Michael Christopher White (born June 28, 1970) is an American filmmaker and actor. He created, writes, and directs the ongoing HBO satirical comedy anthology series The White Lotus, for which he has won three Primetime Emmy Awards.
White also won an Independent Spirit John Cassavetes Award for the 2000 film Chuck & Buck, which he wrote and starred in. He has written the screenplays for films such as School of Rock (2003) and has directed several films that he has written, such as Brad's Status (2017). White was a co-creator, executive producer, writer, director and actor on the HBO series Enlightened. He is the son of Lyla Lee (née Loehr), a fundraising executive, and former executive director of the Pasadena Playhouse, and James Melville "Mel" White, a former speechwriter and ghostwriter for Religious Right figures such as Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson. He attended Polytechnic School which he described as a "very conservative country-club school". He also had a role in the 2004 remake of The Stepford Wives, and the 2008 film Smother. Chuck & Buck, in which White portrayed a manchild who stalks his childhood friend, was named the best film of 2000 by Entertainment Weekly. In an interview with The New York Times, Jeff Bridges called White's turn in Chuck & Buck "the performance of the decade".
He frequently collaborates with actor–writer Jack Black on films. Together they formed the production company Black and White, which closed in 2006. White is not a fan of classic rock, but he wrote School of Rock specifically so Black could perform his own favorite rock music.
White made his directorial debut with the self-penned Year of the Dog at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival. He was a member of the US Dramatic Jury at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival.
Laura Dern brought White into a project with HBO which became the series Enlightened that premiered on October 10, 2011. Dern's character, Amy Jellicoe, goes to a Hawaiian retreat after her professional life publicly implodes, and is introduced to meditation. White himself had suffered an on-the-job meltdown while running an earlier television series, and incorporated elements of that experience, as well as his own exploration of Buddhist meditation, into the new series' plot.
White is a credited writer on The Emoji Movie; he spent three weeks with the film's screenwriters and helped with the structure of the script. For this project he received a Golden Raspberry Award. He wrote and directed the 2017 film Brad's Status.
In 2021, White created, wrote, and directed The White Lotus, a satirical limited series for HBO, after being approached by HBO during the COVID-19 pandemic for ideas. HBO went on to greenlight two more seasons, which have different locations and casts and very little continuity between them. White has brought back three actors over the course of the series: Jennifer Coolidge, Natasha Rothwell, and Jon Gries. The concept for the series was "partly inspired" by White's work on an earlier proposed series which was never picked up by any network: The Tears of St. Patsy, which would have featured "Coolidge as a frustrated actor navigating a dangerous world".
Meanwhile, White continued to work on the third season of The White Lotus, whose release was delayed to 2025 by the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike. As of March 2025, The White Lotus was averaging millions of viewers per episode. It became "the biggest hit" of White's career, drawing comparisons to the best shows of the prestige television era of the 2010s. They lasted for seven legs before being eliminated in sixth place in Phuket, Thailand. Mel and Mike returned to compete in The Amazing Race: Unfinished Business, where they were the second team eliminated in Japan after they both developed hypothermia. Both times, he ended up stuck on the island of Ko Samui, which was used by the show as its elimination station, and because of those unhappy memories, he was reluctant at first to return there to film the third season of The White Lotus.
Survivor
White was a contestant on Survivor: David vs. Goliath, as a member of the Goliath tribe, then to reshuffled Jabeni tribe and the merged Kalokalo tribe. He made it to Day 39 and received three jury votes, finishing in second place behind the winner, Nick Wilson.
White said he had been a big fan of the show, and because of his connections had developed a friendship with the show's host Jeff Probst, providing the host suggestions towards improving the show. For instance, Probst stated that it was White who discouraged him from bringing back Redemption Island for Survivor: San Juan del Sur. At some point White decided to start trying out to be a participant of the show, but he failed to be picked over what he believed was a concern of having "sloppy seconds" from other reality television programs. White noted that once he was selected, he had had no other conversations with Probst until the game was concluded.
Several of White's fellow Survivor players have appeared in cameos on The White Lotus, including Alec Merlino (season 1), Angelina Keeley and Kara Kay (season 2), and Natalie Cole, Carl Boudreaux and Christian Hubicki (season 3).
On May 28, 2025, White was announced as a contestant on Survivor 50: In the Hands of the Fans, the fiftieth season of the show. He placed 20th out of 24. He was on Kalo to begin with, but then went to Vatu, who continued to lose challenges, then got voted out in a 3-2-1 vote with Angelina Keeley voting with him.
Personal life
White is a vegan and lives in Santa Monica. He also owns a house in Kauai. He is bisexual. In a 2025 interview with The New Yorker, White said that his relationship with his partner Josh had fallen apart due to The White Lotus taking over his schedule.
Filmography
Films
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders"
|+
!Title
!Year
!Director
!Screenwriter
!Producer
!Notes
|-
! scope="row" |Dead Man on Campus
|1998
|
|
|
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|-
! scope="row" |Chuck & Buck
|2000
|
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|-
! scope="row" |Orange County
| rowspan="2" |2002
|
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|-
! scope="row" |The Good Girl
|
|
|
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|-
! scope="row" |School of Rock
|2003
|
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|
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|-
! scope="row" |Nacho Libre
|2006
|
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|-
! scope="row" |Year of the Dog
| rowspan="2" |2007
|
|
|
|Directorial debut
|-
! scope="row" |The Hills with James Franco and Mila Kunis
|
|
|
|Short film
|-
! scope="row" |Gentlemen Broncos
|2009
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|-
! scope="row" |Magic Magic
|2013
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|-
! scope="row" |The D Train
|2015
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|-
! scope="row" |Beatriz at Dinner
| rowspan="4" |2017
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|-
! scope="row" |The Emoji Movie
|
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|-
! scope="row" |Brad's Status
|
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|-
! scope="row" |Pitch Perfect 3
|
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|-
! scope="row" |The One and Only Ivan
|2020
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|-
! scope="row" |Migration
|2023
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|-
! scope="row" |Despicable Me 4
|2024
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|}
Acting credits
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders"
!Title
!Year
!Role
!Notes
|-
! scope="row" |Star Maps
|1997
|Carmel County Writer
|
|-
! scope="row" |Chuck & Buck
|2000
|Buck O'Brien
|
|-
! scope="row" |Orange County
| rowspan="2" |2002
|Mr. Burke
|
|-
! scope="row" |The Good Girl
|Corny
|
|-
! scope="row" |School of Rock
|2003
|Ned Schneebly
|
|-
! scope="row" |The Stepford Wives
|2004
|Hank
|
|-
! scope="row" |Are You the Favorite Person of Anybody?
| rowspan="2" |2005
|Respondent
|Short film
|-
! scope="row" |Welcome to California
|John Goodman
|
|-
! scope="row" |Smother
|2008
|Myron Stubbs
|
|-
! scope="row" |Gentlemen Broncos
| rowspan="2" |2009
|Dusty
|
|-
! scope="row" |Zombieland
|Gas Station Clerk
|
|-
! scope="row" |Ride
|2014
|Roger
|
|-
! scope="row" |The D Train
|2015
|Jerry
|
|-
! scope="row" |Brad's Status
|2017
|Nick Pascale
|
|-
! scope="row" |The One and Only Ivan
|2020
|Frankie (voice) / Passing Driver
|
|}
Television
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders"
|+
!Title
!Year(s)
!Director
!Writer
!Producer
!Creator
!Notes
|-
! scope="row" |Dawson's Creek
|1998–1999
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|
|Wrote 9 episodes / Produced 22 episodes
|-
! scope="row" |Freaks and Geeks
|2000
|
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|Wrote 3 episodes / Produced 17 episodes
|-
! scope="row" |Pasadena
|2001–2002
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|Created and produced 13 episodes / Wrote 6 episodes.
|-
! scope="row" |Cracking Up
|2004–2006
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|
|Created and produced 12 episodes / Wrote episode: "The Fixer"
|-
! scope="row" |Earth to America
|2005
|
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|Television special
|-
! scope="row" |Enlightened
|2011–2013
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|
|Created, wrote and produced 18 episodes / Directed 6 episodes
|-
! scope="row" |The Boring Life of Jacqueline
|2012
|
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|
|10 episodes
|-
! scope="row" |Mamma Dallas
| rowspan="2" |2016
|
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|
|Television pilot
|-
! scope="row" |School of Rock
|
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|Episode: "Come Together" / Also wrote original theatrical film
|-
! scope="row" |The White Lotus
|2021–present
|
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|
| Anthology series, wrote and directed every episode
|}
Acting credits
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders"
!Title
!Year(s)
!Role
!Notes
|-
! scope="row" |Freaks and Geeks
|2000
|Chip Kelly
|Episode: "Kim Kelly Is My Friend"
|-
! scope="row" |Undeclared
|2001
|Pet Store Employee
|Episode: "Eric Visits"
|-
! scope="row" |Pushing Daisies
|2007
|Billy Balsam
|Episode: "Bitter Sweets"
|-
! scope="row" |Enlightened
|2011–2013
|Tyler
|15 episodes
|-
! scope="row" |Mamma Dallas
|2016
|Himself
|Television pilot
|}
Non-acting credits
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders"
!Title
!Year
!Notes
|-
! scope="row" |Dog Whisperer with Cesar Millan
|2007
|Dog Owner
|-
! scope="row" |The Amazing Race 14
|2009
|
|-
! scope="row" |The Amazing Race: Unfinished Business
|2011
|
|-
! scope="row" |Survivor: David vs. Goliath
|2018
|
|-
! scope="row" |Survivor 50: In the Hands of the Fans
|2026
|
|}
Awards and nominations
{| class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders"
|-
! Organizations
! Year
! Category
! Work
! Result
! class="unsortable"| Ref.
|-
! rowspan="1" scope="row" | BAFTA TV Awards
| style="text-align:center;", rowspan="1" | 2023
| Best International Programme
| The White Lotus
|
| align=center|
|-
! rowspan="1" scope="row" | Critics' Choice Awards
| style="text-align:center;", rowspan="1" | 2003
| Best Song
| School of Rock <small> (song: "School of Rock") </small>
|
| align=center|
|-
! rowspan="2" scope="row" | Directors Guild of America Awards
| style="text-align:center;", rowspan="1" | 2022
| rowspan=2| Outstanding Directing – Comedy Series
| The White Lotus <small> (episode: "Mysterious Monkeys") </small>
|
| align=center|
|-
| align=center| 2023
| The White Lotus <small> (episode: "Arrivederci") </small>
|
| align=center|
|-
! rowspan="6" scope="row" | Independent Spirit Awards
| style="text-align:center;", rowspan="3" | 2000
| John Cassavetes Award
| rowspan=3| Chuck & Buck
|
| rowspan=3, align=center|
|-
| Best Screenplay
|
|-
| Best Debut Performance
|
|-
| align=center| 2002
| rowspan=3| Best Screenplay
| The Good Girl
|
| align=center|
|-
| align=center| 2007
| Year of the Dog
|
| align=center|
|-
| align=center| 2017
| Beatriz at Dinner
|
| align=center|
|-
! rowspan="9" scope="row" | Primetime Emmy Awards
| style="text-align:center;", rowspan="3" | 2022
| Outstanding Limited Series
| rowspan=3| The White Lotus <small> (season one) </small>
|
| rowspan=3, align=center|
|-
| Outstanding Directing for a Limited Series or Movie
|
|-
| Outstanding Writing for a Limited Series or Movie
|
|-
| rowspan=3, align=center| 2023
| Outstanding Drama Series
| rowspan=3| The White Lotus <small> (season two) </small>
|
| rowspan=3, align=center|
|-
| Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series
|
|-
| Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series
|
|-
| rowspan=3, align=center| 2025
| Outstanding Drama Series
| rowspan=3| The White Lotus <small> (season three) </small>
|
| rowspan=3, align=center|
|-
| Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series
|
|-
| Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series
|
|-
! rowspan="2" scope="row" | Producers Guild of America Awards
| style="text-align:center;", rowspan="1" | 2021
| Best Limited Series – Television
| The White Lotus <small> (season one) </small>
|
| align=center|
|-
| align=center| 2022
| Best Episodic Drama
| The White Lotus <small> (season two) </small>
|
| align=center|
|-
! rowspan="2" scope="row" | Writers Guild of America Awards
| style="text-align:center;", rowspan="1" | 2021
| Long Form – Original
| The White Lotus <small> (season one) </small>
|
| align=center|
|-
| align=center| 2022
| Limited Series
| The White Lotus <small> (season two) </small>
|
| align=center|
|-
|}
References
External links
- July 2000 article about White from The Village Voice
