Michael Audreson
Michael Audreson | |
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Born |
England, United Kingdom | 1 August 1956
Occupation | actor, writer, director |
Years active | 1964–2011 |
Michael Audreson (born 1 August 1956) is a British actor who appeared in many films and television shows in the 1960s. He appeared in the 12-episode Children's Film Foundation series The Magnificent Six and a Half before playing the bespectacled "Brains" in Here Come the Double Deckers (1970–71). In the film Young Winston (1971) he played Winston Churchill as a schoolboy.
As the 1970s progressed, Audreson's appearances reduced significantly, but he had a role in two episodes of The Tomorrow People (1978) television series. In 1996 he founded Rivendell Healthcare, a drug and alcohol addiction treatment centre, later called Mindsets.
Audreson wrote and directed two short films: The Man Who Could Read Minds (1999) and Eve Buckingham (2001) starring Susan Hampshire. His feature film The 10 Arenas of Marwood (2010), which he wrote and directed, starred Judi Bowker, John Hasler, Kate G. Laycy, Michael Mayne, Bryan Murray, Lucy Russell, Issy Van Randwyck, Emma Williams and Peter Wickham as Marwood.
In 2015, He founded a media production and distribution company, 10am Transmedia, which specialises in Transmedia storytelling. Its first project is called Don't Get Mad which looks at the new phenomenon of communicating via the Internet to resolve issues. This includes two fictional feature films; An Hour To Kill to be filmed in 2016 and Multiple Views which will be filmed in 2017. There is also a documentary series called Don't Get Mad which is designed to be in two versions, one for television, the other for the internet.