Not only was Sue Hart (known as Daktari) a pioneering
wildlife vet in east Africa, she was a very versatile and
accomplished children’s writer and television personality.
In 1963 and following the success of “The Spider’s Tales”,
Sue was invited by the SA Broadcasting Corporation to
broaden the scope of her approach to conservation
education and this, in turn, led to the popular “Doctor Sue”
series, broadcast direct from selected school venues.

In England, Sue made a number of appearances in 1967 on Jackanory and Play School.
She created five programmes under the title “Vet in Africa” and a collection of tales for
the very young.
During her “Daktari” years, she initiated a television series for children called
“The Animal Ark”. This was filmed in the open air allowing young people to come into
close contact with “the tame and the wild”. In 1978/79,
she scripted a junior wildlife series “The World About
Us”, followed by “Nightwatch”, the first of a number of
“sound pictures” presenting the diversity and wonder of
natures realm through acoustic episodes targeting
non-sighted adults and children.

Apart from the many stories which were published in
books in South Africa during the 1980s, Sue wrote for
magazines and newspapers as well as organising many
educational and natural awareness initiatives for schools.