Mona Fastvold is a Norwegian-born filmmaker, screenwriter, director, and former actress based in New York City, renowned for her introspective independent films exploring themes of human relationships, identity, and historical displacement. Born on March 7, 1986, in Oslo, Norway, she grew up in an arts-oriented family—her parents were avid cinephiles, her mother a novelist, and her grandfather an architect—which influenced her early interest in storytelling and performance. Fastvold began her career as a child actress at age eight, appearing in recurring roles on Norwegian television series such as Asylet before taking on more roles like Hotel Caesar as a young adult, prior to relocating to the United States in her early twenties to pursue further opportunities in film.[1]Her transition to writing and directing marked a pivotal shift, with her feature directorial debut The Sleepwalker (2014), which she co-wrote and directed, earning critical acclaim for its atmospheric portrayal of psychological tension among friends at a remote house.[1] This was followed by The World to Come (2020), a period drama she directed starring Vanessa Kirby and Katherine Waterston, which delves into a forbidden romance between two women on the 19th-century American frontier and premiered at the Venice Film Festival.[1] Fastvold's screenwriting collaborations, particularly with her partner Brady Corbet, have also garnered significant recognition; she co-wrote The Childhood of a Leader (2016) and Vox Lux (2018) with him, and their joint effort on The Brutalist (2024)—a nearly four-hour epic directed by Corbet, starring Adrien Brody as a Hungarian-Jewish architect navigating post-World War II America—earned seven Golden Globe nominations, 10 Academy Award nominations, and three Oscar wins (Best Actor, Best Cinematography, and Best Director) along with multiple Best Original Screenplay awards from critics' groups.[1][2][3]Fastvold's most recent directorial project, The Testament of Ann Lee (2025), which she co-wrote with Corbet and stars Amanda Seyfried, premiered at the Venice Film Festival in August 2025 and explores the life of the 18th-century religious leader Ann Lee.[4] In addition to her narrative features, Fastvold has directed music videos for artists including her ex-husband, Norwegian musician Sondre Lerche (married 2005–2013), and has maintained a low-profile personal life while raising a child with Corbet, emphasizing collaborative creative partnerships in her professional output.[1] Her work has been praised for its emotional depth and visual precision, positioning her as a rising voice in contemporary cinema.[2]
Early life and education
Childhood in Norway
Mona Fastvold was born on March 7, 1986, in Oslo, Norway. She grew up in a culturally rich environment that nurtured her artistic inclinations from an early age.Fastvold was raised in an arts-active family, with her mother serving as a novelist who emphasized the importance of storytelling. Her mother taught her and her sisters to write by hand in daily journals, a practice that fostered Fastvold's lifelong passion for narrative creation. Her parents, avid cinephiles, introduced her to classic cinema, including films by Ingmar Bergman, which sparked her initial fascination with the medium. Additionally, her grandfather, a mid-century architect, engaged her in discussions about aesthetics and philosophical ideas, further deepening her appreciation for creative expression.During her childhood, Fastvold developed a strong interest in drama and filmmaking, beginning her professional acting career at the age of eight. By eleven, she landed a recurring role in the Norwegian television series Asylet, marking her entry into on-screen work. She later became a regular cast member on Hotel Caesar, Norway's longest-running soap opera, where her experiences on set provided hands-on exposure to the filmmaking process and solidified her early enthusiasm for the industry.
Education and move to the US
Mona Fastvold, born in Oslo, Norway, in 1986 to an arts-oriented family—her mother a novelist who instilled a love of writing and storytelling—moved to the United States in her early twenties to immerse herself in the American film industry and explore broader opportunities beyond her native country's creative scene.[1][5]Lacking formal film education, Fastvold's academic background was shaped by hands-on learning from her mother's daily writing rituals, where she and her sisters were encouraged to keep diaries by hand, fostering her early discipline in narrative craft—a practice she continues today with a constant notebook.[5] Her relocation to New York marked a pivotal shift, as she navigated the challenges of immigrating and working in a second language, experiences that deepened her empathy for themes of displacement and adaptation.[5]In New York, Fastvold's initial years involved actively visiting film sets, building connections within the industry, and capturing her own experimental footage, which served as practical training in the collaborative dynamics of filmmaking. These formative encounters bridged her childhood acting pursuits in Norway with her growing aspirations in directing, allowing her to transition gradually from performer to storyteller behind the camera.[1][6]
Professional career
Acting beginnings
Mona Fastvold began her acting career as a child in Norway, making her debut at age eight and landing her first significant role at age 11 as the recurring character Gry in the Norwegian television series Asylet (1997).[1]She continued with supporting roles in Norwegian productions, including an appearance in the coming-of-age film Capo Nord (2003), directed by Carlo Luglio, where she portrayed a character in the story of young friends on a road trip across Europe.[7][8]Fastvold's early international work included the lead role of Helen, a Norwegian student navigating personal turmoil in New York, in the short drama Fault Lines (2008), directed by Tom Ashton.[9]After moving to the United States in her early twenties to pursue opportunities in the American film industry—following her studies at New York University—Fastvold faced challenges such as language barriers and the difficulties of working as a non-native English speaker in a competitive market.[1] These hurdles, combined with her growing interest in storytelling from behind the camera, prompted her transition to screenwriting and directing around 2009–2010, after her first English-language acting role in The Other Woman (2009).[1][10]
Directing and screenwriting in film
Mona Fastvold made her directorial debut with the 2014 drama The Sleepwalker, which she co-wrote with frequent collaborator Brady Corbet.[11] The film explores the intricate dynamics of relationships through the story of two couples whose weekend getaway unravels amid revelations of hidden tensions, drawing from Fastvold's interest in emotional undercurrents and interpersonal isolation.[12]Fastvold's next directorial effort, The World to Come (2020), marked a shift toward historical settings while deepening her examination of female experiences in constrained environments.[13] Adapted from a novel and scripted by Jim Shepard and Ron Hansen, the film centers on two neighboring women in 19th-century rural America whose bond challenges societal norms, highlighting themes of longing, resilience, and the agency women seek amid isolation.[14] Fastvold's direction emphasizes intimate, naturalistic performances to convey the emotional weight of these relationships, earning the film the Queer Lion award at the Venice Film Festival.[15]In 2025, Fastvold returned to co-writing and directing with The Testament of Ann Lee, a musical retelling of the Shaker leader's life and the founding of her utopian community.[16] Co-written again with Corbet, the film portrays Ann Lee's spiritual journey, persecution, and establishment of a society centered on equality and ecstatic worship through song and dance, premiering in competition at the Venice Film Festival.[17] This project extends Fastvold's recurring motifs of isolation and female agency, reimagining historical female figures who defy patriarchal constraints to forge communal and personal liberation.[18]Across these works, Fastvold's filmmaking evolves from contemporary relational dramas to period pieces that amplify women's inner lives against oppressive backdrops, consistently prioritizing subtle emotional authenticity over overt narrative spectacle.[19] Her thematic focus on isolation as both a burden and a catalyst for empowerment underscores a cohesive artistic vision rooted in empathetic character studies.[20]
Television work
In 2023, Fastvold directed three episodes of the Apple TV+ miniseries The Crowded Room, including the pivotal finale "Family," often collaborating closely with her husband, director Brady Corbet, to explore themes of mental health and identity through layered character performances starring Tom Holland and Amanda Seyfried.[21][22]Her most recent television credit came in 2025 with directing the episode "Blind Spot" of the Peacock crime drama Long Bright River, starring Amanda Seyfried as a Philadelphia police officer navigating family secrets and addiction amid a serial killerinvestigation.[23]Throughout her television projects, Fastvold has adapted her distinctive film style—characterized by atmospheric visuals, subtle emotional undercurrents, and focus on female perspectives—to the serialized format, balancing standalone episode arcs with overarching narrative momentum to heighten psychological tension in ensemble-driven stories.[10]
Collaborations and recent projects
Fastvold's most prominent collaborations have been with filmmaker Brady Corbet, with whom she has co-written several screenplays. Their partnership began with the 2015 psychological dramaThe Childhood of a Leader, which Corbet directed; Fastvold's contributions to the script helped shape its exploration of authoritarianism through the lens of a young boy's upbringing in post-World War I France.[5]This creative alliance continued with Vox Lux (2018), another Corbet-directed film for which Fastvold co-wrote the story, delving into the commodification of tragedy and fame in the life of a pop star portrayed by Natalie Portman.[24]The duo's joint efforts reached a pinnacle with The Brutalist (2024), an epic period drama directed by Corbet and co-written by Fastvold, chronicling the struggles of a Hungarian-Jewish architect in post-World War II America; the screenplay earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay.[25][26]Their most recent collaboration, The Testament of Ann Lee (2025), marks Fastvold's return to directing while co-writing the screenplay with Corbet; the historical musical drama stars Amanda Seyfried as the 18th-century Shaker leader Ann Lee, emphasizing themes of utopian community and spiritual ecstasy through reimagined Shaker hymns.[10][27]In November 2025, Fastvold signed with London-based Magna Studios for representation across film, television, and emerging formats, positioning her for future projects amid growing awards buzz for The Testament of Ann Lee.[15]
Personal life
Relationships and marriages
Mona Fastvold married Norwegian musician Sondre Lerche in 2005.[1] The couple, who had collaborated on various creative projects during their marriage, divorced in 2013 after eight years together.[1]Fastvold was introduced to American filmmaker Brady Corbet by their mutual friend and actor Christopher Abbott around 2003–2004.[28] In 2012, Fastvold began a relationship with Corbet, whom she met through Abbott.[29] The couple, who became close collaborators in both personal and professional spheres, have one child together.[30]These personal transitions in the early 2010s coincided with Fastvold's shift from acting to writing and directing, marking a pivotal period in her artistic development as she prepared for her feature directorial debut.[31]
Family
Mona Fastvold and her longtime partner Brady Corbet welcomed their daughter, Ada, in 2014.[32]The family resides in Brooklyn, New York, where Fastvold maintains a collaborative routine with Corbet that accommodates parenting responsibilities alongside their screenwriting and directing projects.[33][34]Ada frequently joins her parents on film sets and at international festivals, such as Venice, reflecting the couple's integrated approach to family and career as of 2025, with no additional children reported.[10][33]
Awards and recognition
Academy Awards nomination
Mona Fastvold received a nomination for Best Original Screenplay at the 97th Academy Awards, held on March 2, 2025, for her work on The Brutalist (2024), shared with co-writer and director Brady Corbet.[26] The film, a historical epic about a Hungarian-Jewish architect's post-Holocaust journey in America, earned widespread critical acclaim for its ambitious storytelling and visual scope, contributing to its 10 total Oscar nominations, including Best Picture; it ultimately won three Oscars—Best Actor for Adrien Brody, Best Cinematography, and Best Original Score—but the screenplay did not win (Anora won in that category).[33][3]Fastvold's screenplay collaboration with Corbet, developed over seven years, was praised for its intricate narrative depth and thematic exploration of trauma and ambition, marking a significant milestone in her screenwriting career.[35] This nomination highlighted her pivotal role in crafting the film's script, which drew from historical research and personal insights into immigrant experiences; the screenplay also earned a nomination for Best Screenplay at the 82nd Golden Globe Awards and multiple wins from critics' groups, including eight Best Original Screenplay awards from 46 voting bodies.[1][36]
Festival and critical acclaim
Fastvold's directorial debut, The Sleepwalker (2014), world premiered in the U.S. Dramatic Competition at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival, where it was praised for its atmospheric tension and exploration of familial secrets but received mixed reviews overall for its deliberate pacing and unresolved narrative threads.[37][38] Critics noted the film's intriguing buildup of psychological intrigue among the characters, though some felt it prioritized mood over payoff.[37]Her second feature, The World to Come (2020), had its world premiere in competition at the 77th Venice International Film Festival, earning acclaim for its lyrical depiction of forbidden love and isolation on the 19th-century American frontier.[39]The film later screened at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival for its U.S. premiere, where reviewers highlighted its emotional depth and the performances of Vanessa Kirby and Katherine Waterston in conveying themes of human connection amid hardship.[40] With a 74% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, it was lauded as an austere yet poignant period drama.[13]In 2025, Fastvold returned to Venice with The Testament of Ann Lee, which competed in the main section of the 82nd Venice International Film Festival and generated significant buzz, including a 15-minute standing ovation at its September 1 premiere.[4] The folk musical, starring Amanda Seyfried as the Shaker founder, was critically praised as a warm, wry reimagining of religious fervor and communal ideals, earning an 89% Rotten Tomatoes score for its inventive blend of history and allegory.[16][41][42]Fastvold's screenwriting collaborations have also drawn praise for their thematic depth. In Vox Lux (2018), co-written with director Brady Corbet, critics commended the film's audacious examination of fame's intersection with violence and cultural trauma, portraying celebrity as a satanic bargain in a post-tragedy world.[43] Similarly, for The Brutalist (2024), her co-script with Corbet was hailed for weaving architecture as a metaphor for post-war trauma, immigration struggles, and capitalism's false promises, contributing to the film's status as a monumental epic with widespread critical acclaim.[44][45]
Filmography
Feature films
Mona Fastvold has directed and written several feature films, often collaborating with her partner Brady Corbet on screenplays. Her work spans psychological dramas, historical epics, and character-driven stories, with credits in both directing and writing roles.
Co-written with Laure de Clermont-Tonnerre and Brock Norman Brock; screenplay for the drama directed by de Clermont-Tonnerre, focusing on prisonrehabilitation.[49]
Mona Fastvold began her professional career as an actress in Norway, appearing in television and independent films during the late 1990s and early 2000s, often under her birth name or early professional name Mona Lerche.[53] Her roles were typically minor or supporting, reflecting her emerging presence in the industry before she shifted focus to directing and screenwriting around 2010.[53]In 1997, Fastvold appeared in the Norwegian TV series Asylet, portraying the character Gry across seven episodes of the third season.[54] The series, a drama centered on asylum seekers and social issues, marked a significant early role at age 11.[53][1]In 1998, she appeared as Vibeke in one episode of the TV series Nini.[55]In 1999, she had a role in one episode of the TV series Smørøyet.[56]She followed this with a role in the 2003 Italian-Norwegian comedy-drama Capo Nord, a road movie about young Neapolitan thieves traveling to Oslo; Fastvold appears in the cast but her specific character is unspecified in credits.[57]From 2006 to 2007, Fastvold had a recurring role as Daphne Flaa in 65 episodes of the Norwegian soap opera Hotel Cæsar.[58]In 2008, Fastvold starred as Helen in the short video Fault Lines, directed by Kate Barker-Froyland, where she played a Norwegian student navigating personal relationships in New York.[9] Credited as Mona Lerche, the role highlighted her ability to convey emotional vulnerability in intimate, low-budget productions.In 2009, she played Sonia in a minor role in the film The Other Woman.[59]After transitioning primarily to behind-the-camera work, Fastvold took a small on-screen role in the 2018 musical drama Vox Lux, directed by her frequent collaborator Brady Corbet; her appearance is minor and uncredited in major character listings, contributing to the ensemble backdrop of the film's exploration of fame and trauma.In 2020, she appeared in the HBO anthology series Homemade, in the episode "Annex" directed by Antonio Campos.[60]
Television directing
Fastvold's television directing career includes contributions to limited series, focusing on psychological and dramatic narratives.In 2023, she directed three episodes of the Apple TV+ miniseries The Crowded Room (season 1). These were "Rya" (episode 6, aired June 30), "Family" (episode 9, aired July 28), and "Judgment" (episode 10, aired July 28).[61][62][21][63]In 2025, she directed one episode of the Peacock crime drama Long Bright River (season 1, episode 4: "Blind Spot", aired March 13).[64][23]