Natural World | |
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2010-2011 series title card |
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Also known as | The Natural World The World About Us |
Genre | Nature documentary |
Narrated by | Various |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Language(s) | English |
No. of episodes | >400 |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Various |
Editor(s) | Tim Martin (series editor) |
Running time | 50/60 minutes |
Production company(s) | BBC Natural History Unit |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | BBC Two |
Picture format | Film SD: 576i HD: 1080i |
Audio format | Monaural, Stereo |
Original run | 10 December 1967 | – present
External links | |
Website |
Natural World is the longest-running nature documentary series on British television. 2008 marked the series' 25th anniversary under its present title, though its origins can be traced back to its predecessor The World About Us which began over 40 years ago. Natural World is broadcast on BBC Two in the autumn and spring seasons; currently, 14 episodes are commissioned by the BBC each year. Production duties are shared between its in-house Natural History Unit, independent UK production companies and leading wildlife filmmakers from around the world. All episodes are now shot in high definition, and more than 400 have been screened in its first 25 years[1]. The current series editor is Tim Martin.
The latest series of Natural World began transmission in July 2010 with a study of harpy eagles in the Orinoco rainforest. Other episodes in the series feature British butterflies, a family of sea otters in Monterey harbour and a tribute to elephant matriarch Echo.
Contents |
In 1967, colour television was gradually being introduced to British audiences on the BBC’s recently launched second channel. David Attenborough, at that time the Controller of BBC Two, was seeking to expand the range of colour programmes on the fledgling channel. Formerly head of the BBC’s Travel and Exploration Unit in London, he realised that many of its telecine films had been shot in colour. Attenborough commissioned The World About Us, a documentary series with a broad remit of geography, anthropology and natural history subjects. It was described by Barry Paine, a producer and narrator of many of the early programmes, as "a series designed to sell colour television sets"[2]. It was no accident that early episodes featured some of the most vibrant colours in the natural world. The first programme was a film by the French vulcanologist Haroun Tazieff, called simply "Volcano". It was broadcast on Sunday 3 December 1967, which also marked the first full evening of colour television in Britain. Another early episode featured the brilliantly-coloured scarlet ibis.
Due to the difficulty in sourcing colour films, production duties were initially shared between the Travel and Exploration Unit in London and the Natural History Unit in Bristol. Over time, the London contribution dried up and the focus became exclusively on natural history.[3] To reflect this, the series title was altered to The Natural World in 1983 and then shortened to its current form in 2003. The first episode under the new title was “Save the Panda”, broadcast on 30 October 1983. In September 2008 the BBC announced that the series had been re-commissioned for a further three years.[4]
I have no doubt that Natural World is not only the doyen and founding member of the 50-minute natural history genre but is still the one with the best and most distinguished record.
— David Attenborough
In commissioning The World About Us, Attenborough also created the first documentary series whose programmes ran to 50 minutes rather than the half-hour films typical of the time. This allowed wildlife filmmakers to present more detailed studies of their subjects.[5] The format has remained largely unchanged to the present day, though some recent episodes have been extended to 60 minutes.
Although the series is characterised by large budgets and high production values, Natural World programmes rarely fall into the category of blue-chip wildlife films (as defined by Derek Bouse[6]). The commissioning editors draw on a diverse range of films with sometimes idiosyncratic presentation styles or subject matters. Films with conservation messages, human-animal interaction and poetic or spiritual musings on the natural world feature alongside more traditional profiles of individual species and wildlife-rich locations. Some of the more unusual subjects have included plankton, wasps and cephalopods.
David Attenborough has maintained a close association with the series over its long history, narrating or presenting around 50 programmes. He narrated the Echo of the Elephants films, which followed scientist Cynthia Moss's and cameraman Martyn Colbeck's lengthy study of an African elephant herd in Kenya's Amboseli National Park. In 1996, "Attenborough in Paradise" saw him fulfil a lifelong ambition to observe and film the courtship displays of New Guinea's birds of paradise; he returned to the subject for the 2010 programme "Birds of Paradise".
During the 1980s and 1990s, the Natural World strand included occasional mini-series on particular themes. Notable examples include the three-part series The Flight of the Condor (1982), Kingdom of the Ice Bear (1985) (both released on VHS), and Wild Indonesia (1999).
The most requests ever for an episode to be repeated were for My Halcyon River by Philippa Forrester and Charlie Hamilton James.
The following is a chronological list of series editors, the most senior member of the production team on Natural World[1]. Peter Jones, the first series editor, also acted in the same capacity on The World About Us from 1979-1983.
Natural World filmmakers are regularly recognised by the television industry for the quality of their work. One of the earliest awards was the 1986 Prix Italia for Ecology for a special edition on soil erosion in the Vanishing Earth mini-series. In 1998, the Royal Television Society awarded the series the Best Documentary Strand Award.
In addition, the following individual films have recently won awards at the Missoula International Wildlife Film Festival, Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival, Wildscreen Festival, Grierson British Documentary Awards and RTS Awards:
Some episodes of Natural World were released on VHS (see Notable Episodes section for examples) but all are now out of print.
A Region 2 DVD, The BBC Natural World Collection, was released in 2007 and contains the following six episodes from the 2006 and 2007 seasons)[8]:
The following episodes were released on individual Region 2 DVDs in 2008:
The UK releases of Planet Earth on HD DVD and Blu-ray includes the following 2 episodes of Natural World, both narrated by David Attenborough, in 1080i on a bonus disc:[9]