MY LIFE PENGUIN POST OFFICE
Narrators: Daisy and Amy Graham-Brown
An AGB Films production for CBBC
Amy and Daisy join their dad on the trip of a lifetime to learn about his job as a wildlife film-maker, as he films penguins in Antarctica for the BBC Natural History Unit.
The girls tell their story of a terrifying boat journey across the stormy seas of the Drake Passage (640 miles of open water), living with penguins and working in the world’s coldest and most southerly post office. They learn how to film and record sound on wildlife sequences, do the heart-stopping, goose-bump inducing ‘polar plunge’ and come face to face with a leopard seal. But how will they cope with the psychological challenges of living on a tiny boat, cut off from iPhones and the rest of the world?
AWARDS
WILDSCREEN AWARD Nomination: Best Children’s Programme
SHOWREEL
REVIEWS
IAN BURREL
THE INDEPENDENT
After the Jeremy Clarkson fiasco in Tierra del Fuego, a happier BBC story from the bottom of the Earth.
The natural history film-maker Andrew Graham-Brown has given his daughters Amy and Daisy (aged 12 and 14) the experience of a lifetime by taking them down Patagonia way to watch him film penguins in Antarctica.
The result is a documentary for CBBC, My Life: Penguin Post Office, where the girls tell of their “terrifying boat journey” out from Ushuaia, across Drake Passage to the isolated post office at Port Lockroy, owned by the Antarctic Heritage Trust. There they lived among the local gentoo penguins, and Dad taught them to use his camera.
It should inspire interest in natural history among the CBBC audience and provides a fresh take on Graham-Brown’s “grown-up” Penguin Post Office, which was shown on BBC2 in July.
CREDITS
Executive Producer: Andrew Graham-Brown
Director: Ruth Peacy
Film Editor: Rick Holbrook
Sound: Wounded Buffalo
Executive Producer: Fred Kaufman
Series Editor: Steve Greenwood