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    • Source: D. Smith
    • D. Smith (born July 20, 1975) is an American singer-songwriter, reality television personality, and documentary filmmaker. She worked on Lil Wayne’s Tha Carter III, which was nominated for Album of the Year at the 2009 Grammy Awards and won Best Rap Album. In 2016, she made her reality-tv debut on season five of Love & Hip Hop Atlanta.
      Her debut documentary Kokomo City (2023) follows four Black transgender sex workers and premiered at the 2023 Sundance Film Festival.


      Early life and education


      D. Smith was born to a religious family in Miami, Florida where she fell in love with music through church. She wrote her first song at ten years old for her church choir. By seven years old, she knew was transgender and often fell asleep praying to wake up as a woman.
      She graduated high school and moved to New York City, New York where she began pursuing a career in music.


      Career


      In Brooklyn, New York, Smith pursued her music career as a producer and collaborated with singer-songwriter Stacey Barthe. Together, they worked with several artists, including Lil’ Wayne. In 2008, D. Smith produced and sang on the track “Shoot Me Down” for Lil Wayne’s rap album Tha Carter III. For her work on the song, she won the 2009 Grammy Award for Best Rap Album with other collaborators.
      Smith also collaborated with other artists prior to her transition, including Andre 3000, Kendrick Lamar, Lloyd, Katy Perry, and Ciara. In 2014, she came out as transgender, and her music career fell in decline; Smith cited her transition as the cause for the break. According to Out, the music industry "stopped returning her calls."
      She appeared on season five of Love & Hip Hop Atlanta for eight episodes in 2016, making her the first openly trans woman cast on an unscripted reality tv series. The music artist faced heated discussions with fellow cast members on transgender issues, including Waka Flocka and Lil Scrappy. Despite her intention to portray transgender women as non-confrontational, Smith claims she faced pressure from the show’s production team to be more confrontational; she said “I'm not a confrontational person, and I forced myself to be, and it was a complete, utter disaster for myself.” She left the show later in the season, citing it as a regretful experience.
      Following her time on Love & Hip Hop Atlanta, Smith became homeless and relocated back to New York, where she couch-surfed with friends and family, and "looked for what was next." During this time, Smith began production on Kokomo City, a documentary following the lives of four black transgender sex-workers. Along with directing, Smith also shot and edited the film herself on a low-budget and without secure housing. Her film, which was produced by Harris Doran, Bill Butler, and Lena Waithe, debuted at the 2023 Sundance Film Festival on January 21, 2023 and won both awards in the Sundance (Next) category. Smith was signed by the Creative Artists Agency the same day.
      She was listed as one of 2023's Most Impactful and Influential LGBTQ+ People by Out on their annual Out100 Awards list. She told the magazine, which called her work a "vital breath of fresh air for trans art," that when you start to see "the enemies, you know you’re heading in the right direction. Trust the process and know that us being able to fight is a good thing."


      Personal life


      In May 2023, R&B artist Dustin Michael confirmed his relationship with Smith on Instagram.


      Filmography




      References

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