Happy birthday to Sir David Attenborough, who is 100 today. 10 things you might not know about him.
His father was the principal of University College Leicester, so he was raised around the campus. As a boy he collected fossils and at the age of 11 struck a deal with staff at the university whereby he would catch Newts for the laboratories at a nearby pond, and receive 3 pence per newt.
He served in the Royal Navy on an aircraft carrier for national service. After that he worked in publishing, editing children’s science textbooks.
In 1950, he applied for a job as a radio talk producer with The BBC but didn’t get it. Nevertheless, his CV was in the system and after a few months it came to the notice of Mary Adams, head of the Talks (factual broadcasting) department. She thought this young man had promise and offered him three months training and then a permanent job in 1952. At the time he started in the role, he didn’t own a Television and had only seen one TV programme in his life.
He became a producer of factual shows (Mary Adams didn’t place him in front of the camera at first as she was of the opinion that his teeth were too big). The first show he produced was called Coelacanth, a documentary about a prehistoric Fish.
Nature shows weren’t his only area of influence. As controller of BBC Two, he oversaw the first ever colour broadcasts in Europe, winning the race against Germany to be the first nation in Europe to broadcast in colour. He was also responsible for commissioning Monty Python’s Flying Circus as well as the documentaries Civilization and The Ascent of Man. The first show resembling the nature shows we know and love today was called Zoo Quest.
Although happy to handle venomous Snakes and Scorpions and the like for the camera, he’d draw the line at rats. Rats are the only animals he really dislikes. His fear of them started when filming on location in the Solomon Islands, when he woke one night to find his room was full of them. On another occasion, in India, a rat jumped out of a Toilet. “I’ve handled deadly spiders, snakes, and scorpions without batting an eyelid, but if I see a rat, I’ll be the first to run,” he said.
He doesn’t own a car. In fact, he never passed his driving test.
Although he generally wants nothing to do with modern technology and would rather write a letter than send a text or email, he did join Instagram in 2020 at the age of 94 and broke the record for being the fastest to reach a million followers, in four hours and 44 minutes. He only stayed on the platform for a few weeks. His record was broken soon afterwards by 43 minutes by Harry Potter actor Rupert Grint.
He is the only person to have won BAFTA Awards in black-and-white, colour, high-definition, 3D and 4K resolution. He’s also been knighted twice by Queen Elizabeth II and holds more honorary degrees from British universities than any other celebrity.
He’s also had a lot of things named after him, including a building at Cambridge University and many animals and plants. The latter include the Attenborosaurus (Attenborosaurus conybeari), a marine Dinosaur; a Peruvian rubber Frog (Pristimantis attenboroughi); a flightless beetle and a species of hawkweed found only in the Brecon Beacons. He also had a polar research ship named after him. RRS Sir David Attenborough was the name chosen despite the public vote overwhelmingly choosing Boaty McBoatface.






