Malcolm-Jamal Warner, the actor and poet whose legacy was cemented as Theo Huxtable on the groundbreaking sitcom The Cosby Show, has died at the age of 54.
According to the Costa Rican National Police, Warner drowned on Sunday while swimming off the coast of Cocles Beach in Limon. Authorities say he was caught in a rip current and bystanders rushed to help and got him to shore, but despite their best emergency efforts, Warner was pronounced dead by the Costa Rican Red Cross.
The official cause of death was listed as asphyxia.
Born August 18, 1970, and trained at The Professional Children’s School in New York City, Warner knew early on that the stage and screen were calling. His first on-screen appearance came in 1982 with Matt Houston, followed by a role in Fame. Just two years later, he became Theo, the quick-witted, relatable son of Cliff and Clair on The Cosby Show. The show ran from 1985 to 1992 and forever redefined how Black family life was portrayed on television.
Viewers fell in love with Theo’s boyish good looks, cheeky smile and ability to talk himself into trouble, rather than out of it. Early on, Theo struggled in school and was diagnosed with dyslexia, driving home another hard-hitting issue in a relatable way that only The Cosby Show could do at the time. In the emblematic series finale, the youngest Huxtable son walks across the stage as a proud New York University graduate with a degree in psychology, and the world cheered right along with him. His legacy was already firmly cemented, moving Black culture forward.
Despite being a child when he first took on the role, the political undertones of The Cosby Show were never lost on Warner, who was raised with knowledge of his history.
“My father made me read Great American Negroes and write book reports every summer. I was six, seven, eight years old,” he revealed to Karen Hunter during an interview recorded in January 2023 interview, also noting that one of his favorite books as a kid was Poems on the Life and Death of Malcolm X.” Warner shared that even in fifth grade, he knew he was reading poetry more sophisticated than anyone else around me.”
For his work, Warner earned an Emmy nomination in 1986 and became a role model for a generation of young Black men navigating adolescence and identity.
“I don’t do what I do for validation. But it is validating […] The awards don’t drive my grind, but they’re cool to have,” Malcolm-Jamal Warner
The Karen Hunter Show
Warner would go on to star alongside Eddie Griffin in Malcolm & Eddie (1996–2000) and played Dr. Alex Reed opposite Tracee Ellis Ross in BET’s Reed Between the Lines as well as American Horror Story, Key & Peele, Suits, Sons of Anarchy, The Michael J. Fox Show and The Resident, where he starred for five seasons portraying high-powered surgeon, AJ Austin.
The role was a major detour from the roles Waner usually dove into, but he relished the opportunity to try his hand at something new.
“I think other roles that I’ve done may have been a little more Malcolm-infused,” he told Wbur. “But to play someone who is really, you know, so out of what people are used to seeing me do is really the most fun.”

In 2015, he earned a Grammy Award for Best Traditional R&B Performance for his powerful contribution to the Robert Glasper Experiment and Lalah Hathaway’s rendition of “Jesus Children of America.”
An all-around creative, the spirit of storytelling ran deep through Warner’s veins, not only in his acting career, but also in music and poetry.
“For me, poetry has always been therapy. It’s an outlet. And there’s something powerful in being able to write something, walk away from it, and then come back and read it and go, ‘Wow—I meant every word of that,” he explained. “That was from my soul.’ It’s like you leave little pieces of your truth for your future self to come back and pick up. That’s why I always recommend journaling or writing—even if it’s not for anybody else. Because it helps you see yourself. It helps you chart your growth, your evolution.”
In 2022, Warner teamed up with Dr. Daniel Black to collaborate on the Grammy-nominated spoken word poetry album, Hiding In Plain View. They also collaborated on the songs “Asante Sana” and “So I Run (Prelude)” featured on the album.
He spoke passionately about his belief in a soft, nurturing love while parenting Black boys.
“Dr. Daniel Black is all over the album because he speaks to the things we don’t always say as Black men. One thing he says at the beginning of the album is, ‘The thing about a Black boy is—you don’t want to beat him. You want to love him so divinely, so fiercely, that your disappointment will kill him.’ That line—man, that hit me,” Warner revealed to Hunter. “It’s about raising Black boys with love, not just discipline. And he talks about vulnerability as the missing piece in father-son relationships. That really hit home, because with my father, that space has always been there. And I realized, if I’m going to make a piece called Hiding in Plain View, it has to be about my own vulnerability, my own story—not just commentary on social issues.”
Fiercely private, Warner is survived by his wife and daughter, both of whom he kept out of public scrutiny, having spent the majority of his career under the full glare of the mainstream media.
Gone but never forgotten.
Rest in Power, Malcolm-Jamal Warner.