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Kai Undrell
Kai Undrell (born 15 December 2000) is a British music composer and screenwriter. He began his music career writing for video games and smaller projects, before rising up the ladder into larger productions and then venturing into Bollywood. As a writer, he has developed and devised multiple screenplays for short and feature film that have been produced for both the screen and theatre.

Early Work
Undrell originally sought a career in acting on-stage in theatre, as well as for film and television. But eventually, his life-long love of narrative storytelling found a place in his career when screenwriting and music composition became a fascination that manifested into career.

Music Composition
Having played piano since a very young age, Undrell decided to branch out this skill into the field of music composition - originally, as a solo musician - before finding himself in a sea of independent cinema and video game development that was always calling out for music. In 2016, Undrell scored the soundtrack to the survival-horror game Today is my Birthday, which became of large interest to a big fan base - before its announcement of cancellation in 2018.

After getting familiar with the world of video games, Undrell progressed into independent cinema; working with Mari Jeaneth Olan on several award-winning films, including The Unthinkable, Annie and Molly and Night-Life.

In 2018, Undrell was approached by Sandeep A. Varma, who was working on The Disguise, a politically-driven passion project, and wanted him to do the score for a culturally-relevant piece of cinema - it is still running the International festival circuit.

Cinema
Cinema has always been at the centre of Undrell's heart since a young age, and filmmaking was an inevitable venture. His work has mainly revolved around screenwriting, having written several works for both short and feature film.

Melodic Caring Project
In November 2017, Undrell began working at Melodic Caring Project; a volunteer-based charity that broadcasts music artists such as Jake Bugg, The Sherlocks, Gregory Porter, and Lucy Spraggan, to ill-children across the world, after it branched out from Seattle, Washington, to the United Kingdom.