Marlin Perkins

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Richard Marlin Perkins

Perkins bottle-feeding a young kangaroo.
Born (1905-03-28)28 March 1905
Carthage, Missouri, United States
Died 14 June 1986(1986-06-14) (aged 81)
Saint Louis, Missouri, United States
Occupation Zoologist
Television Personality
Spouse(s) Carol Perkins (19601986, his death) [1]

Richard Marlin Perkins (March 28, 1905  June 14, 1986) was a zoologist best known as a host of the television program Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom from 1963 to 1985.

Biography

Marlin Perkins was born on March 28, 1905, in Carthage, Missouri, the youngest of three sons of Joseph Dudley Perkins and Mynta Mae (née Miller) Perkins. He attended public school there through eighth grade. In the fall of 1919, he entered Wentworth Military Academy. There Perkins demonstrated his fascination with snakes by keeping blue racer snakes in his room. One afternoon, while exercising them on a lawn in the back of the barracks, he was spotted by a faculty officer and got in trouble for handling them.[citation needed]

Perkins briefly attended the University of Missouri, but quit school to become a laborer at the Saint Louis Zoological Park. He rose through the ranks, becoming the reptile curator in 1928. After being hired as a curator of the Buffalo Zoological Park in Buffalo, New York, Perkins was eventually promoted to director in 1938. He then served as director at the Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago, Illinois, from 1944 until 1962, when he returned to the St. Louis Zoo, this time as director. During his time at the Lincoln Park Zoo, Perkins joined Sir Edmund Hillary as the zoologist for Hillary's 1960 Himalayan expedition to search for the legendary Yeti.[2]

Perkins was the host of Zoo Parade, a television program that originated from the Lincoln Park Zoo on NBC station WNBQ-TV (now WMAQ-TV) when he was the director there. During a rehearsal of Zoo Parade, he was bitten by a timber rattlesnake, one of several bites from venomous snakes Perkins suffered throughout his career (over the years he was also bitten by a cottonmouth and a Gaboon viper). Although the incident occurred during a pre-show rehearsal and was not filmed, it has become something of an urban legend, with many people "remembering" seeing Perkins receive the bite on television.[3]

As a result of his work on Zoo Parade Perkins was offered the job in 1963 for which most Americans remember him: host of the nature show Wild Kingdom. The fame he gained in his television career allowed Perkins to become an advocate for the protection of endangered species, and through Wild Kingdom he gave many Americans their first exposure to the conservation movement. Perkins also helped establish The Wild Canid Survival and Research Center (WCSRC) near St. Louis in 1971. This wolf sanctuary has been instrumental in breeding wolves for eventual re-placement into their natural habitats.[4]

He married his wife Carol in 1960.[1]

Perkins retired from active zookeeping in 1970 and from Wild Kingdom in 1985 for health reasons. Perkins remained with the Saint Louis Zoo as Director Emeritus[4] until his death on June 14, 1986, when he died of cancer.

Following the revelation that The Walt Disney Company had fabricated footage of a mass suicide of lemmings in its film White Wilderness,[5] CBC journalist Bob McKeown challenged Perkins in an interview as to whether he had ever done something of that sort. Perkins, then in his seventies, "firmly asked for the camera to be turned off, then punched a shocked McKeown in the face." [6]

In 1990, Marlin Perkins was inducted into the St. Louis Walk of Fame.[7] A statue of Perkins also stands in Central Park in his hometown of Carthage, Missouri.

See also

References

My Wild Kingdom: An Autobiography, by Marlin Perkins. Dutton, New York, 1982.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.