Sarah Steele is joining NBC’s Brilliant Minds in a recurring guest role for the back half of season 2, adding a familiar prestige-drama face to a medical series that has leaned heavily on high-profile patient stories. The actor will play Sofia, a patient introduced in episode 211, “The Boy Who Feels Everything,” scheduled to air January 5, with further appearances planned later in the season. Deadline first reported the casting, with NBC confirming that Brilliant Minds continues to air Mondays at 10 p.m., followed by next-day streaming on Peacock.
Set at Bronx General Hospital, Brilliant Minds follows neurologist Dr. Oliver Wolf, played by Zachary Quinto, whose own prosopagnosia complicates his interactions with patients and colleagues. Creator Michael Grassi built the series around cases inspired by Oliver Sacks’ writings, mixing rare neurological conditions with emotional family dramas. The show premiered in September 2024, earned an 88% critics score on Rotten Tomatoes and a “generally favorable” rating on Metacritic, and returned for a second season in September 2025 after a renewal earlier in the year.
Season 2 already widened its cast: Brian Altemus, John Clarence Stewart and Al Calderon joined as series regulars, while Bellamy Young recurs as a behavioral health director. The year has also brought standout guest turns, including Eric Dane’s widely praised appearance as a firefighter living with ALS, mirroring his real-life diagnosis. Grassi has said that storyline grew out of conversations about illness and dignity, and Dane described the episode as a chance to channel his advocacy work into drama.
Steele arrives with a strong legal-drama pedigree. She spent years as Marissa Gold across The Good Wife and The Good Fight, then reprised the role on Elsbeth, and has balanced that screen work with stage acclaim in the Tony-winning play The Humans and film roles such as Nicole Holofcener’s You Hurt My Feelings. Her casting signals a continued push to seed Brilliant Minds with actors who can anchor character-driven episodes, especially as the second season’s 22-episode run moves into winter and the series works to deepen its mix of neurologic mystery and personal fallout.















































