Dillon graduated from the American Musical and Dramatic Academy.[5] They enrolled in and completed the Meisner training program at The Actor's Workshop of Ithaca during their junior year of high school at age 16. They were the youngest student ever admitted to the class.[5]
Dillon played white supremacist Brandy Epps, a penitentiary inmate, in eight episodes of Orange Is the New Black in 2016, making them one of the first openly non-binary actors cast in a major television show.[5][10] They also played a recurring role in season 2 of Showtime's Wall Street drama Billions in 2017.[11] The role they played is a non-binary character, Taylor Mason, a hedge fund intern,[12] who is reported to be the first non-binary character on mainstream North American television.[13][14][15][16] Showtime confirmed in April 2017 that Mason would be a main cast member starting in season 3.[17] When submitting their name for an Emmy Award for acting, Dillon was allowed to submit for whichever gendered category they wished, and chose "actor" over "actress" because it is a gender neutral word.[18][19][20] Their effort to clarify the matter for all non-binary people prompted the MTV Movie & TV Awards to combine their gender-segregated categories.[21] They presented the award for Best Actor at the MTV Movie & TV Awards on May 7, 2017.[22] In November 2018, it was announced Dillon would appear in The Outside Story.[23]
Dillon is the founder and producing director of MIRROR/FIRE Productions, which created US, a performance piece exploring racism and the Black Lives Matter movement in the United States.[7]
In June 2019, to mark the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall riots, an event widely considered a watershed moment in the modern LGBTQ rights movement, Queerty named them one of the Pride50 "trailblazing individuals who actively ensure society remains moving towards equality, acceptance and dignity for all queer people".[24]
On March 28, 2020, Dillon released their first EP, Handsomehands, with profits being donated to the Marsha P. Johnson Institute.[25]
Personal life
Dillon was born in Ithaca, New York. They identify as non-binary and were assigned female at birth.[26][27] Dillon explained that around 2015, they began removing gendered pronouns from their biography, and auditioning for the part of Mason helped them understand their gender identity.[28][29] Dillon is pansexual, stating they are attracted to multiple genders.[30] In September 2021, Dillon told The Hollywood Reporter's "Hollywood Remixed" podcast that they use the word "non-binary" because their "gender identity falls outside the boxes of man or woman." They stated that gender is a spectrum, without a binary that was "created by colonists and imposed on the indigenous peoples," and that "sex is not a binary either."[31]