David Attenborough

Overview

David Frederick Attenborough is a broadcaster and writer, best known for presenting documentary series and films on the natural world. With his narrative storytelling style and use of cutting-edge technology, Attenborough has engaged audiences across a career spanning over seven decades. Alongside being knighted twice, winning four Emmy Awards, and having over 50 species named after him, Attenborough remains the only person to have won BAFTAs for programming in black-and-white, color, HD, 3D, and 4K.

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  • David Attenborough's career, from managing television programming to natural historian

    Throughout his career, Attenborough's storytelling style framed nature as the stage where plants and animals were characters that audiences could connect with and become emotionally attached to. Before the breakout success of "Life on Earth" and working full-time on making programs about the natural world, Attenborough spent a decade in executive roles responsible for overseeing content on BBC channels.

  • Discussing his early life, David Attenborough describes how his TV career began by chance

    Growing up on the University College, Leicester campus, where his father was principal, Attenborough uncovered specimens such as coiled shells in the rocks and limestone of the surrounding Midlands, which sparked his interest in nature. A week after not landing an interview for a radio job he had applied for, Attenborough was offered a position on "a new thing called television."

  • Watch David Attenborough catching a python on 'Zoo Quest'

    The first series, hosted by the famed natural historian, was meant to be presented by Jack Lester, a curator at the London Zoo, who would be documented while they captured wildlife to bring to the institution. Because Lester became ill, Attenborough became the presenter and often participated in the capture of animals, such as snakes.

  • View some of the species named after David Attenborough

    Acisoma attenboroughi is a dragonfly from Madagascar named in honor of Attenborough's 90th birthday. Stating they liked watching Attenborough's documentaries with their family, the discoverer of a flightless weevil from Indonesia named it Trigonopterus attenboroughi in 2014. A Peruvian frog was named Prisimantis attenboroughi in 2014 to honor Attenborough for raising awareness of wildlife conservation.

  • Watch David Attenborough's unexpected interaction with a family of gorillas on 'Life on Earth'

    On the border between Rwanda and the modern-day Democratic Republic of the Congo, Attenborough uses specific vocalizations and behaviors to approach a female gorilla peacefully, only to have two of her children lie down on him. Through a comical exchange, the incident helps show the creatures to be the opposite of the aggressive, violent stereotypes about them.

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