Emma De'Ath
Emma De'Ath is the co-series producer of CNN's MILLENNIUM.
Before joining Jeremy Isaacs Productions in 1997, De'Ath made "An Everyday Miracle," a film on sex, pregnancy and birth for the series "The Human Body." "An Everyday Miracle" won two gold awards from the British Medical Association and was recently broadcast on the Discovery Channel as "An Intimate Universe." The series, "The Human Body," has garnered some 14 awards, including three British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) awards for Best Factual Series, Originality on Television and Best Graphics.
As a free-lance director and producer, De'Ath produced three episodes for a 10-part series on the history of Western art, and in 1995 she made three films for the Discovery Channel's "History's Turning Points," which was honored as Best Documentary Series at the Chicago Film Festival. De'Ath also worked as a producer and director for the BBC's history unit on documentaries for "Timewatch," " The French Revolution Bicentenary" and "The Name of the Room."
De'Ath's first film, "The Paston Letters," won a special award for Women's History on Television from the 600 Group, and her film, "Plenty of Time for Play," about the social history of the kitchen was awarded Best Use of Archive by the Royal Television Society in 1993.
De'Ath studied ancient and modern history at Oxford University and documentary filmmaking at the University of Pennsylvania's Annenberg School of Communications.