Neil Bromhall is an Emmy Award-winning wildlife cameraman and the son of Dr. Derek Bromhall, marine biologist and wildlife filmmaker for the BBC. His first assignment was in Kenya filming Kitum, the Elephant Cave (1985), where elephants go underground to dig for soda-rich rocks.
Neil’s passion for underwater filming led to his qualification as a Dive Master in order to film such subjects as coral spawning in the Great Barrier Reef, lemon sharks giving birth to live young in Bimini, and dolphins being released in the Turks and Caicos.
After four years filming around the world, Neil was asked to join the BBC team for filming The Private Life of Plants (1995) with Sir David Attenborough. Neil received an Emmy Award for his camerawork on the series.
After 16 additional years of filming wildlife for the BBC, CNN, and others, Neil now specializes in macro and time-lapse filming in his studio in Oxford where he also works on his online garden plant database and website (Right Plants 4 Me) containing more than 10,500 photographs plus time-lapse sequences.
The many films he’s contributed to include, among many others, Footprints in the Forest, The Life of Mammals, Life in the Undergrowth, Dangerous Australians, and Arachnophobia. The independent films he’s contributed to include Vampire Hunters, Blood Suckers, Crime Scene Creatures, and The World of the Unborn, among others.