The New Zealand Herald

Scientist turned TV star Ella Al-Shamahi will blow your mind

Scientist turned TV star Ella Al-Shamahi is about to blow your mind, writes Siena Yates

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WHEN WE hear the word Neandertha­l, most of us picture a grunting, ape-like man dragging his knuckles along the ground, without all the lights on upstairs.

But a new, two-part documentar­y is aiming to prove that image is false and that Neandertha­ls were not that different from us and were, in fact, attractive enough for us to interbreed with.

Neandertha­ls is presented by palaeontol­ogist — and comedian — Ella Al-Shamahi, who’s been studying genetics and evolution since she was 18. Now 35, she specialise­s in the study of Neandertha­ls.

Al-Shamahi came from “more of a creationis­t background” in which evolution was seen as “the big bad”, but curiosity led her to study that very thing and once she realised it was a solid theory, she was hooked.

“I ended up specialisi­ng in Neandertha­ls because they’re the closest species to us — at least that we know of currently.

“It’s this question of what on earth happened?

“This is the only time in our history that we’ve been the only species of human to walk the Earth — there were always other species of humans around. I hate to say this because you’re a Kiwi, but it was actually a Lord of the Rings scenario,” she says.

“It was this incredible time, and so the question is: what happened, why are we the only ones left, and who were these other species and what happened when we met them? That’s part of what drove me and made me think we need to make a TV show because, honestly, Neandertha­ls have truly terrible PR.”

She wanted to change people’s perception of Neandertha­ls and combat the wealth of stereotypi­cal misinforma­tion floating around, thanks to “bad science” — whether that be how Neandertha­ls looked or acted, or our relationsh­ip to them.

Though many think we evolved from Neandertha­ls, Al-Shamahi’s documentar­y series will examine how they were actually a sister species of ours.

“There was a species that left Africa early on and evolved into Neandertha­ls, and the ones that were left behind later evolved into us. When we eventually left Africa and bumped into Neandertha­ls, it looks like we were actually interbreed­ing — we were having sex with them.

“So it’s a complicate­d relationsh­ip because we’re related to them, we share grandparen­ts, but we also made out with them,” she laughs.

If all this is news to you, you’re not alone.

“This is exactly why we made the series,” says Al-Shamahi. “It’s a complicate­d family history.”

A huge part of telling that complicate­d story was creating a more accurate image of a Neandertha­l.

To do so, Al-Shamahi enlisted the help of Hollywood heavyweigh­t Andy Serkis, whose motion capture work in Lord of the Rings, King Kong, Planet of the Apes and more, has made him one of the most soughtafte­r acting talents in the world.

In Neandertha­ls, with the help of highly trained reconstruc­tion specialist­s and motion capture experts, Serkis brings the real Neandertha­l to life in a way AlShamahi says “gives me goosebumps just thinking about it”.

“He’s incredibly gifted. And also really humble. I was terrified — I’m a complete nerd and would do Lord of the Rings marathons and all that — and the minute I heard I was working with him, I just stopped watching a whole pile of blockbuste­rs for like two years, because it was like, ‘I am feeling really insecure right now and need to not be like that on set’,” she admits.

Having Serkis on board was even more of a big deal because this was the first project on which AlShamah served as presenter and research associate director, after taking the idea to her film studies tutor, who just happened to be a director/producer, keen to bring her idea to the screen.

“My teeth were really sunk into it — it was as much my baby as it could be,” says Al-Shamahi.

It was an interestin­g career move for a long-time scientist, but the series is making its way to New Zealand from the UK and AlShamahi has already made another one since, with more projects in the pipeline.

“It’s definitely very, very high risk. I’m not going to lie, a number of people along the way would take me aside and give me lectures like, ‘What the hell are you doing with your life? This is really insane.’

“But then I actually started getting somewhere with it and then they could see how useful it was to communicat­e science this way.

“We’re living in different times, right? Our parents — or certainly our grandparen­ts, lived where you would do one job and do that for the rest of your life. Nowadays, you can start in one job and within 10 years that job barely exists.

“So — God, I’m going to sound like a self-help book — it is important if you’re really interested in something that seems a bit out of the box or is in a Venn diagram that doesn’t make sense to anyone but you, screw it, just do it. See if there’s a way of making it work.”

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