Television
Faith’s won five Emmys for her stories and commentaries on CBS Sunday Morning, covering wildly diverse topics—from the feminist history of pockets to gender pronouns to the geometry of pasta to British vs. American English to the journey of a pointe shoe to the Nutcracker stage to her own journey of freezing her eggs.
Faith’s not just a storyteller on tv; she began performing musical theatre professionally at thirteen, and her first film role was opposite Diane Lane and Donald Sutherland in 1993. Her gold lamé-clad turn on Sex and the City is still quoted by fans, and she used her improv comedy chops as the star of Bravo’s series Significant Others. Perhaps she’s most famous for portraying the beloved mutant Sarina Douglas on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, on which she got to sing an aria.