Sir David Attenborough is 100 today.
The naturalist has inspired generations to learn more about the world, bringing wildlife, from dinosaurs to polar bears, into the homes of hundreds of millions of television viewers.
His hushed and reverential whisper has narrated almost every aspect of life on Earth for more than 70 years.
But the presenter admits he has never liked fame – and believes that the credit should really go to others.
In a recent interview he said: ‘I have the greatest job in the world. What a privileged time I’ve had. People provide me with wonderful pictures of things we’ve never seen before and ask me to write a sentence or two on it.’
He has even joked that he only got a knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II because Buckingham Palace confused him with his older brother Richard, the actor and director who died in 2014 aged 90.
Sir David’s own adventures began when he was given a fire salamander as a pet by his father Frederick on his eighth birthday.

Sir David Attenborough and cameraman Martin Saunders on location for Life On Earth in the 1970s. Sir David is 100 today.

The broadcaster has admitted he never plans to retire

The TV presenter, left, with his brother Richard Attenborough and wife Jane Oriel at St. Anne’s Church, Kew Green on their wedding day in 1950

Sir David holding his son Robert and a coati, which is a member of the raccoon family, brought home back from the combined London Zoo and BBC expedition to British Guyana in 1955

The naturalist and his three-year-old daughter Susan cover their ears as sulphur-crested cockatoo Georgie lets out a piercing shriek in 1957

A young Prince Charles and Princess Anne meet Sir David and Cocky the cockatoo at the BBC television studios in 1958

The presenter at BBC Television Centre in White City, west London, in 1965

Sir David opens the Colour Television Fair in London in 1967
Before the Second World War, he would race around on his Raleigh bike looking for newts, grass snakes, dragonflies, and fossils in the English countryside.
Sir David attended the University of Cambridge before serving in the Royal Navy from 1947 to 1949. He started at the BBC in 1952, although it was behind the camera rather than in front of it because his bosses considered his teeth too prominent.
But everything changed in 1954 when Sir David, then aged 28, was dispatched with a cameraman to find a rare jungle bird for the show Zoo Quest. He was asked to step in after a zookeeper who had been lined up for the job fell ill – and the rest is history.
He had no plans to travel the world and was already married to his wife Jane. Their marriage would last for 47 years until her death from a brain haemorrhage in 1997.
They had two children, Robert and Susan. Robert is an academic in Australia while Susan, a former teacher, works with her father.
In his wildlife series and films since then, now through the century barrier, Sir David brought footage of animals never seen before on TV into the homes of millions of Britons.
The seminal Life On Earth, which was three years in the making and his first series in colour, was released in 1979 and has been watched by an estimated 500 million people globally alone.
He has vowed never to retire and plans to be involved in filmmaking about the natural world until he dies.
Born on May 8, 1926, his interest in nature started as a child when he collected fossils. He went on to gain a Natural Sciences degree from Clare College, Cambridge, after attending Wyggeston Grammar School for Boys in Leicester.

Sir David with his wife Jane, right, and daughter Susan after being knighted at Buckingham Palace in 1985

The presenter and his film actor brother Richard with the painting of them unveiled at the National Portrait Gallery in London in 1990

Sir David unveiling his waxwork at London’s Madame Tussauds in 1992

Sir David and Richard at the University of Leicester, where they grew up, after receiving a top academic honour at De Montfort Hall in 2006

Queen Elizabeth II smiling as Sir David gives a segment of a Christmas Lecture at the Royal Institution of Great Britain in 2008
It was at school in Leicestershire that he discovered his passion for the natural world.
Speaking recently, he admitted he felt sorry for the children of today. He was free to cycle along roads now choked with traffic.
He said to The Times in 2020: ‘I think it’s terrible that children should grow up without knowing what a tadpole is. Just awful.
‘I can’t criticise other people how they bring up their children, but in my time I could, and did, get on a bicycle and cycle 15 miles to a quarry and spend the day looking for dragonflies, grass snakes and newts, as well as fossils.’
Sir David has proved to be as brave and imaginative as he is warm and conscientious.
He writes his own scripts, and although he says he dislikes writing, he won a major literary prize for his book The Life Of Birds before the series even screened.
A committed Londoner, he is equally at home in the wildest and most remote parts of the world.
His combination of charm and an ability to put across his wide knowledge in an attractive and compelling way has been much-imitated but rarely replicated.
Long before environmental issues were making daily headlines, he was a fervent green campaigner both on and off screen.
His 2000 series State Of The Planet and Are We Changing Planet Earth? in 2006 dealt heavily with environmental issues such as global warming.

Sir David with the Specialist Factual Award received for Life In Cold Blood at the Baftas in 2009

The TV presenter appears alongside Prince William at the opening of the Natural History Museum’s Darwin Centre in 2009

Sir David, with a South East Asian Great Mormon butterfly on his nose, as he launches the 2012 Big Butterfly Count in Regent’s Park

The naturalist speaks with Princess Kate before a screening at the Natural History Museum in 2013

Sir David holds ‘Inti’, an armadillo from Edinburgh Zoo, before receiving a £250,000 cheque from the People’s Postcode Lottery for the charity Fauna and Flora International in 2017

The presenter wins an Impact award for Blue Planet 2 at the National Television Awards in 2018

Sir David trying out a virtual reality headset as he opens an exhibition in York in 2018

The presenter with the late Queen as she presented him with the 2019 Chatham House Prize at the Royal Institute of International Affairs

The Prince of Wales, Sir David, King Charles and Prince Harry attending the global premiere of Netflix’s ‘Our Planet’ at the Natural History Museum in London in 2019

The Princess of Wales and the naturalist, during the naming ceremony of the polar research ship, named after Sir David, in Birkenhead in 2019
As a younger man, he often travelled in economy class on flights, only accepting upgrades if they were extended to his crew as well.
When he turned 75, the BBC reportedly told him he should fly in business class.
He still frequently diverts praise for his work to those behind the camera.
Sir David has shown a lack of fear in alarming situations, including being attacked by an army of ants and an amorous capercaillie.
Having studied life in all its various forms for over 70 years, his attitude to the natural world has changed.
When his career began, wild creatures were seen as curiosities to be tracked, captured and brought back to British zoos to be stared at, and Zoo Quest reinforced that Victorian notion.
In the series he would travel with staff from London Zoo to a tropical country to capture an animal for its collection.
In his much later series Attenborough: 60 Years In The Wild, the transition to a more respectful attitude towards animals and the natural world was a dominant theme.
David’s pioneering efforts on screen have been matched by those off camera, as the man responsible for introducing colour television into Britain after he became Controller of BBC Two in 1965.
Four years later, he was appointed director of programmes with editorial responsibility for both of the BBC’s TV networks. He introduced popular sports such as snooker to TV as well as the hit series The Forsyte Saga.
But he could not spend too long behind a desk and even though he was tipped for the post of Director General, he quit management in 1973 to resume programme-making, declaring: ‘I haven’t even seen the Galapagos Islands.’
A stream of spectacular series soon followed, starting with Eastwards With Attenborough, exploring South East Asia, and followed by The Tribal Eye, which examined tribal art.

Sir David Attenborough speaking at the first UK-wide citizen’s assembly on climate change (Climate Assembly UK) at the Park Regis Hotel in Birmingham in 2020

Sir David Attenborough looks through a telescope in JMW Turner’s bedroom, which affords a view similar to that the artist would have enjoyed, during the opening of the Turner and the Thames exhibition at Turner’s House in Twickenham, south west London, in 2020

Boris Johnson (left) and Sir David Attenborough at the launch of the next Cop26 UN Climate Summit at the Science Museum, London in 2020

Sir David Attenborough attends the premiere of Green Planet at the Glasgow IMAX cinema in the Green Zone at COP26 in Glasgow in 2021

Sir David Attenborough in conversation with members of the public from the inaugural UK-wide Climate Assembly, at the House of Commons, London in 2021

Sir David Attenborough being made a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George by King Charles III, then the Prince of Wales, at Windsor Castle in 2022

Sir David Attenborough with Clare Balding (rear right) planting a tree, in honour of Queen Elizabeth II, for The Queen’s Green Canopy in Richmond Park with school children from across London in 2023

Sir David Attenborough planting a tree, in honour of Queen Elizabeth II, for The Queen’s Green Canopy in Richmond Park with school children from across London in 2023

Sir David Attenborough during the unveiling of a portrait of the broadcaster and conservationist painted by Jonathan Yeo, at a private ceremony at the Royal Society in London in 2024
It is estimated that 500 million people worldwide watched his amazingly successful 13-part series, Life On Earth, which was regarded as the most ambitious series ever produced by the BBC Natural History Unit.
Five years later came the sequel, The Living Planet, in 1984 followed by the final part of this trilogy, The Trials Of Life.
Sir David also wrote and presented two shorter series, The First Eden on the long history of mankind’s relationship with the natural world in the lands around the Mediterranean, and Lost Worlds, Vanished Lives, about fossils.
In 1993 he presented the spectacular Life In The Freezer, which was a celebration of Antarctica, and two years later, the epic The Private Life Of Plants.
It was in 1996 that he fulfilled a lifelong ambition to make a special film about the elusive birds of paradise, entitled, appropriately, Attenborough In Paradise.
In 1997, he narrated the award-winning Wildlife Specials, to mark 40 years of the BBC Natural History Unit, and the following year he completed an epic, 10-part series for the BBC, The Life Of Birds.
In 2001 he narrated The Blue Planet, followed by The Life Of Mammals in 2002.
Life In The Undergrowth came in 2005, followed by the groundbreaking Planet Earth in 2006, a series five years in the making, the most expensive nature documentary series ever commissioned by the BBC, and the first to be filmed in high definition.
Life In Cold Blood followed in 2008, while Frozen Planet arrived in 2011, and in 2013 he brought the six-part series Africa to our screens.
Even as he approached his 90th year, Sir David continued at a prodigious pace, bringing more about the wonders of planet Earth to the masses.
In 2016 he returned to the Great Barrier Reef for a three-part series and he told the story of the fossil discovery and reconstruction in Argentina of the largest known dinosaur, a new species of titanosaur, in Attenborough And The Giant Dinosaur.
Planet Earth II, a series of six one-hour natural history programmes, aired in 2016 and was appointment viewing.
The show even won a Bafta for the must-see moment of the year, after tense footage showing a newly hatched iguana narrowly escaping racer snakes had the nation on the edge of their seats.
While most of his peers settled into retirement, he continued to work at an impressive rate through his 90s.
His 2018 series Dynasties, looking into the secret lives of animals as they fight for their families, was also a hit, and a sequel appeared in 2022.
In 2019, Sir David made his first major series for Netflix, Our Planet, which explored Earth’s habitats, biodiversity, and the impact of climate change on all living creatures.
Other shows included A Perfect Planet, Life In Colour, The Green Planet, Wild Isles and Prehistoric Planet, as well as a Frozen Planet sequel.
Planet Earth III came in 2023, using lightweight drones, high-speed cameras, remotely operated deep-sea submersibles and other new technologies to explore previously unseen landscapes.
Even as he approaches his 100th birthday, he is a regular fixture on television.
Most recently he has fronted Wild London, in which he explores the wildlife of his hometown, from urban deer to rooftop peregrines.
His programmes have earned him awards from all over the world. In April 2005, he was awarded the Order of Merit by the Queen, in recognition of exceptional distinction in the arts, sciences and other areas.
He was knighted in 1985.
Over the years he has received numerous honorary degrees and a number of prestigious awards, including Fellowship of the Royal Society.
Sir David is a trustee of the British Museum, and the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, and president of the Royal Society for Nature Conservation.
In 1950 he married Jane Elizabeth Ebsworth Oriel, who died in 1997, and the couple had a son and a daughter.
He has made shows for black and white TV, colour TV, HD and 3D, terrestrial broadcasters and streamers.
As he turns 100, Sir David travels less now, but is still a singular figure in British broadcasting and in the public consciousness.



