Mike Faist (birthname:
Michael David Faist) is an acclaimed actor in film, television, and theater, with Tony, Emmy, and BAFTA award nominations to his credit. Faist’s screen debut was in a supporting role in filmmaker Dan Sallitt’s superb indie drama, The Unspeakable Act (2012), with Tallie Medel, Sunita Mani, and Kate Lyn Sheil, premiering internationally at the Edinburgh and Rotterdam film festivals, and released by The Cinema Guild.
Faist landed a small supporting role in writer-director Paul Dalio’s indie drama, Touched with Fire (2015), co-starring Katie Holmes, Luke Kirby, Christine Lahti, Griffin Dunne, and
Bruce Altman, and was released by Roadside Attractions after a South by Southwest film festival premiere. Faist joined the ensemble of director/writer Patrick Wang’s highly acclaimed tragic drama, The Grief of Others (2015), with Wendy Moniz, Trevor St. John, Rachel Dratch, and Oona Laurence, and released by Grasshopper Film after its South by Southwest film festival premiere.
Mike Faist then co-starred in director/writer/producer Marc Lucas’ indie feature, Our Time (2016), with Robert Gorrie, Craig Walker, Keenan Jolliff, and Ashley Anderson. Faist followed this film turn with his first lead big screen role in director/writer Nadine Truong’s bullying-themed drama, I Can I Will I Did (2017), co-starring In Jo Kang, Selena’s Leyva, Ellie Lee, Jack Difalco, and Ryan-James Hatanaka, and which won the audience award during its premiere at the Asian American film festival.
Faist played a supporting role in co-writer/director Aaron Fisher-Cohen’s comedy-drama, Active Adults (2017), with Lola Kirby, Dominic Chianese, Rosie Perez, Ellen Barkin, Scott Cohen, and Sondra James, which was released in limited form by The Orchard. Faist branched out to the fantasy-horror genre with a supporting role in director/co-writer Fritz Bohm’s Wilding (2018), co-starring Bel Powley, Brad Dourif, Collin Kelly-Sordelet, and Liv Tyler, and premiering at the South by Southwest film festival.
Mike Faist had his second starring role in a feature opposite Jessica Hecht in director/writer/producer Henry Butash’s romantic drama, The Atlantic City Story (2020), with Nina Hellman, Gary Wilmes, Prema Cruz, and Emily Donahoe, which premiered at the Denver film festival.
Faist had his movie breakthrough as Riff, leader of The Jets, in the Steven Spielberg/Tony Kushner Oscar-winning adaptation of West Side Story (2021), the second big-screen version of the Leonard Bernstein/Stephen Sondheim musical, starring Ansel Elgort,
Ariana DeBose (Oscar winner for best supporting actress), David Alvarez, Rita Moreno, and
Rachel Zegler, but which lost money for 20th Century Studios with a poor $76 million return (on a $100 million budget).
Faist then starred as journalist Roger Sharpe in the true story,
Pinball: The Man Who Saved the Game (2022), co-directed and co-written by Austin and Meredith Bragg, and featuring Crystal Reed and Dennis Boutsikanis, and which was released by MPI Original Films in a limited pattern after its Hampton film festival premiere. Faist played opposite
Zendaya as a tennis prodigy and Josh O’Connor in MGM’s
Challengers (2024), directed and co-produced by
Luca Guadagnino and written by Justin Kuritzkes, originally slated as opening film of the 2023 Venice film festival (but pulled as a result of the SAG-AFTRA strike) and then released in 2024 theatrically by Amazon Studios (in the U.S.) and Warner Bros. (internationally).
Mike Faist was a key part of the ensemble of filmmaker Jeff Nichols’ drama,
The Bikeriders (2023), based on Danny Lyon’s book, and co-starring Jodie Comer,
Austin Butler,
Michael Shannon, Norman Reedus, and Tom Hardy, and which premiered at the 2023 Telluride film festival before a postponed 2024 theatrical release by Focus Features.