Muhammad Ali: A Life in Ten Pictures

(BBC Two, Saturday, 9pm)

He was the most beloved sports hero of the 20th century, battling fearsome opponents in ring, political adversaries out of it, and later in life, the cruel effects of Parkinson’s disease.

The latest edition of this series uses 10 photographs to reveal the defining moments in iconic boxer Muhammad Ali’s remarkable life which transcended sport to race, politics and foreign policy.

We begin on January 17, 1942, in Louisville, Kentucky, where Cassius Marcellus Clay Jr was born, the second son of sign painter Cassius Sr and cleaning lady Odessa.

At the age of 12, Cassius’s bicycle was stolen, and he reported the theft to a policeman named Joe Martin, who offered to give the youngster boxing lessons in a local youth centre. Spotting his talent, Martin began to feature him on his local TV show, Tomorrow’s Champions, before trainer Fred Stoner taught the young boxer the science of the sport.

After winning gold at the 1960 Olympics in Rome, he was offered a professional contract. He worked his way through a series of victories, and was famously described by one of his handlers as having the ability to “float like a butterfly, and sting like a bee”.

To win his first world heavyweight championship, in 1964, we see how the ‘Louisville Lip’, needed to defeat reigning champion Sonny Liston in what looked like a match between a cocky 22-year-old youngster and one of sport’s most chilling figures. However, Clay taunted and exhausted his opponent with his jabs, eventually defeating him the sixth round.

Around the time that he won the title, Clay became inspired by Malcolm X, and began to follow the Black Muslim faith, changing his name to Cassius X, before Muslim leader Elijah Muhammad gave him the name Muhammad Ali, meaning ‘beloved of Allah’.

Ten years after winning it for the first time, Ali regained the world title in Kinshasa, defeating George Foreman, with his rope-a-dope tactics going down in sports history.

He held the championship until Leon Spinks defeated him in 1978 in Las Vegas.

However, Ali regained the title by defeating Spinks in New Orleans, becoming the first boxer to win the world heavyweight championship three times.

As Ali’s ring career wound down during the early 1980s, he became more involved in politics, even trying to win the release of four kidnapped Americans in Lebanon in 1985.

However, Ali’s greatest act of personal bravery came after he was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 1984. He never hid the effects of the disease during his long years of decline and suffering, and instead appeared in public as often as he could, showing remarkable dignity.

Interspersed with the photographs in this programme are interviews with those who knew Ali best. But a picture is worth a thousand words – especially when they feature the man simply known as ‘The Greatest’.