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David Attenborough's centenary celebrations begin with a closer look at "Life on Earth"

Next week, the celebrations of the 100th anniversary of British?naturalist David Attenborough begin with a special that digs deeper into his landmark 1979 TV series "Life on Earth".

This program, with its famous "face-to face encounters" with mountain gorillas from?Rwanda, set the pattern for natural history documentaries in the years that followed. It also helped him establish himself as one of the most authoritative voices in conservation.

The new series, "Making Life on Earth - Attenborough's Greatest Adventure", explores the stories behind the show and features more footage including a baby gorilla crawling on the presenter as well as a lioness on the hunt.

Attenborough, reading from his 'diary' during filming recalls that he and crew were held by the Rwandan Army and 'threatened' in Saddam Hussein’s Iraq.

The team talks about the challenges of arranging shoots abroad, when letters take a few weeks to arrive and about worrying about getting precious films rolls back to Britain.

Also, there are more details about their "hunt" for a fish in the Indian Ocean that is often referred to as a "living dinosaur".

After a fisherman accidentally caught the?coelacanth and released it, he notified the crew. Attenborough jokes that it was "the first time the coelacanth was ever filmed live, but just barely."

Mike Gunton, the creative director of BBC's Natural History Unit, who later worked with Attenborough, said that the series was a game changer.

Gunton said, "All we have really done is remake Life on Earth."

Attenborough was a London native born in 1926. In 1952, Attenborough began his BBC career. Two years later, he received his first big break when he presented "Zoo?Quest" after the original presenter fell ill during their first shoot.

He then moved into BBC management. In his late forties, he returned to nature programming and pitched "Life on Earth", a new series that would tell the story of evolutionary change.

He wrote the scripts of all 13 hours before the filming began.

Victoria Bobin said, "He has without doubt defined natural history?and the way we view the world."

BBC premieres "Making life on Earth: Attenborough’s greatest adventure" on Sunday.

A concert will be held in London, and there will be events at museums all over Britain to commemorate the birthday of the naturalist. (Reporting and editing by Andrew Heavens; Sarah Young, Francesca Halliwell)

(source: Reuters)