9 Jan 2021

Michael Apted: TV documentary pioneer and film-maker dies aged 79

11:32 am on 9 January 2021

Film director Michael Apted, best known for the Up series of TV documentaries following the lives of 14 people every seven years, has died aged 79.

British film director Michael Apted.

British film director Michael Apted has died age 79. Photo: Getty Images

He also directed Coal Miner's Daughter, Gorillas In The Mist and the 1999 Bond movie The World Is Not Enough.

The original 7 Up in 1964 set out to document the journeys of a range of children from all walks of life.

The show was inspired by the Aristotle quote "give me a child until he is seven and I will show you the man".

The first 7 Up show was followed by 14 Up at the start of the next decade, which interviewed the same children as teenagers - and the pattern was set right up until 63 Up in 2019.

Throughout all those intervening years ITV viewers became engrossed with the stories of private school trio Andrew, Charles and John, of Jackie who went through two divorces, of Nick who went from jobless and homeless to Liberal Democrat councillor, and of working class chatterbox Tony, whose life ambition was to become a jockey.

Apted's shows have often been described as the forerunner of modern-day reality TV series, giving its participants the time to tell their own stories on screen.

But unlike their modern counterparts, the original Up children tended to fade away from the limelight in the seven years between each chapter.

'Remarkable' career

Thomas Schlamme, president of the Directors Guild of America, said Apted was a "fearless visionary" whose legacy would live on.

He said Apted "saw the trajectory of things when others didn't and we were all beneficiaries of his wisdom and lifelong dedication".

ITV's managing director Kevin Lygo said the director's six-decade career was "in itself truly remarkable".

He said the Up series "demonstrated the possibilities of television at its finest in its ambition and its capacity to hold up a mirror to society and engage with and entertain people while enriching our perspective on the human condition".

"The influence of Michael's contribution to film and programme-making continues to be felt and he will be sadly missed," Lygo added.

- BBC