HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesDavid Attenborough's rule for commentary: 'I eschew adjectives and metaphors'

David Attenborough's rule for commentary: 'I eschew adjectives and metaphors'

Naturalist Sir David Attenborough’s new docu-series, ‘A Perfect Planet’, is ready for release. His commentary approach, like Richie Benaud’s, veers towards ‘less is more’.

December 28, 2020 / 21:05 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

“Remember the value of the pause”. This was one of Richie Benaud’s golden rules for commentary. Try telling that to the yammering broadcasters of today, some of whom, to be fair, are told to be over the top by their bosses.

But when the narrator is of a towering stature, he is under no obligation to follow trends. So Sir David Attenborough does it the quiet way, not unlike Benaud.

Story continues below Advertisement

“I think the best commentary is almost the least commentary,” Attenborough told The New York Times while talking about his new docu-series, ‘A Perfect Planet’. “Fortunately, one of the ways in which natural history editors work, at least the best ones, is that they make the story vivid in images, and you can watch the story without any words at all. If you can see it in the picture, you shouldn’t spend your time saying: ‘This is a glorious sight!’ So, by and large, I eschew adjectives and metaphors and high-flown language and just try and produce the facts that are required to make sense of the pictures.”

‘A Perfect Planet’ will have only five episodes. Yet, it took four years to film over 31 countries. Attenborough, 94, does not travel as much as he used to, focusing on the script and narration. The fewer the words, the better.