Audrey Fleurot has a dyslexic son, but that’s not what worried her the most. The 48-year-old actress was afraid that her child would not have a characteristic that she considers essential…
In addition to being a funny and talented actress, Audrey Fleurot is the happy mother of a boy named Lou and 10 years olds, born from his love with the director Djibril Glissant. And if her son has some difficulties at school, the actress, starring in the film Perfect(s): family scamsis reassured on one point: he has a sense of humor!
Audrey Fleurot, mother of a dyslexic son: what “reassured” her
Audrey Fleurot does not lack a sense of humor on a daily basis. “Humor is like a shield. Like working a lot too, because it is sometimes easier to evolve in fiction than in reality“, confided the 48-year-old actress to Gala. And she obviously passed this characteristic on to her son. “That he is funny and well behaved is almost more important than his studies. He obviously has to look good in his sneakers, but I would be sad not to share the humor with him“, she explained.
Certainly, her son is dyslexic And “learning to write and read was very complicated“, but the actress felt “reassured“when she discovered very early on that he had a sense of humor.”When he was 5, I said something to him and he said, ‘Is that irony, mom?’ I didn’t know when he would be able to read and write, but I thought it was wonderful that at his age he was able to detect irony. I was very proud“, detailed the one who is also mother-in-law of her partner’s two children.
Audrey Fleurot: her son, too independent? “A little too early…”
In addition to humor, the actress expected in The Countess of Monte Cristo And Gold diggers on TF1, ensures that she transmits a sense of responsibility to her child, who is already very independent. “I am a mother who relies heavily on the child’s autonomy and I think maybe sometimes a little too early and at the same time it gives me a son who is still quite all-terrain“, the actress clarified to the media Parentsadding that she had sent it “go shopping very early“.
“I always let my children pick up things from the ground and eat them, and get up on their own, and it irritated me when I saw parents catching them, looking at me like: ‘Well, sorry, but your child fell down.’ Yes, but he will learn to get up“, she added. An education method that seems to have borne fruit!








