Michael Roberts is known for A Quiet Place: Day One (2024).
Michael Robertson was born in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. He is a producer and director, known for Road Train (2010), Black Water: Abyss (2020) and The Reef (2010).
Born in Ottawa, Canada, Michael moved at age three to Calgary, Canada - where he made his stage debut as a Polar Bear in the kindergarten Christmas pageant. At age eight he moved to Brussels, Belgium, and then moved to Vancouver, Canada at age twelve. He attended South Delta Senior Secondary and then the University of British Columbia, becoming the first ever graduate of the new BFA Acting program in 1983. He had many notable performances at University, most memorably as 'Lucky' in 'Waiting for Godot'. After graduation Michael was one of the core group responsible for making the Vancouver Theatresports League one of the worlds leading improvisational theatre companies. He won World Theatresports Championships in Calgary, Canada in 1988 at the Winter Olympic Arts Festival and in Auckland, New Zealand in 1990 at the Commonwealth Games Arts Festival. He has also won North American, Canadian, and New Zealand championships. For several years, he performed with Colin Mochrie and Ryan Stiles. He moved to New Zealand in 1990 and started his own improv company, The Court Jesters, in Christchurch. This company won the World Theatresports Championship in in Los Angeles in 1995. He also was the primary instructor to The Improv Bandits, in Auckland, which won the Super Cage Match long form World Championship in Chicago in 2002. In addition he taught improv at the National Institute of Dramatic Arts, in Sydney, Australia, where among his many students was Cate Blanchett. Concurrently while performing and directing improvisational theatre, Michael also developed a television directing career, in Childrens, (Oi (1993), Comedy (Melody Rules (1994) and Flatmates (1998) and Factual (_"The Shopping Bags" (2001)_ , Tomorrow's World (1965), Dream Lives (2001), [link=tt0455279/ and Serious Amazon (2006) for the BBC. He has won eight international awards for directing television for his work in Canada, New Zealand, and the U.K, including a Leo, a BAFTA, a Prix Jeunesse, and a Royal Television Society Award He has also directed many theatre productions, particularly as Artistic Director of the Queenstown Shakespeare Festival in New Zealand, and the international touring hit and 'Best New Zealand Play' award winner "Bare". For many years was the senior improvisor and teacher to the Vancouver Theatresports League, and led the companies growth into long form improvisation, creating several long form formats and taking Vancouver improvisors to long form festivals in Miami, Calgary (x3), Chicago (x2), San Francisco, and Seattle (x6). In addition, he took up a teaching position at the Vancouver Film School, where he taught Advanced Directing to the Film students, and Improvisation, Acting, Character, Shakespeare, and Sitcom to the Acting Students, creating the curriculum for all these courses. He also helped design the curriculum and taught for the first two years at the Centre for Digital Media Masters degree program. In 2017 he pivoted back to his early love of outdoor recreation and gained his Level One CSIA Ski Instructors qualification, and taught at Mt. Seymour in 2018 and Cypress Mountain in 2019 and 2020, where he gained his Level Two CSIA qualification, and also taught children as a Forest Educator at the Saplings Outdoor Forest school. He continues to direct television and theatre, improvise internationally with the Improv Bandits., act in film, television, and theatre, teach and coach actors, ski instruct at Cypress Mountain, and educate children in outdoor recreation.
Michael Robinson is known for Mysteries at the Museum (2010).
Michael Robison was born on 29 August 1955 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Michael is a director and editor, known for The Collector (2004), R.L. Stine's The Haunting Hour (2010) and The Outer Limits (1995).
Michael Rocco is known for For Love or Money? A Poker Documentary (2019).
Michael Rock is an actor, director, and producer. He is also a retired U.S. Army Special Forces Engineer Sergeant (Green Beret), and fights against child exploitation. He is originally from Springfield, Massachusetts, and started his acting career on stage in Virginia City, Nevada in the play "Murder at the Gin Joint". His first official movie was "The Flock".
Michael Roddy is an actor and producer, known for 24 (2001), ER (1994) and Speedway Junky (1999).
Michael was born and raised in Jersey City. During his junior year of high school, he auditioned for New Jersey's Governor's School of the Arts on a lark to get himself out of the house. He was one of 12 students selected across the state. He went on to receive a full scholarship to the Catholic University of America, graduating with a BA in Political Science. During school, he supported himself as a theater carpenter - often building the sets that he would later perform on. Early in his college career, he portrayed Jim O'Connor in Tennessee Williams' The Glass Menagerie and The Beast in Beauty and the Beast. Michael has appeared in several feature films, most notably The River Murders opposite Ray Liotta, Nowhere Man, Desolation Angels (Telluride Film Festival winner), and Under Hellgate Bridge. Dedicated fans remember him from his first television acting role as Cameron on NBC's Another World. Since then he's had numerous guest star roles on shows such as Hawaii Five-0, Castle, Major Crimes, Rizzoli & Isles, Saving Grace, The Mentalist, 24, and Bones, in addition to several Jerry Bruckheimer shows - CSI: Miami, Without a Trace, Close to Home, and Cold Case. He's also lent his voice to the video games Call of Duty: Black Ops II and L.A. Noire. He resides in New York City. When not acting, he works with non-profits to build housing for the homeless with a focus on seniors and veterans, as well as at-risk foster youth. To stay active, he studies Krav Maga and enjoys tuna fishing and salsa dancing. He loves to attend film festivals.
Michael Rodrigues is an Australian actor, writer, action performer and fight choreographer. Michael started training in martial arts from the age of 7, primarily in Tae Kwon Do through the International Tae Kwon Do Federation. His training in martial arts had a direct influence in his desire to be a performer. After deciding to become an actor in 2005 and taking up study at Queensland University of Technology in Drama, Michael was cast in the channel 7 television series, Forensic Investigators. In 2007, Michael commenced work at Warner Brothers Movie World on the Gold Cast. He was a performer there for two years before moving to Melbourne in 2009. Michael has worked on a number of films, television programs, music videos and commercials over the last 10 years. His credits include City Homicide, Rush, Sea Patrol, Offspring, Secrets and Lies and most recently the ABC/Netflix drama The Unlisted. As an accomplished martial artist with training in stage combat and stunts, Michael has developed essential skills for action performance, which is utilized in much of his work. Michael's onset experience allowed him to develop skills and understanding of script narrative, screen production and action design, which directly contributed to the development of his various projects. Since 2019 Michael has also been creatively involved with a number of projects as a writer. His current projects include creating a sci-fi television series with his writing partner, Simon Smith and showrunner, Paul Mullie (Stargate, Dark Matter), as well as an action feature and horror feature all in development.