Keith Scholey, born in Dar es
Salaam, Tanzania, is a British producer of nature documentaries for
television and cinema, and a former television executive. He is the
director and producer of the feature film 'African Cats' for
Disneynature, in partnership with Alastair Fothergill. He is also the
executive producer of the series 'North America' for the Discovery
Channel.
Scholey graduated from Bristol University with a degree in Zoology in
1978 and subsequently completed a PhD in Zoology at the same
university. In 1983, he began working as a researcher at the BBC
Natural History Unit on David Attenborough's series 'The Living
Planet'. He rose to become a producer in this BBC department, making
programs for 'The Natural World' and 'Wildlife on One' series as well
as for David Attenborough's award winning series 'The Private Life of
Plants'. He also created and produced the original series of 'Big Cat
Diary', which has continued for over a decade, began and series
produced the 'Wildlife Specials' and became the series editor of
'Wildlife on One'.
In 1998, Scholey became the Head of the Natural History Unit. During
his four and a half year tenure, the NHU made the memorable David
Attenborough series 'State of the Planet' and 'The Life of Mammals',
and also 'Blue Planet', 'Andes to Amazon' and 'Wild Africa'. The
department also reinvented its live broadcasting creating 'The Abyss -
Live' and "Springwatch'.
In 2002, Scholey became the Controller of Specialist Factual for the
BBC's Factual and Learning division. With responsibility for Science,
Arts, Business, History, Religion as well as Natural History
departments, he over saw programs with a range from landmark
programming including, 'Auschwitz', 'Planet Earth', 'Egypt',
'Supervolcano' and 'The Power of Art' to the classic long running
series of Horizon, Timewatch, Natural World, and Arena and live events
including the funeral of Pope John Paul II.
In 2006, Scholey became the Controller of Factual Production for BBC
Vision, with the responsibility for all BBC Factual in-house
production. During this time, he oversaw the creation of 'The One
Show', the biggest factual commission in the organization's history. He
was also the Deputy Chief Creative Officer for BBC Vision Productions,
with responsibilities across all in-house TV production. In 2008, he
resigned from the BBC to pursue a career as an independent film
director and television producer.
In recent years, Scholey has directed and produced the feature film
African Cats for Disneynature, which is due to be released in the USA
on Earth Day, 22 April 2011. He is also the executive producer on the
landmark Discovery Channel series 'North America', through his company
Wild Horizons Ltd.
Scholey was made a Doctor of Science (DSc) in 2001, by the University
of Bristol for his contribution to the public and to biological
sciences. He is a trustee of Wildscreen. Scholey is a qualified SCUBA
diver and pilot.