Mark Linfield (born 6 June 1968) is a British writer, producer and director of nature documentaries for cinema and television. He is best known for his work with the BBC Natural History Unit as a producer of two episodes of the television series Planet Earth (2006) and as writer and co-director of the associated feature film Earth (2007).
Mark co-founded Wildstar Films in 2018 after 30 years of directing and producing wildlife films. He is currently on the senior creative team for several series at Wildstar and is directing a feature-length film for Disneynature.
After studying zoology at the University of Oxford, Mark began his career fronting a film about gorillas in the Congo. After several years with the BBC, Mark joined independent production company, Green Umbrella, where he produced and directed many films for BBC strands[clarification needed ] The Natural World and Wildlife on One including The Temple Troop; Gelada Baboons – The Battles of Braveheart; Orangutans – The High Society; and Capuchins – The Monkey Puzzle.
Mark returned to the BBC in 2000 to produce and direct on the BAFTA-nominated Life of Mammals, on which he travelled the world with Sir David Attenborough. Mark followed this with two episodes of the hit TV series Planet Earth, winning a Primetime Emmy for the opening show "Pole to Pole".[ 1] Mark followed this as producer/director on Frozen Planet.
For the last 10 years,[when? ] Mark has been directing and co-directing feature length wildlife films for Disneynature, including Chimpanzee, Monkey Kingdom, Elephant and Earth.[citation needed ]
Linfield lives in Bristol with his wife Vanessa Berlowitz and their son, Cam.
| Vorname: | Mark |
|---|---|
| Geburtsdatum: | +1950-00-00T00:00:00Z (♐ Schütze) |
| Alter: | 76 Jahre 6 Monate 15 Tage |
| Sprachen: | Englisch; |
| Geschlecht: | ♂ männlich |
| Berufe: | Fernsehproduzent, Filmregisseur, Schriftsteller, Drehbuchautor, Regisseur, |