Niobe Thompson
Niobe Thompson is a Canadian anthropologist and documentary film maker.[1] Since co-founding Clearwater Documentary in 2008, Thompson has produced and hosted one-off and series documentaries in partnership with CBC's science-and-nature program The Nature of Things.[2] He has twice won Canadian Screen Awards for "Best Science and Nature" (Code Breakers, 2011 & The Great Human Odyssey, 2015), his films have won 17 Alberta Film Awards, and he is a two-time winner of the Edmonton Film Prize.
Thompson studied Russian at the University of Alberta and McGill University before completing a masters at London's School of Slavonic and East European Studies.[1] For his PhD at Cambridge's Scott Polar Research Institute he lived in Russia's remote Chukotka region, following the impact of Roman Abramovich's hypermodernization program in the early 2000s.[3] Four of his documentaries were partly filmed with indigenous people in Chukotka.
For the feature documentary Tipping Point: Age of the Oil Sands (2011),[4] Thompson featured Dene Elder Francois Paulette and director James Cameron. Code Breakers (2011),[5] about the peopling of the Americas, features the renowned geneticist Eske Willerslev. For The Perfect Runner (2012), Thompson attempted the 125-km Canadian Death Race and featured the ultrarunner Diane Van Deren.
For the three-part series on human origins, The Great Human Odyssey (2015), Thompson followed the emergence of modern humans in Africa and our subsequent settlement of the planet.[6][7][8] Over 18 months of shooting, the crew worked in 17 countries on 5 continents, filming with the Badjao of the Philippines, the San Bushmen of the Namibian Kalahari, Chukchi nomads in Arctic Russia, and the Crocodile People of Papua New Guinea.[9] Thompson produced an interactive documentary[10] alongside the series, and in 2016, an orchestral live version[11] of Human Odyssey premiered with the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra.
Thompson was raised partly in the northern Alberta Cree community of Wabasca-Desmarais, where his father Jamie Thompson made wood-canvas canoes. His mother Sharon Poetker Thompson is a landscape painter. Thompson described his ambition in film making, stating "I want my children to grow up in a scientifically literate society, where films that explore the natural world play a central role"[12]
Thompson credits conservationist David Suzuki and veteran Canadian filmmaker Tom Radford[13] for his introduction to film. He also works closely with the Canadian verité specialist Rosie Dransfeld.[14]
References
- 1 2 Aaron Hutchins (11 Feb 2015). "Niobe Thompson: Anthropologist, filmmaker, human guinea pig". Maclean's.
- ↑ "Clearwater Documentary Inc.".
- ↑ "Settlers on the Edge: Identity and Modernization on Russia's Arctic Frontier, UBC Press (2008).".
- ↑ "Tipping Point: Age of the Oil Sands (2011)".
- ↑ "Code Breakers (CBC, 2011)".
- ↑ "The Great Human Odyssey: How Homo sapiens almost disappeared". The Globe and Mail. 5 Feb 2015.
- ↑ "African bushmen, deep-sea freedivers give compelling look into the past in documentary". Chronicle Herald. 10 Feb 2015.
- ↑ Ivan Semeniuk (25 Feb 2015). "Niobe Thompson's CBC series dives deep into the origins of humankind". The Globe and Mail.
- ↑ "World Broadcast Premiere on CBC-TV's The Nature of Things". Broadcaster Magazine. 5 Feb 2015.
- ↑ "World of Extremes, Interactive Documentary for The Great Human Odyssey".
- ↑ "Human Live at the Winspear (2016)".
- ↑ Niobe Thompson. "DIRECTOR'S STATEMENT: DR. NIOBE THOMPSON". CBC.
- ↑ "Tom Radford, Canadian Encyclopedia".
- ↑ "Rosie Dransfeld, ID:Productions".
External links
- Great Human Odyssey at CBC.ca
- Niobe Thompson's works on Worldcat
- Niobe Thompson's Vimeo account