7.8 /10 1 Votes
Country of origin United Kingdom Production company(s) Wall to Wall Genre Documentary film | 7.8/10 IMDb Original language(s) English First episode date 21 April 2011 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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No. of series 6 (regular)
1 (revisited) No. of episodes 42 (regular)
3 (revisited) Running time 60 minutes (inc. adverts) Presented by Davina McCall, Nicky Campbell Executive producers Kate Scholefield, Colette Flight, Sally Benton, Duncan Coates, Clare Bradbury, Leanne Klein Nominations National Television Award for Most Popular Factual Entertainment Programme Similar Got to Dance, Stepping Out, The Moaning of Life, Real Crime, Prize Island Profiles |
Long Lost Family is a BAFTA award winning British television series that has aired on ITV since 21 April 2011. The programme, which is presented by Davina McCall and Nicky Campbell, aims to reunite close relatives after years of separation. It is made by the production company Wall to Wall.
Contents

Synopsis

Presented by Davina McCall and Nicky Campbell, the series offers a last chance for people who are desperate to find long lost relatives. The series helps a handful of people, some of whom have been searching in vain for many years, find the family members they are desperately seeking. It explores the background and context of each family's estrangement and tracks the detective work and often complex and emotional process of finding each lost relative before they are reunited. With the help and support of Davina and Nicky, each relative is guided and supported through the process of tracing the member of their family they have been desperately seeking, in some cases for most of their lives. Long Lost Family reveals the background to each case, the social context and reasons why these estrangements occurred, from the single teenage mums who felt unable to keep their babies to the fathers who left and the twin sisters who were separated at birth.
Long Lost Family: What Happened Next
A revisited series called Long Lost Family: What Happened Next aired on ITV for three episodes in 2014.
Reception

Michael Deacon of The Daily Telegraph gave the show a mixed review stating "the presenters seemed to be trying slightly too hard to squeeze tears out of their interviewees". Deacon also stated "I wonder what the producers would do if the two people they brought together, instead of embracing joyfully, launched into a furious rally of accusations and blame. Perhaps I'll tune in next week to see whether it happens, although that will depend on whether I can stomach more of Pavlov’s Piano, or for that matter Davina McCall's habit of talking to her interviewees, even the elderly ones, as if she were their proud mother, waving them off at the school gate". Lucy Mangan of The Guardian gave a more positive review commenting "Within its own parameters, it succeeds quite nicely. Davina's common touch remains infallible and her co-host Nicky Campbell's almost pathological lack of charisma is obscured and alleviated by his status as an adopted son himself, makes the whole thing slightly less painful than it might have been". Mangan summed up the show as a "lovely documentary"

Alice-Azania Jarvis of The Independent gave a show a mixed to positive review, she wrote; "It was all very warm and fuzzy and just what you'd expect, apart from the presenters, who struck me as an odd duo. His connection is obvious – adopted at four days old – hers rather less so. Still, she's really rather good: none of the overgrown-yoof presenting she favours on Big Brother, much more concerned (grown-up) friend. I can't imagine this continuing for more than a couple of series – it's all a little one-trick: once you've got the hang of the tracking-down-strangers part, there's only so much to be astonished about. But, for the meantime, it ain't bad". Sam Wollaston of The Guardian praised Long Lost Family calling it "very good" and "so much more interesting than Who Do You Think You Are?". He went on to say "It's so moving because it's real, and it's about separation and hurt, guilt and regret, growing up, identity, belonging, family, love, life. Now I'm blubbing, like a baby."
International versions

On 1 March 2016, a US version of the same name premiered on TLC starring Christopher Jacobs and Lisa Joyner. This version was sponsored by TLC and Ancestry.com and produced by Shed Media which also produces the US version of Who Do You Think You Are.

The Australian version of Long Lost Family, hosted by Chrissie Swan and Anh Do, will screen on the Ten Network in 2016.