Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
history

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Long Lost Family (British TV series)


FieldValue
imageLonglostfamily.jpg
genreDocumentary
based_on
presenterDavina McCall
Nicky Campbell
countryUnited Kingdom
languageEnglish
num_series14 (Regular)
8 (What Happened Next)
6 (Born Without Trace)
1 (Switched at Birth)
1 (Shipped to Australia)
num_episodes91 (Regular)
25 (What Happened Next)
15 (Born Without Trace)
1 (Switched at Birth)
1 (Shipped to Australia)
producerJuliet Singer
Thea Hickson
runtime60 minutes (inc. adverts)
companyWall to Wall
channelITV
first_aired
last_airedpresent

Nicky Campbell 8 (What Happened Next) 6 (Born Without Trace) 1 (Switched at Birth) 1 (Shipped to Australia) 25 (What Happened Next) 15 (Born Without Trace) 1 (Switched at Birth) 1 (Shipped to Australia) Thea Hickson

Long Lost Family is a 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. Long Lost Family is based on the Dutch series Spoorloos (), airing on NPO 1 from 1990 and made by KRO-NCRV.

Background

The series is based on the long running Dutch TV programme Spoorloos, which aired from 2 February 1990 to 11 December 2024 before being cancelled in February 2025 due to several reunion mismatches. Early Spoorloos shows included studio interviews with people who knew a missing person and ended with the missing person joining them in the studio. Later shows focused more on biological family reunions outside the studio with DNA matching done behind the scenes.

The show led to several international versions:

  • A Danish version called Sporløs, has aired 19 series since 1999.
  • A Finnish version called Kadonneen jäljillä has been airing since 2009.
  • A Norwegian version called Sporløs has been airing on TV 2 since 2010.
  • The British version, called Long Lost Family, airing since April 2011.
  • A Hungarian version aired on RTL, called Keresem a családom, was aired from 2015 to 2020.
  • An Australian version (also Long Lost Family), hosted by Chrissie Swan and Anh Do, was screened for a single series on the Ten Network in 2016.
  • A US version (also Long Lost Family), presented by Chris Jacobsand Lisa Joyner and sponsored by TLC and Ancestry.com, aired 6 series between 2016 and 2019.

Format

Presented by Davina McCall and Nicky Campbell, the show often offers a last chance for people who are desperate to find long lost relatives. Given the large numbers of people contacting the show, the series only helps a selection of people, most of whom eventually appear on screen. With the help of the hosts, each relative or relatives are then guided and supported through the process of tracing the member of their family they have been seeking, in some cases for decades.

Using the show's resources, the programme is often able to devote considerable time to track down archival materials and scour public records. The also hire trained intermediaries who are legally able to access adoption files, uncover birth or death record details, reveal new legal names for adopted children, and initiate first contact on behalf of the show.

Each show also explores the background and context of each family's estrangement and tracks the often complex and emotional process of finding each lost relative before they are reunited. They reveal background details to each case (as agreed to by the guests) and elements of the social context. They also uncover reasons why these estrangements occurred, from the young single mothers who willingly or unwillingly surrendered their babies, to parents who abandoned their children, and to underlying familial, financial, and institutional pressures that led to forced fostering or adoptions.

Sometimes, for privacy reasons, the entire backstory is not provided in detail, nor a person’s current familial situation explained clearly. Further, not all reunions are positive either, with aged relatives sometimes deceased, or others not willing to appear on camera, and some who do not wish to face decades old family secrets. In the UK and other versions, the family are usually told distressing news away from the cameras out of respect.

Transmissions

Regular series

SeriesEpisodesOriginally airedFirst airedLast aired
1621 April 201126 May 2011
2712 April 201231 May 2012
3817 June 201312 August 2013
4814 July 20141 September 2014
563 June 20158 July 2015
6713 July 201624 August 2016
7726 July 20176 September 2017
8717 July 201828 August 2018
9710 June 201919 August 2019
The Unknown Soldiers121 October 2019
10518 January 202115 February 2021
1195 July 202131 August 2021
12713 June 202225 July 2022
1363 July 20237 August 2023
1468 July 202425 August 2024
15718 Sept 2025(Unknown) 2025

''What Happened Next''

A revisited series called Long Lost Family: What Happened Next has aired on ITV since 2014.

SeriesEpisodesOriginally airedFirst airedLast aired
139 September 201414 October 2014
239 May 201723 May 2017
3311 June 20182 July 2018
Christmas Reunion117 December 2018
4329 July 201912 August 2019
Twin Special128 October 2019
536 July 202020 July 2020
6215 April 202127 May 2021
738 August 202222 August 2022
834 April 202320 April 2023

''Born Without Trace''

SeriesEpisodesOriginally airedFirst airedLast aired
Special125 February 2019
1
221 June 20202 June 2020
3324 May 202126 May 2021
4323 May 202225 May 2022
5326 June 202328 June 2023
6310 June 202412 June 2024
7318 June 20252 July 2025

Awards and nominations

YearGroupAwardResult
2014BAFTA Awards"Features Programme"
2015National Television Awards"Factual Programme"
2021BAFTA Awards"Features Programme"

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 commented, "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, [which] 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, saying: "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 added, "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."

References

References

  1. (2012-04-03). "Davina McCall, Nicky Campbell for 'Long Lost Family' series two – TV News". Digital Spy.
  2. "Long Lost Family and Who Do You Think You Are? Returning to Screens Next Year". Warner Bros. Television Production UK.
  3. (13 January 2019). "Spoorloos blikt terug in 600ste aflevering". RTLBoulevard.nl.
  4. (2025-02-22). "KRO-NCRV cancels "Spoorloos" after mismatches in family reunions {{!}} NL Times".
  5. (19 November 2015). "TEN Upfronts 2016: Survivor, Jessica Marais, Anh do -and Nigella!".
  6. (25 February 2019). "Long Lost Family: Born Without Trace".
  7. Deacon, Michael. (20 April 2011). "Long Lost Family, ITV1, review". [[The Daily Telegraph.
  8. Mangan, Lucy. (21 April 2011). "TV review: Long Lost Family; Secrets of the Arabian Nights; and Wishful Drinking". [[guardian.co.uk]].
  9. Jarvis, Alice-Azania. (22 April 2011). "Last Night's TV: Long Lost Family/ITV1 [and] Secrets of the Arabian Nights/BBC4". [[The Independent]].
  10. Wollaston, Sam. (12 April 2012). "TV review: Derek; Long Lost Family". [[The Guardian]].
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Long Lost Family (British TV series) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report