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Fran michelmore and alan root

          He married Jenny Hammond in ; she died in , after which he was married a third time, to the biologist, artist and violinist Fran..

          Alan Root He died on 26 August , aged 80, in Nanyuki, Kenya, following a holiday with his wife, Fran Michelmore, and two sons to Alaska, US.

        1. Alan Root He died on 26 August , aged 80, in Nanyuki, Kenya, following a holiday with his wife, Fran Michelmore, and two sons to Alaska, US.
        2. He was married to Joan Root, Fran Michelmore and Jenny Hammond.
        3. He married Jenny Hammond in ; she died in , after which he was married a third time, to the biologist, artist and violinist Fran.
        4. Mr.
        5. According to Wildflower, Alan later married Fran Michelmore, a biographer, artist, violinist, and cartographer.
        6. Alan Root

          Alan Root (12 May 1937, London – 26 August 2017) was a British-born filmmaker who worked on nature documentary series such as Survival.[1]

          Until 1981 he was married to Joan Root, who was a Kenyan-born conservationist, murdered at Lake Naivasha in 2006.

          The couple had produced National Geographic articles together from 1963 to 1971 on animals, Galapagos Islands, and mainly African wildlife. Notable films include: The Year of the Wildebeest (1974), Safari by Balloon (1975), Mysterious Castles of Clay (1978), Two in the Bush (1980) and A Season in the Sun (1983).[citation needed]

          Alan Root's strong narrative style characterised much of Survival’s output and helped shape a sophisticated genre known as Blue Chip films.

          The Year of the Wildebeest was the epic story of the thundering migration of wildebeest herds across the plains of the Serengeti. Mysterious Castles of Clay, by contrast, showed wildlife in intricate detail in an