The Eichmann Show is a 2015 British BBC TV drama film produced by Laurence Bowen and Ken Marshall and directed by Paul Andrew Williams.
Despite death threats, reluctance to cooperate from several networks, and even resistance from the Israeli prime minister, David Ben-Gurion, who fears a 'show trial', the pair persist and move their cameras into the courtroom.
The daily films produced and directed by Milton Fruchtman and Leo Hurwitz constitute the world's first ever global television documentary series.
It was the first time the horror of the Nazi death camps had been heard on television, from the mouths of 112 eye witnesses and survivors.
For his work on the Eichmann trial, Milton Fruchtman won a Peabody Award together with Capital Cities Broadcasting Corporation,[3] and he went on to have a successful career in American television.