'Dr. Adam John Hart-Davis' (born
4 July 1943) is an
English scientist,
author,
photographer,
historian and
broadcaster, well-known in the
UK for presenting the BBC
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 (though heavily edited half-hour versions have also been shown), 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''. He also presented ''How London Was Built'' on ITV1.
Personal Life
Born and raised in
Henley-on-Thames, he attended
Eton College before studying for a degree in
chemistry at
Merton College,
Oxford. He later took a
DPhil in
organometallic chemistry at the
University of York before spending three years as a post-doctoral scholar 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 (YTV) 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 YTV: ''
On The Edge'' and ''
Local Heroes''. The latter programme involved him cycling around the
Yorkshire region in his trademark fluorescent pink and yellow cycling clothes, seeking out places associated with the great innovators of science and technology. The bicycles were his own: he is a keen cyclist, owning an early
Burrows Windcheetah as well as a mountain bike fitted with an early front monoblade. This series was subsequently transferred to
BBC2, where its scope became national, 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), and ''Taking The Piss'' (A Potted History of Pee).
Hart-Davis 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 Bridget, the dowager
Lady Silsoe. His father had previously been married to the actress
Peggy Ashcroft.
Adam Hart-Davis was married (1965–1995) to Adrienne Alpin, with whom he had two sons.
He now lives with
psychologist Dr. Susan Blackmore and her family in
Bristol.
He also appears in public service advertisements for
HM Revenue & Customs.
Adam has a new television series for the
BBC on in August 2007, called 'The Cosmos - A Beginner's Guide'', which explores the latest ideas and experiments in
cosmology. It will be accompanied by a book of the same name, published by BBC Books.
External links
★
Old and
new Adam Hart-Davis websites
★
Adam's biography at "Speakers UK"
★
BBC Press Office biography
★
★
Thunder, Flush and Thomas Crapper extracts
★
Taking The Piss details
★
"Taking The Piss" (book) and "How London Was Built" (TV series) joint party photos Oct 2006