didn’t yet have the commanding presence people associate with him today. Even his identity felt different back then. Friends and family knew him by his middle name, Jason, long before “Colman Domingo” became a major Hollywood name.
That confidence people see now was something he had to build over time.
The First Family Member He Told
According to Domingo, one of his first coming out conversations happened after his older brother brought him to a strip club in the early ’90s.
That experience apparently pushed him to finally speak honestly.
“I told him that I was gay,” Domingo recalled in the interview. His brother reportedly reacted with surprise at first before ultimately responding with support and love.
The moment clearly stayed with him decades later.
His Sister Had a Very Different Reaction
Ironically, the strongest reaction didn’t come from rejection.
It came from hurt feelings.
After learning Domingo had already told their brother, his older sister reportedly became upset because she felt left out of such an important moment in his life. According to Domingo, she jokingly demanded to know why she hadn’t been told first.
It’s the kind of family dynamic that feels deeply familiar to a lot of queer people:
messy, emotional, loving, and unexpectedly funny all at once.
The Support From His Parents Meant Everything
The actor also spoke warmly about the support he received from his mother and stepfather after coming out.
His stepfather reportedly told him:
“You’re a good boy and there’s nothing you can tell me that would make me stop loving you.”
That kind of acceptance can completely shape someone’s sense of self, especially during a period when LGBTQ visibility was far more limited than it is today.
Coming Out in the ’90s Was a Different World
It’s easy to forget how different things felt culturally in the early 1990s.
Mainstream LGBTQ representation remained scarce. Openly queer actors still faced enormous career risks, and many people stayed closeted professionally out of fear that honesty would damage future opportunities.
For Black queer men especially, those pressures could feel even more intense.
That context makes Domingo’s reflections feel especially meaningful now, considering how visible and celebrated he has become in modern Hollywood.
Colman Domingo Has Quietly Become a Cultural Icon
Over the last several years, Domingo’s career has exploded.
The actor earned back-to-back Academy Award nominations for:
- Rustin
- Sing Sing
He also became widely beloved for his work on:
- Euphoria
- Fear the Walking Dead
- The Four Seasons
Along the way, he’s become something else too:
a fashion icon.
He’s Also Redefining What Aging in Hollywood Looks Like
Part of why Domingo resonates so strongly right now is because he represents a version of masculinity that feels confident without trying too hard.
At 56, the actor continues landing magazine covers, fashion campaigns, and fitness spreads while openly discussing aging, wellness, and self-confidence. The Men’s Health UK shoot accompanying the interview quickly went viral online for obvious reasons.
People love authenticity.
Domingo seems comfortable enough to actually offer it.
Why His Story Matters
Coming out stories can sometimes feel repetitive in media coverage, but Domingo’s reflections land differently because they feel grounded and human rather than overly polished.
There’s no dramatic celebrity reinvention narrative here.
Just someone honestly talking about fear, family, awkwardness, and eventually learning how to fully become himself.
And for many LGBTQ people, that process never really stops evolving.
Confidence Doesn’t Always Start That Way
Maybe that’s the most relatable part of Domingo’s story.
The man who now commands every red carpet he walks onto once felt shy, uncertain, and nervous about simply telling the people closest to him who he was.
That transformation didn’t happen overnight.
But looking at where he is now, it’s hard not to feel inspired by it.