EMMA

Lord Richard Attenborough

Since winning the EMMA Award (Lifetime Achievement) 

Lord Richard Attenborough’s CBE is a British Actor, Film Director, Producer and a Social campaigner whose last acting role was in the 2002 film Puckoon, which he narrated. 

On 26th December 2004, his eldest daughter, Jane Holland, along with her mother-in-law, Audrey Holland, and Attenborough’s granddaughter, Lucy, were tragically killed during their holiday when a tsunami caused by the Indian Ocean earthquake struck Khao Lak, Thailand. 

On 11th May 2005, Attenborough read a lesson at the national remembrance service for those killed during the tsunami and earthquake. 

Between 2006 and 2007, Richard worked on the film Closing the Ring, his last project as a director and producer. On 13 July 2006, he and his brother David were awarded the titles of Distinguished Honorary Fellows of the University of Leicester. 

On 20th November 2008, Richard was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Drama from the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama (RSAMD) in Glasgow. He was an Honorary Fellow of Bangor University for his film-making contributions. 

Lord Richard Attenborough CBE sadly passed-away of heart failure on 24th August 2014.

On 19 October 2016, the Arts for India charity committee honoured him posthumously at an event hosted at BAFTA’s home in Piccadilly. 

Lord Richard Attenborough has greatly impacted cinema, the arts, education, and social justice. 

Richard was a longtime advocate of education that does not judge on colour, race, or religion.

Background (Before 2001)

Richard Attenborough was born in Cambridge, Cambridgeshire. His mother (Maria Attenborough) was a founding member of the Marriage Guidance Council, and his father (Frederick Attenborough) was a scholar, academic administrator, and fellow at Emmanuel College, Cambridge. 

From 1943 to 1946, Richard served in the Royal Air Force during the Second World War, spending part of that time with the RAF film production unit. He then volunteered to fly with the film production unit as a pilot but sustained permanent ear damage after further training. 

He went on to gain accolades for his film portrayals of a sociopathic thug in Brighton Rock, a soldier in the comedy Private’s Progress and its sequel, I’m All Right Jack, and a squadron leader engineering a breakout from a German POW camp in The Great Escape. 

After a lengthy acting hiatus, Richard returned to the silver screen in Steven Spielberg’s Jurassic Park, playing the owner of the titular dinosaur theme park, a role he reprised in the 1997 sequel. 

Richard then played Kris Kringle in the 1994 remake of Miracle on 34th Street and appeared as Sir William Cecil in Elizabeth. 

Richard’s directorial credits include Gandhi, the biographical film about Mohandas K. Gandhi, A Bridge Too Far, the antiapartheid film Cry Freedom and the Charlie Chaplin biopic Chaplin. 

In 1967, Richard was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) and was made a Knight Bachelor in 1976, having the honour conferred on 10 February that year.

In 1987, he became a goodwill ambassador for UNICEF and a member of the House of Lords in 1993 as a life peerage for public service and his film work, having helped establish Bafta. 

In 1998, he received the Japan Art Association’s Praemium Imperial prize for theatre and film. 

The late Diana, Princess of Wales, opened Richard Attenborough’s Arts Centre, an arts centre in Leicester inspired by Richard’s work, in 1997 after six years of funding efforts from Lord Richard Attenborough himself. 

About Us

We have been promoting Social Cohesion that has led to successful Social Inclusion in certain sectors within the Creative Industries since 1997. As pioneers to define the proper meaning of Multiculturalism, which is a natural development of a Metropolitan environment leading to a Cosmopolitan society, EMMA is perfectly suited to pursue our new Time4Peace project that resonates with Generation Z who are about Peace.

EMMA has been referred to as the cultural Oscars from their conception since 1997, because of its Multicultural philosophy to promote Social Cohesion and to encourage Social Inclusion throughout the “Creative Industries”. EMMA has been the first ever- Creative Industries TV show, worldwide, which has ensured its growth within the UK by £125 billion and $4.3 trillion globally; the EMMAs were broadcast on ITV & BBC.

Campaigns

EMMA has been in the forefront of many ground-breaking campaigns since 1997, by changing Britain’s global image, as the catalyst for the London 2012 Olympic Games and undertook a Social Cohesion conference in 2011. Throughout our Ad campaigns our message is for racial emancipation, where you are only judged by your character and not race or colour. Instigated the Equal Game conference at Wembley Stadium.

The Time4Peace Charity Music show is an apolitical and areligious event, whereby, every person can promote the collective need for Peace in whatever conflict affects them and will be a ticketed event. Proceeds from ticket sales will go to the charities of the ticket buyer’s choice as selected. All charities will be displayed on our App or Website, and funds transferred to the charity (subject to required changes). >>more

Global Issues

Humanity is facing a major crossroad with further alienation taking place amongst communities on a national and worldwide level leading to direct and indirect conflict that could eclipse the devastation imposed during WW2. EMMA has been working in the background since our conception to promote Social Cohesion with Ad campaigns to tackle Modern Day Slavery, Mental Health Issues and loss of life from Knife Crime

The FC Match is a Football Supporters competition that celebrates the Multicultural aspect of each Football Club that symbolises the most celebrated sport on the planet from domestic Football to the FIFA World Cup. The winning supporters will receive an EMMA Multicultural trophy that has been won by Muhammad Ali, Lennox Lewis, Thierry Henry, David Beckham, Ian Wright, Prince Naseem and Venus Williams, etc.