Play’s the Thing
Fady Demian shares insights on his acting career—past, present, and future.

Before breaking onto the small screen, Fady Demian (’23) (right) appeared in The Band’s Visit, an award-winning coproduction of the Huntington Theatre and SpeakEasy Stage. Photo by Stanislav Callas
Play’s the Thing
Rising Star Fady Demian shares insights on his acting career—past, present, and future.
Fady Demian started acting as a teenager, inspired by the movies he watched in middle and high school. The future theater star moved a lot during that time, and in his isolation from his peers, he found company in the likes of Fight Club (1999), The Imitation Game (2014), and the films of Christopher Nolan.
“I started to re-create the scenes I saw in the films or improvise my own characters. I’d start by prepping a scene by myself, without knowing that’s what I was doing, and I noticed that hours would pass by,” says Demian (’23). “It allowed me to channel a lot of things that I felt I couldn’t express in real life.”
Later in high school, as he took more roles in school plays, Demian became inspired by the therapeutic aspect of acting—how energizing it felt to step into another life. He honed his craft at CFA, later landing roles in The Band’s Visit at the Huntington Theatre and English at the Cincinnati Playhouse. This year, he’ll tackle his biggest project yet, in Amazon Studios’ The Terminal List: Dark Wolf. Like its predecessor series, The Terminal List, based on military thriller novels by Jack Carr, Dark Wolf is a gritty depiction of modern espionage, and the choices made behind enemy lines.
CFA spoke with Demian, who plays Sergeant Daran Amiri, about his acting career—past, present, and future.
How do you usually break into a new role?
I start with the body. I love finding the physicality of the person, because once I get into the way they move, it starts to affect the thought patterns. Once I find thought patterns, I’m able to get underneath everything else.
What are some differences between acting for the stage and acting for the screen?
I find theater to be about discovering what’s new within repetition, experiencing it for the first time every time, and getting to live the whole journey of a life, whereas film is about immediate instinct and first impulse—you don’t get to live that particular moment in your character’s life ever again.
How did it feel to film an Amazon Studios production?
It was definitely a huge jump. I’ve done a lot of indie films, but I have never done something of that scale. At some point, I realized this is the same stuff I was doing in acting class. At the end of the day, from action to cut, that moment of play is the same.
What do you want to say to your younger self, who created those characters in his bedroom?
I’d tell him to not lose the unshakable, fervent belief in what he’s doing. When I first started, I had no experience or training, but I had so much more courage than I sometimes find now. I would tell him to never lose that. In a way, I hope he’d tell me that.
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