Benedict Allen

Benedict Allen
Born Benedict Colin Allen
(1960-03-01) 1 March 1960
Macclesfield, Cheshire, England, UK
Nationality British
Occupation Author, Adventurer, Explorer, Film-maker
Website http://www.benedictallen.com/

Benedict Colin Allen FRGS (born 1 March 1960) is a British writer, traveller and adventurer known for his technique of immersion among indigenous peoples from whom he acquires survival skills for hazardous journeys through unfamiliar terrain. In 2010, Allen was elected a Trustee of the Royal Geographical Society. He has recorded six TV series for the BBC, either alone or with partial or total use of camera crews, and pioneered the use of the head-held camera for TV, for the first time allowing viewers to witness immersion of a traveller in remote environments without the artifice brought about by a camera-crew. He has published ten books, including the Faber Book of Exploration, which he edited.[1]

Background

When Allen was a child, he went on fossil-hunting expeditions in Lyme Regis. His father, Colin Allen, a test pilot who taught Prince Philip how to fly, brought back exotic presents and so passed on to his son the sense that there was still an exciting world out there waiting to be explored. Amongst explorers, his heroes are Laurens van der Post and naturalist Peter Matthiessen. To him, "the greatest explorers are people like this who just listen and learn, and don't impose."

Allen has two older sisters, Katie and Susie. He was educated at Bradfield College, and read Environmental Science at the University of East Anglia. He joined three scientific expeditions during his last year at university.

Allen began a degree in Ecology at the University of Aberdeen but did not take the final exam, claiming to have been distracted by planning his first independent expedition from the mouth of the Orinoco to that of the Amazon.

After publishing five books describing his various lone journeys across the least unexplored regions of the Amazon, New Guinea and Sumatra, in the mid 1990s Allen went on to develop the technique of self-filming with a cam-corder, becoming the first (and for many years the only) television adventurer - through such programmes as The Skeleton Coast, which depicted a first full traverse by foot of the Namib Desert.

In 2009, Allen was one of four stars of the reality epic Expedition Africa, airing on History. The eight-part series followed the team as they retraced the journey of Henry Morton Stanley in his quest to find David Livingstone, the journey which supposedly ended with the famous phrase, "Dr. Livingstone, I presume?"

Allen is a Patron of the Environmental Justice Foundation and Save the Rhino Trust.

Expeditions

While still a student, Allen took part in scientific expeditions to a volcano in Costa Rica, to a remote forest in Brunei, and - as leader - to a glacier in Iceland. He went on to establish his reputation through a series of daring independent journeys to cross through the least known regions of the Amazon and New Guinea. He made first outside contact with two threatened indigenous peoples – the Obini and Yaifo – and he maintains has travelled for longer alone in Rain Forest than anyone else alive. Today he is acknowledged as one of the last great adventurers in the classic mould, the Daily Telegraph listing him as one of the top ten British explorers of all time[2] with the only other living individual being Sir Ranulph Fiennes. He went on to develop the technique of self-filming while on his immersive expeditions, he was described as “Part of the History of Television”[3] by former Director General of the BBC Mark Thompson.

Allen crossed northeast Amazonia in 1983,[4] going 600 miles on foot and by dug out canoe (Mad White Giant). In West Papua and Papua New Guinea he flew from the Obini community in Irian Jaya. He participated in six-week male initiation ceremony of the Niowra tribe[5] (Into the Crocodile's Nest). In Siberut and Sumatra he investigated the "Orang pendek" ape man, via the Mentawai of Siberut and the Kubu of Sumatra (Hunting the Gugu).

He crossed the central mountain range of New Guinea and the Torres Strait to Australia. He made 'first contact' with the Yaifo people in New Guinea (The Proving Grounds).

He crossed the Amazon basin at its widest point, 1,200 miles from the Andes of Ecuador, through the lowland jungle to Mato Grosso in Brazil, helped by the Matses Indians (Through Jaguar Eyes). In the Cocha Brava he went in search of tigers (The Raiders of the Lost Lake). In the Namib Desert (1995), he spent three and a half months travelling with three reluctant camels, learning from the nomadic Himba tribe to survive with little food or water (The Skeleton Coast).

He crossed the steppe and Gobi desert in five and a half months, going 3,000 miles by horse and camel through Siberian drylands, Mongolian steppe (The Edge of Blue Heaven). In the Mato Grosso he investigated the Kalapalo Indians’ story of the disappearance of Colonel Fawcett (The Bones of Colonel Fawcett). He attempted to cross the Bering Straits. He travelled with dogs 2500 miles through Chukchi and Inuit peoples and beyond (Ice Dogs).[6] He visited spiritual healers including Voodoo witchdoctors in Haiti, the Mentawai in Indonesia, the Huichol of Mexico and shamans in Siberia (Last of the Medicine Men).

Books

As author

As contributor

As editor

TV series

Other TV appearances

A voyage through the Brazilian Amazon to reveal the secrets of the Cocha Brava (Wild Lake), home to the giant monster snake – which no white man has ever seen.
Through Kenya to Uganda. An account of contemporary life in East Africa.

Highlights and mishaps

References

  1. "Benedict Allen: Explorer of the new century". The Independent. 5 November 2006. Retrieved 6 February 2012.
  2. "Britain's Greatest Explorers Benedict Allen", 25/01/2013, Daily Telegraph
  3. "About Benedict - Welcome". Retrieved 2016-10-28.
  4. "About Benedict - Career". Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  5. "An Interview With Legendary Explorer Benedict Allen", 02/09/2015, Huffington Post
  6. "Ice Dogs". BBC Two online. BBC. Retrieved 30 May 2012.
  7. "Benedict Allen: my greatest mistake", as told to Graham Snowdon, 7 October 2011, The Guardian
  8. Benedict Allen (2002). "Episode 3". Ice Dogs. London. BBC.
  9. Castella, Tom de. "Dog days in Roman's empire". Retrieved 2015-07-20.

External links

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