Marlin Perkins, recognized as one of the
leading ecologists and naturalists in the world, helped bring
wildlife into American living rooms. Perkins' interest in animals
began long before his adventures on Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom.
Perkins began his zoo career
in 1926, literally working from the ground up with the St. Louis
Zoological Gardens. He was put to work on the Zoo's laborer crew,
where he helped maintain the zoo grounds. Perkins quickly rose
through the Zoo's ranks, becoming curator of reptiles in 1928. In
1944, following seven years as curator of the New York Zoo in
Buffalo, N.Y., Perkins was appointed
director of the Lincoln Park
Zoo in Chicago. Under Perkins' direction, the Zoo became
internationally known, in part from the Zoo Parade television
series, which ran on NBC from 1949-1957.
Perkins' career came full circle in 1962, when he returned to the
St. Louis Zoo as its director. He became director emeritus of the
Zoo in 1970. It was during Perkins' tenure with the St. Louis Zoo
that he, along with producer Don Meier, began work on an idea for a
new television program. Mutual of Omaha's "Wild Kingdom" debuted on
January 6, 1963, and was in original production for 27 years. The
program received four Emmys from the National Academy of Television
Arts and Sciences and was the first television series to receive the
National Parent Teacher Association's (PTA) "Recommended for Family
Viewing" designation.
Marlin Perkins passed away in 1986 at the age of 81.
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