He is known as Michael, and was born in London, England London,
England, on June 18, 1933, his parents returning to Canada the following
year. After their separation he, with his mother and younger brother
Boultbee:John Jeremy Jeremy, went to Sydney, Australia Sydney, Australia,
where they remained until early in January 1942.
They left Sydney for America at that time on the S.S. Ships:President
Grant President Grant. The ship had hurriedly left Singapore
because of the Japanese invasion, leaving most of the crew behind, the
Captain safely navigating through the Australian Barrier Reef without charts.
What would normally have been a voyage from Sydney to San Francisco lasting
14 days took 48 as the ship was chased by Japanese submarines for several
days and had to take a zig-zag course down to Antarctic waters.
Everything that had the name President Grant on it was thrown overboard,
a successful ruse to make their pursuers think the ship had been sunk by
one of the submarines. However, the much longer voyage led to shortage
of food and fresh water, passengers surviving for two weeks on one meal
a day of corned beef and having to drink condensed sea water. As a
result, Michael and his brother and several other passengers needed hospitalization
on arrival at San Francisco.
For the next three years Boultbee:William Michael Michael and
Boultbee:John Jeremy Jeremy attended various schools in America and then
boarding school in Canada. In 1945 their step-father was posted to
England and the family reached there by flying boat, starting at Baltimore,
stopping in Newfoundland and Ireland, finally landing in Poole Harbour,
the flight having lasted 17 hours.
In England, Michael was educated at Beachborough Park Preparatory
School, Northamptonshire Beachborough Park Preparatory School, Northamptonshire,
and Malvern College, Worcestershire Malvern College, Worcestershire, until
1952 when he started two years' National Service in the Army. After
Basic Training with the Green Jackets, he was commissioned in the Queen's
Royal Regiment Queen's Royal Regiment and then seconded to the King's African
Rifles in Kenya King's African Rifles in Kenya. This was at the time
of the Mau Mau terrorist troubles Mau Mau terrorist troubles. After
completing his military service he worked on tea plantations in Kenya Kenya,
eventually managing a 2000-acre tea estate near Nairobi, Kenya Nairobi
until 1956, when he decided on a change of career and joined an American
film company working all over East Africa.
In 1958, this film company having gone out of business, Michael
and his first wife returned to England where he worked for the British
Broadcasting Corporation B.B.C. for the next five years filming on various
programmes, such as Panorama, and documentaries.
He then went 'free lance' until 1978, his film work including
coverage of the wars in Vietnam Vietnam, Cyprus Cyprus, Nigeria/Biafra
Nigeria/Biafra, the 1973 Yom Kippur War in Israel Yom Kippur War in Israel
and the beginning of the Lebanese Civil War Lebanese Civil War. During
these years more peaceful assignments included the official film of the
1968 Olympic Games in Mexico Olympic Games in Mexico, and an international
series of golf tournaments which took him to England, France, Spain, Portugal
and Puerto Rico. One interesting assignment was on documentaries
for the Hydrographic Department of the Royal Navy Hydrographic Department
of the Royal Navy, shot around Fiji and the Solomon Islands Solomon Islands.
This work involved charting waters which had not been re-surveyed since
the hydrographic surveys of Captain Cook Captain Cook, undersea volcanic
activity having made many physical changes. Michael tells us that
some Pacific areas have still not been resurveyed and that merchant ships
are forced to use Cook's original charts.
During his 'free lance' years he occasionally worked for American
and Canadian national television news networks and for British Independent
Television (I.T.N.) British Independent Television (I.T.N.). Eventually
he joined the American ABC News International American ABC News International
in a senior staff position. With them, he has been involved in filming
the troubles in Beirut Beirut, the Iranian Revolution Iranian Revolution,
the American hostage episode in Teheran American hostage episode in Teheran,
the Iran/Iraq War Iran/Iraq War, the Gulf War Gulf War and its post-war
Kuwaiti oil fires Kuwaiti oil fires, the American bombing of Tripoli,
the American invasion of Somalia American invasion of Somalia and more
recently in Bosnia where, tragically, a member
of the ABC team was killed by a sniper.
When not away covering all-too-frequent trouble spots, Michael lives with his family in a historic house on the North Downs of Kent near Rochester.