National Geographic Live

Nature Roars Back

with Bob Poole

Composite image of a herd of elephants in Nature an Bob Poole on the job as a nature photographer. He is a caucasian man with medium length curly grey hair. He is wearing a green jacket and visor.

Tuesday, March 28

7:30pm

Capitol Theater

$25-$65

Age Recommendation

6 and up

Meet the Artist

Stay after the show for a brief informal Q&A session in the theater with the artist.

Experience an epic African wildlife park through the eyes of an Emmy Award-winning natural history cinematographer.  

A childhood in East Africa gave Emmy Award-winning cinematographer Bob Poole a fierce curiosity about the natural world as well as an adventurous spirit. For a six-part PBS/National Geographic International series, Poole drew on that experience to document the rebirth of a lost Eden: Mozambique’s Gorongosa National Park, a jewel of Africa’s parks system until civil war almost destroyed it. There, he joined forces with rangers and scientists (including his sister, renowned elephant researcher Joyce Poole), on perhaps the biggest conservation project on the planet. He’ll share secrets of filming lions, crocs, elephants, and spectacular scenery, and tell how he cracked the “Gorongosa code”—learning to read the landscape and find prime locations for filming the park’s spectacular wildlife.   

Join the acclaimed cinematographer and filmmaker for unforgettable images and stories of Gorongosa’s majestic animals—and learn how the wild places we’ve broken can be put back together. 

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About the speaker

Headshot of a caucasian man with curly grey hair and a visor. He is holding a large camera.

Wildlife Filmmaker

Bob Poole

Bob Poole grew up in East Africa, where his father was the director of the Peace Corps, and later the director of the African Wildlife Foundation. His family spent much of their time with the abundant wildlife that thrived there during the 1960s and 1970s. Poole’s unique upbringing gave him an appreciation and curiosity of the natural world, a highly adventurous spirit, and a strong sense of self-reliance. 

Poole’s relationship with National Geographic began when he was a teenager working with a crew who had come to Kenya to film elephants. After completing a university degree in science, he traveled the world as a camera assistant before landing his first assignment as a cinematographer for National Geographic. The film, Coming of Age with Elephants, was about his sister, Dr. Joyce Poole, the renowned elephant zoologist.  

Now an Emmy Award-winning director of photography, Poole films both people and wildlife and has made a career in front of the camera as well.  His extensive credit list includes documentaries for PBS, NATURE and NOVA, BBC, and more than 35 films for National Geographic Television. 

Poole works around the world and his passion for wildlife conservation has taken him to some of Africa’s most remote locations. Whether tracking elephants in extreme desert environments of Mali, following wildebeest across the Serengeti, or traveling road-less regions of war-torn Sudan, Poole’s lifetime experience and unfailing tenacity help him to capture remarkable moments. For this he won an Emmy for Outstanding Individual Achievement in a Craft: Cinematography while working on the series Great Migrations for National Geographic. 

Working on the other side of the camera, Poole is the main character in a National Geographic film, War Elephants, which premiered in March of 2012. The film was nominated for an Emmy (Best Nature Program 2013), was a Finalist at Jackson Hole for Best People and Nature Program, and won Best Documentary at the Sun Valley Film Festival. 

Poole spent two and a half years working on Gorongosa Park: Rebirth of Paradise, a six-hour primetime series for PBS and National Geographic International, which premiered September 22, 2015. He is the presenter, narrator, and wildlife cameraman for the series. 

In 2015 he spent three months following and filming a family group of elephants for a National Geographic film called Little Giant and worked as a "Cameraman in Vision" on a new BBC One series. 

Poole sits on the board of the Gorongosa Restoration Project, is a Fellow with the Explorers Club, and is a member of National Geographic Speaker's Bureau.

Photos

  • Two baby elephants in the wild face to face

    Photo by Elephant Voices
  • A flock of birds taking flight. They have white bodies, black wings and long orange beaks.

    Photo by Piotr Naskrecki
  • A baby elephant running between adults.

    Photo by Gina Poole
  • A middle aged caucasian man with curly grey hair and a visor smiling towards the viewer with a camera.

    Photo by Gina Poole
  • A videographer with a camera on a long boom mounted to the top of an offroad vehicle.

    Photo by Gina Poole
  • An adult elephant facing the viewer.

    Photo by Elephant Voices
  • A group of elephants of various ages huddling together.

    Photo by Gina Poole
  • A man with grey hair holding a camera next to an offroad vehicle.

    Photo by Gina Poole
  • A herd of elephants walking in the same direction.

    Photo by Elephant Voices
  • A herd of elephants in the wild

    Photo by Elephant Voices
  • African grasslands in the evening.

    Photo by Gina Poole
  • A videographer face to face with an elephant

    Photo by Gina Poole
  • silhouette of a videographer with a camera at dusk next to a body of water.

    Photo by Gina Poole
  • A caucasian man with curly grey hair carrying a camera.

    Photo by Gina Poole

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