Jump to content

Dallas Campbell

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 84.13.42.233 (talk) at 21:04, 4 March 2016. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Dallas Campbell
Born
Robert Dallas Campbell

(1970-09-17) 17 September 1970 (age 54)
Occupation(s)Actor, film director, screenwriter, television presenter
Years active1993–present
SpouseVictoria Goodall
RelativesRobert Eddison (Great Uncle)

Robert Dallas Campbell (born 17 September 1970) is a British television presenter and television and stage actor, best known as a presenter on the factual Channel 5 series The Gadget Show in 2008 and BBC One science series Bang Goes the Theory from 2009 to 2012.

Early life

Born in Kilmacolm, Scotland, he attended schools in Darras Hall and Ponteland, Northumberland, continuing his education at Glenalmond College[1] in Perthshire, Scotland. From 1989 to 1992 he studied Drama and English at the University of Northampton.

Career

Campbell at the 2009 Bang Goes the Theory Roadshow.

In 1997, he appeared in the play The Warp, which is the longest play ever performed (over 24 hours).[2]

He was the screenwriter and director of the short subject film No Deposit, No Return in 2004.

His television presenting career began on The Gadget Show (Channel 5) followed by BBC One's prime time science magazine show Bang Goes the Theory. He recently completed The Treasure Hunters for BBC One with Ellie Harrison which saw them on the trail of earth's most prized and valuable treasures both natural & manmade. Supersized Earth (BBC One), a BAFTA-nominated series that examined the scale and pace with which humans have transformed the Earth in a generation.

Airport Live (BBC Two) featured three days of access 'airside' at Heathrow Airport with Kate Humble and Anita Rani. Egypt's Lost Cities, again for BBC One, was a feature-length documentary used satellite technology to hunt for undiscovered historical treasures, and a six-part National Geographic series Time Scanners used laser scanning technology to uncover the secrets of the world's most famous historical buildings, from Machu Picchu in Peru to St Paul's Cathedral.

On BBC Four he is a regular presenter of the Horizon series, covering a wide variety of big science subjects from dogs to quantum mechanics and on the one-off documentaries Voyager: Beyond the final frontier - The story of NASA’s Voyager mission and The Drake Equation: The Search for Life - an investigation into the science and history behind our efforts to find life beyond the earth.

Dallas hosted Doctor Who's 50th Anniversary celebrations at London's ExCel Arena, Stargazing Live, and a two-summer national tour of Bang Goes the Theory.

He is a regular contributor to the BBC's science magazine Focus, the Times' Eureka magazine, and The Observer. He has appeared on BBC Radio 4's comedy science show Infinite Monkey Cage, with Robin Ince and Brian Cox (physicist), Loose Ends with Clive Anderson, and Shaun Keavney's Breakfast Show on BBC Radio 6 Music.

On 2 January 2015, Campbell appeared on and won Celebrity Mastermind, with filmmaker Werner Herzog as his specialist subject. He appeared in The Dumping Ground episode "Fake It to Make It'" which aired on the CBBC Channel in February 2015.

In July 2015, he presented a two-part series for BBC One called Britain Beneath Your Feet. [3]

References

  1. ^ "large About the film makers taking part" (PDF). British Council. 2000.
  2. ^ The Donor. National Blood Service. Winter 2010, page 5.
  3. ^ "Britain Beneath Your Feet: Dallas Campbell examines Britain's hidden underground". The Mirror. 2 July 2015.

Template:The Gadget Show

Template:Persondata