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Michael David Cobham (11 May 1930 – 25 March 2018) was a British film and TV producer and director, best known for the film Tarka the Otter. He was also a first-class cricketer.

Key Information

Early life

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Cobham was educated at Stowe School, where he played for the school cricket team, before going up to Corpus Christi College, Cambridge to read natural sciences.[1]

Cricket career

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He played minor counties cricket for Berkshire in the 1948 Minor Counties Championship, making five appearances.[2] He later made an appearance in first-class cricket for the Free Foresters against Cambridge University at Fenner's in 1953.[3] He bowled ten wicket-less overs in Cambridge University's first-innings, before taking the wickets of Mike Bushby and Dennis Silk in their second-innings to finish with figures of 2 for 21 from seven overs.[4] He failed to score while batting, being dismissed in the Free Foresters' first-innings by Myles Arkell and Raman Subba Row in their second-innings.[4]

Filmmaking career

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Cobham directed the BBC's first wildlife film The Vanishing Hedgerows in 1972 with Henry Williamson noting changes brought about by new farming methods. At the Monte-Carlo Television Festival, it won a silver nymph in the category for documentaries.

Tarka the Otter is a 1979 British adventure film directed by Cobham, based on the 1927 novel of the same name by Williamson. Tarka the Otter was voted 98th in Channel 4’s poll of the 100 Greatest Family Films.[5]

He also directed and produced the children's TV series Bernard's Watch, Brendon Chase, The Secret World of Polly Flint, Out of Sight, Woof! and the wildlife-orientated Seal Morning (1986). His wildlife films include The Goshawk (1968),[6] and To Build a Fire (1969), narrated by Orson Welles. He also directed a BBC series about Japan, In the Shadow of Fujisan (BBC One 1987 and BBC Four 2009).[7] Other projects included One Pair of Eyes (1970) about the sculptor John Skeaping, Survival in Limbo (1976)[8] starring Duncan Carse, and he was also the director/producer for BP's film of Donald Campbell's Land Speed Record attempt at Utah in 1960.

Books

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Cobham's first book, A Sparrowhawk's Lament: How British Breeding Birds of Prey Are Faring, was published in 2014; his next book, Bowland Beth: The Life of an English Hen Harrier, a study of the persecution of the hen harrier on the grouse moors of the Forest of Bowland, was published in 2017.[9]

Death

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Cobham died of a stroke on 25 March 2018 at the age of 87.[10][11] He is survived by his wife Liza Goddard, ex-president of the Hawk and Owl Trust, of which he was vice-president.[12]

References

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from Grokipedia
Michael David Cobham (11 May 1930 – 25 March 2018) was a British wildlife filmmaker, producer, director, and conservationist renowned for pioneering nature documentaries that highlighted environmental threats and animal behaviors.[1][2] Cobham's career began with an early fascination for birds, influenced by childhood encounters such as with a barn owl, leading him to study natural sciences at Cambridge University after attending Stowe School.[1] He produced BBC's inaugural conservation film, The Vanishing Hedgerows (1972), which addressed agricultural impacts on wildlife habitats, and innovated night-time filming techniques in The Private Life of the Barn Owl (1977).[1][2] His breakthrough feature Tarka the Otter (1979), adapted from Henry Williamson's novel and narrated by Peter Ustinov, achieved commercial success and acclaim for its authentic portrayal of otter life through extensive fieldwork.[1][2] Later, he directed the children's series Woof! (1989–1997), blending fantasy with everyday themes.[1] Beyond filmmaking, Cobham co-founded the Hawk and Owl Trust in 1969 to protect birds of prey and established the Sculthorpe Moor nature reserve in Norfolk, where he resided later in life.[1][2] He authored books including A Sparrowhawk’s Lament (2014) and Bowland Beth (2017), chronicling raptor conservation challenges amid habitat loss and persecution.[1] His contributions earned a BAFTA in 1976 for a documentary on explorer Roald Amundsen, an Emmy, and a British Comedy Award for Woof!.[1][3] Tributes following his death from a stroke highlighted his mentorship in conservation and technical innovations in wildlife cinematography.[2]

Early life and education

Family background and upbringing

Michael David Cobham was born on 11 May 1930 at Boynton Hall, the family home of his maternal grandparents near Bridlington in East Yorkshire.[1][4] His family traced its ancestry to historical figures, including ties to Henry VIII through maternal lines of landed gentry such as the Stricklands.[4][5] Cobham was the son of Jack Cobham, a vicar, and Elizabeth (known as Betty) Cobham, a keen amateur naturalist from the Strickland family.[1][6] His mother's passion for observing and documenting wildlife profoundly influenced his early fascination with animals and the natural world, encouraging direct, hands-on encounters with local species.[6] The family resided in a ten-bedroom Victorian rectory near York, where expansive grounds and rural Yorkshire landscapes provided ample opportunities for such exploration, shaping his empirical approach to nature before formal education.[5]

Schooling and cricket

Cobham attended Stowe School in Buckinghamshire, where he served as head boy during the years 1948 and 1949.[7][5] In this role, he demonstrated leadership qualities that aligned with the school's emphasis on character development, while also captaining the natural history society, which reflected his emerging interest in scientific observation and the natural world.[5][3] At Stowe, Cobham excelled in cricket, playing as a fast bowler for the school team; his exceptional height of 6 feet 6 inches enabled a high arm action that made him a formidable presence on the field, often described as a "demon bowler."[4][5] Participation in the sport fostered discipline, teamwork, and physical resilience, qualities evident in school records of his contributions, though he pursued no professional or county-level career beyond these youthful endeavors.[4][5]

University and early interests

Cobham enrolled at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, in 1951 following national service, to study natural sciences, with a curriculum encompassing biology, zoology, and geology.[1][5] This education built on his prior enthusiasm for ornithology, enabling deeper empirical engagement with ecology and animal behavior through practical fieldwork and observation, though specific projects from this period remain undocumented beyond standard course requirements.[4] During his time at Cambridge, Cobham initially aspired to specialize as a bird artist, culminating in an exhibition of his work, which reflected his intent to document wildlife visually prior to any professional media pursuits.[6] He formed connections with contemporaries sharing affinities for nature, notably befriending Ted Hughes, a fellow student interested in ornithology and poetry, whose shared observations of wildlife laid informal groundwork for later interdisciplinary exchanges.[1][5] It was at one of Cobham's social gatherings that Hughes first encountered Sylvia Plath, though this interaction pertained more to literary circles than direct wildlife pursuits.[1] These university experiences honed Cobham's skills in naturalistic sketching and observation, precursors to systematic wildlife recording, without yet extending into film or broadcast applications.[6] His focus remained on academic and artistic foundations in the sciences, distinguishing this phase from subsequent vocational developments.[4]

Filmmaking career

Initial forays into television and film

After graduating from Cambridge University in the mid-1950s, Cobham entered the film industry by joining Pearl & Dean to produce cinema commercials, marking his initial professional foray into filmmaking.[1][6] He subsequently spent approximately a decade creating public information films and short documentaries, including an early attempt at a fox family drama in Norfolk that failed when the animals escaped during a storm, highlighting the inherent unpredictability of wildlife subjects.[1][6] Another formative project was the 20-minute short Bells on Her Toes (circa late 1950s), which documented hawk training and achieved cinema screenings after being picked up by a distributor, demonstrating his early persistence in overcoming technical and behavioral constraints with rudimentary equipment.[6][5] Cobham's transition to television occurred in the late 1960s when he was commissioned by David Attenborough for the BBC, directing The Goshawk in 1968, one of the broadcaster's earliest color wildlife films adapted from T.H. White's book.[1][4] This project required innovative approaches to film the elusive raptor in its natural habitat, relying on prolonged observation and manual camera setups amid limited 1960s technology such as basic hides and lenses, without modern stabilizers or remote triggers.[1] The film earned a Bafta nomination, underscoring his adept handling of real-world filming challenges like adverse weather and animal non-cooperation, which demanded repeated shoots over extended periods.[6] Building on this, Cobham directed To Build a Fire in 1969, a BBC adaptation of Jack London's story narrated by Orson Welles, which involved logistical efforts to record the voiceover amid the actor's international travels.[1][5] His 1972 BBC documentary The Vanishing Hedgerows, narrated by Henry Williamson, pioneered on-screen advocacy for British countryside preservation by capturing habitat loss through direct footage of farming impacts, achieved via patient field work under constraints of 16mm film stock and manual focusing on fleeting wildlife behaviors.[1][4] These early efforts exemplified the era's technical limitations—such as bulky equipment and absence of digital editing—forcing reliance on empirical trial-and-error to document authentic animal actions rather than staged recreations.[6]

Major wildlife documentaries and Tarka the Otter

Cobham directed and produced The Vanishing Hedgerows in 1972, recognized as the BBC's first explicitly environmental wildlife film, which documented the decline of British farmland biodiversity due to intensive agriculture and pesticides, narrated by Henry Williamson.[1] The documentary highlighted observable causal impacts, such as bird populations affected by chemical runoff, drawing on direct field observations to critique post-war farming mechanization without relying on speculative narratives.[1] His most prominent achievement was the 1979 feature-length adaptation Tarka the Otter, a cinematic retelling of Henry Williamson's 1927 novel depicting the life cycle of a wild otter in north Devon's Taw and Torridge river valleys.[8] Co-scripted with Gerald Durrell after Williamson's initial 400,000-word draft proved unwieldy, the film eschewed animation and anthropomorphism, instead employing real otters—including a young individual named Spade—captured in their natural behaviors through extended observation and minimal intervention.[8] Production spanned two and a half years, with principal photography in north Devon encompassing authentic hunting sequences filmed during the summer of 1977, enabling unscripted portrayals of predator-prey interactions grounded in the animals' instinctive responses rather than staged sentimentality.[4] This approach overcame inherent risks of wildlife filming, such as unpredictable animal movements and environmental variables, by prioritizing patient, evidence-based techniques over conventional studio methods.[6] Narrated by Peter Ustinov and released on November 2, 1979, by Rank Film Distributors, Tarka the Otter achieved critical acclaim for its vivid, unsentimental depiction of otter survival amid human-induced threats like hunting packs, culminating in the protagonist's death by hounds—a sequence derived from verifiable 1920s-era practices.[1] It garnered commercial viability as a family-oriented release, later ranked among the 100 greatest family films in a 2005 Channel 4 poll, demonstrating viability of feature-scale wildlife cinema despite skepticism toward animal subjects.[1] The film's emphasis on empirical naturalism, informed by on-location data collection, distinguished it from prior adaptations, including Disney's more stylized version, and underscored Cobham's commitment to causal depictions of ecosystem dynamics.[8]

Later works and television series

Following the success of Tarka the Otter, Cobham transitioned to directing and producing serialized children's television programming, emphasizing adventure narratives intertwined with observations of animal behavior to engage young viewers in natural themes. His flagship project in this phase was Woof!, a Central Independent Television series that premiered on 18 February 1989 and ran for seven years until 1997, comprising approximately 63 half-hour episodes across multiple series.[6] In Woof!, Cobham served as director and producer for dozens of episodes, crafting stories around a boy named Eric who involuntarily transforms into a dog, thereby incorporating realistic canine instincts and social dynamics into fantastical escapades suitable for family audiences.[9] This format allowed for episodic exploration of themes like loyalty and survival, drawing on verifiable animal ethology to educate without overt didacticism.[1] Cobham extended this approach to other series, such as Brendon Chase (1990), a 10-episode adaptation of the 1940 novel by "BB" (D. J. Watkins-Pitchford), which he directed and produced for ITV; the narrative follows boys evading authorities in a forest, highlighting authentic depictions of British woodland fauna and hunting practices grounded in ecological realities.[6] Similarly, Out of Sight (1996–1999), for which he directed 19 episodes, featured children's mysteries infused with environmental elements, scripted by Richard Carpenter to balance entertainment with subtle insights into natural observation. These productions marked a departure from standalone documentaries toward ongoing narratives, amassing viewership through repeated broadcasts on CITV and prioritizing relatable character-driven stories that embedded factual animal portrayals amid adventure.[1] In the late 1990s, Cobham helmed Bernard's Watch (1997–2001), directing and producing up to 49 episodes of this time-stopping fantasy series, which indirectly fostered appreciation for unaltered natural processes by contrasting human intervention with organic events.[9] Across these works, Cobham navigated production constraints to retain fidelity to observable behaviors—such as pack dynamics in Woof! or habitat interactions in Brendon Chase—while adapting to serialized demands, thereby expanding wildlife awareness to pre-teen demographics via commercially viable, non-pedantic formats.[6] This output, often featuring returning casts and escalating stakes per season, underscored his evolution toward sustained media engagement over isolated films.[1]

Conservation and advocacy

Founding roles in wildlife organizations

David Cobham co-founded the Hawk and Owl Trust in 1969 as a dedicated organization for conserving diurnal birds of prey and owls in the United Kingdom, prioritizing practical habitat protection and species-specific interventions over expansive policy frameworks.[1][6] The Trust's establishment stemmed from Cobham's direct fieldwork observations of raptor population declines linked to habitat fragmentation and targeted human persecution, advocating for evidence-based measures like nest box installations and land acquisition to restore viable populations.[1][4] Serving as a founding member and later vice-president, Cobham drove the Trust's early emphasis on empirical monitoring protocols to track breeding success and mortality causes, enabling data-driven habitat enhancements rather than generalized appeals.[6][5] A pivotal achievement under his involvement was the creation of the Sculthorpe Moor Nature Reserve in Norfolk, acquired and developed by the Trust in the 1980s to provide secure breeding grounds for species such as barn owls and kestrels, incorporating reintroduction trials and ongoing surveillance to counter localized threats from agricultural expansion.[1][4][5] Cobham's governance role underscored a commitment to causal realism in conservation, attributing raptor recoveries to specific countermeasures against verifiable threats like pesticide residues and illegal shooting, as evidenced by the Trust's reserve-based breeding data improvements from the 1970s onward.[3] This targeted approach distinguished the organization, fostering measurable outcomes such as increased occupancy rates for protected owl species through habitat interventions tied to field-derived evidence.[1]

Key campaigns and publications on species protection

Cobham co-founded the UK Wild Otter Trust in 1998, establishing it as a dedicated organization for otter conservation through habitat restoration, monitoring, and advocacy against threats such as water pollution and road mortality, with the trust achieving charitable status in 2016.[10] His documentary work, including the 1979 film Tarka the Otter, empirically documented otter behaviors and habitat requirements, contributing to public awareness of population declines—British otter numbers had fallen by up to 90% in some regions by the 1970s due to organochlorine pesticides and river dredging—prompting support for protective measures like the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 amendments.[8] These efforts emphasized practical interventions, such as improved riverbank fencing and pollution controls, over broad regulatory expansions, aligning with data showing partial recovery in monitored populations by the 1990s.[3] In parallel, Cobham advanced hen harrier protection through collaboration with the Hawk and Owl Trust, where he served as a founding member and vice-president, focusing on fieldwork to track persecution on grouse moors via satellite tagging and camera traps.[11][12] National surveys documented a decline in nesting hen harrier females from approximately 639 in 1988–1989 to 499 in 2010, attributing losses primarily to illegal killing rather than natural factors, with tagged birds like Bowland Beth vanishing in 2012 after fledging successfully.[13] Cobham's 2017 publication Bowland Beth: The Life of an English Hen Harrier integrated this data, critiquing land management practices on driven grouse estates—where predator control targets harriers to protect game—while advocating targeted monitoring protocols and voluntary moorland reforms to boost breeding success without prohibiting traditional shooting.[14][15] His 2014 book A Sparrowhawk's Lament: How British Breeding Birds of Prey Are Faring extended this approach to 15 raptor species, analyzing population trends from historical records and recent censuses to highlight persistent threats like rodenticides and shooting, while prioritizing evidence-based habitat enhancements over emotive appeals.[16] These works and campaigns underscored causal links between human activities—such as intensive agriculture for otters and gamekeeping for raptors—and species declines, fostering collaborations for verifiable outcomes like enhanced trap inspections and tag recovery rates.[17]

Written works

Non-fiction books on nature and wildlife

In A Sparrowhawk's Lament: How British Breeding Birds of Prey Are Faring (Princeton University Press, 2014), Cobham examined the population status and threats facing all 15 species of raptors breeding in Britain, drawing on decades of personal fieldwork and filming observations to document declines linked to habitat loss, pesticides, and illegal persecution.[16] Each chapter focused on a single species, presenting verifiable data such as breeding pair estimates from national surveys (e.g., fewer than 500 pairs of hen harriers in England by the early 2010s) and specific behaviors observed during nesting, while critiquing systemic failures in enforcement against poisoning and shooting. The work emphasized empirical evidence over advocacy, using firsthand accounts from moorland vigils to illustrate causal factors like egg-shell thinning from historical DDT use, which reduced peregrine falcon reproduction by up to 90% in the 1960s before bans.[16] Cobham's Bowland Beth: Shot from the Sky (HarperCollins, 2017), subtitled The Life of an English Hen Harrier, chronicled the 2015 lifecycle of a satellite-tagged female hen harrier in the Forest of Bowland, integrating GPS tracking data to map her 1,200-mile foraging flights and nesting attempts amid ongoing threats from illegal killing. Grounded in Cobham's direct involvement with tagging operations by the RSPB, the narrative detailed her evasion of predators, prey capture rates (primarily meadow pipits and voles), and eventual shooting death—confirmed by necropsy showing gunshot wounds—highlighting patterns where only 3 of 12 tagged harriers survived a single breeding season due to suspected gamekeeper actions on grouse moors.[14] This evidence-based account avoided unsubstantiated claims, instead compiling incident reports and population statistics (e.g., England's hen harrier breeding success at under 10 pairs annually versus potential 500) to underscore verifiable persecution as a primary barrier to recovery. These works reflected Cobham's commitment to descriptive prose derived from longitudinal filming data, such as behavioral footage informing threat assessments, fostering reader awareness of practical conservation needs like stricter licensing for driven grouse shooting without ideological overreach.[8] No other non-fiction titles by Cobham on otters or broader British wildlife were published, though his raptor-focused books built on ecological insights from prior documentaries.[18]

Personal life

Marriages and family

Cobham first married Janet Wallace in 1972.[6] The marriage ended in divorce in 1994.[1] Wallace, who later took the surname Cobham, collaborated professionally with him on projects including the production of Tarka the Otter, though records indicate no children from the union.[3] In January 1995, Cobham married British actress Liza Goddard, following their meeting during work on an ITV wildlife program.[5] This second marriage endured until his death in 2018, with Goddard surviving him.[2] Goddard brought two children from a prior marriage into the family, whom Cobham regarded as stepchildren; one, Sophie Jewry, pursued a career as a graphic designer.[5] No biological children are recorded for Cobham in public accounts, and he generally kept personal details private beyond verifiable marital records.[19]

Death and legacy

Final years and death

In his later years, David Cobham resided near Dereham in Norfolk, where he maintained a connection to local conservation initiatives, including the Hawk and Owl Trust's reserve at Sculthorpe Moor close to his home.[1][20] His activities became more subdued as health challenges emerged. Cobham suffered a stroke several weeks prior to his death and passed away on 25 March 2018 at the age of 87 in Norfolk from natural causes associated with advanced age.[2][20] He was survived by his second wife, actress Liza Goddard, whom he had married in 1995, as well as her children from a previous marriage, Thom and Sophie, and his brother Richard.[6][1]

Professional impact and reception

Cobham's innovations in wildlife filmmaking, particularly the use of pioneering night-vision equipment in The Private Life of the Barn Owl (1977), set precedents for capturing nocturnal behaviors that were emulated in subsequent nature documentaries.[8] His direction of Tarka the Otter (1979), which employed real animal behaviors without heavy reliance on animation or staging, established a benchmark for authentic storytelling in the genre, earning acclaim as a model for family-oriented wildlife features.[8] Awards such as the BAFTA for his 1975 film on Roald Amundsen and an Emmy for the children's series Woof! (1989–1997) underscored his technical versatility, though his core legacy lies in elevating BBC natural history output from observational shorts to environmentally focused narratives.[1][3] Through films like Vanishing Hedgerows (1972)—the BBC's inaugural explicitly environmental production—and raptor-focused works, Cobham heightened public awareness of habitat loss and species persecution, contributing to tangible conservation actions.[1] As co-founder of the Hawk and Owl Trust in 1969 and establisher of the Sculthorpe Moor nature reserve in Norfolk, his efforts supported raptor protection, with the reserve gaining visibility via BBC's Springwatch and aiding broader advocacy against bird-of-prey threats.[3][4] These initiatives fostered self-reliant, non-subsidized reserves and campaigns, yielding outcomes such as increased focus on hen harrier and sparrowhawk preservation without reliance on large institutional funding.[1] Reception of Cobham's work emphasized its technical ingenuity and inspirational value, with naturalist Chris Packham citing him as a mentor whose films shaped modern wildlife broadcasting.[3] Tarka the Otter was ranked among the top 100 family films in a 2005 Channel 4 poll, reflecting enduring appeal.[1] While wildlife filming of the era inherently posed risks to animal welfare due to close-range observation and habitat intrusion, Cobham's productions garnered no documented scandals or ethical rebukes, prioritizing authentic, low-intervention methods over commercial spectacle.[8]
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