Adam Hart-davis

Dr. Adam John Hart-Davis (born July 4, 1943) is a British author, photographer, and broadcaster, well-known in the UK for presenting the television series Local Heroes and What the Romans Did for Us, the latter spawning several spin-off series involving the Victorians, the Tudors, and the Stuarts. The most recent version of this series is called What the Ancients Did for Us. This is a departure from the previous series not only in that each episode is an hour long rather than half an hour, but also in that it does not concentrate on a single period of history but rather one ancient civilization per episode including the Chinese, the Indians and the Greeks. He was also a co-presenter of Tomorrow's World, and continues to present Science Shack. Born and raised in Henley-on-Thames, he attended Eton College, before studying for an MA in chemistry at the University of Oxford. He later took a DPhil in organometallic chemistry at the University of York before doing three years of a post-doctoral thesis at the University of Alberta in Canada. Subsequently, he worked at the Oxford University Press, editing science texts and chess manuals. His work in broadcasting began in 1977 when he joined Yorkshire Television as a researcher, working on material for the likes of Magnus Pyke, David Bellamy, and Miriam Stoppard. In 1985 he was promoted to production work, producing Arthur C. Clarke's Mysterious World, the Fred Harris-fronted TV show Me & My Micro and the Johnny Ball-fronted Fun & Games amongst other things. He also devised and produced the school science show Scientific Eye. In the early 1990s he moved in front of the camera to present two series for the YTV region: On the Edge and Local Heroes. The latter programme involved him cycling around the country in his trademark fluorescent pink and yellow cycling clothes, seeking out places associated with the great innovators of science and technology. This was subsequently transferred to BBC2, where its scope widened from the Yorkshire region to a nationwide area, a different region being the subject of each episode. Since then he has essentially become the face of the BBC's output on science and the history of science. At the same time he is heavily critical of the standard of science output on British television (including, to a certain extent, his own programmes), which he sees as dumbed-down. He has written many books, including a history of the toilet, entitled Thunder, Flush and Thomas Crapper (Thomas Crapper being one of the pioneers of the toilet's development). Adam is the youngest child of the publisher Sir Rupert Hart-Davis (1907-1999) by his second wife Catherine Comfort Borden-Turner, his siblings being the journalist Duff Hart-Davis and Lady Silsoe. Adam Hart-Davis was married (1965-1995) to Adrienne Alpin, by whom he had 2 sons. He is the partner of the psychologist Dr. Susan Blackmore. He lives with her and her family in Bristol.

External links

Hart-Davis, Adam

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
longships lighthouse
southwold lighthouse
lighthouses in wales
lightvessel
food chain
buoy
lightvessels in the united kingdom
loddon
munchkin (cat)
lighthouses in france
ocicat
lighthouses in scotland
corsewall lighthouse
continental divide
oberon (mythology)
bertrand blier
bressay lighthouse
david stevenson
civilian
chris dickerson
lightvessels in the republic of ireland
puffin lightvessel
lighthouses in the republic of ireland
unlawful combatant
susan blackmore
subduction
rupert hart davis
coenwulf of mercia
lighthouses and lightvessels in denmark
lighthouses and lightvessels in the netherlands
lighthouses and lightvessels in sweden
duff hart davis
obduction
lighthouses and lightvessels in belgium
lighthouses and lightvessels in germany
hwicce
peter fleming
edwin of northumbria
civilian infrastructure
aethelfrith of northumbria
aethelweard
julian huxley
leonard huxley
lanfranc