We were stupid beyond belief to have that lion in our house’: Tippi Hedren reveals her regrets at letting beast share family home – and even letting it sleep in daughter Melanie Griffith’s bed!
Hollywood
actress Tippi Hedren has revealed her embarrassment and regret that she
let a fully grown lion live with her family in the 1970s, saying they
were ‘stupid beyond belief’ to let the beast play with her daughter
Melanie Griffth, then aged just 13.
pictures shows the Lion – named Neil – can be seen
relaxing by the family’s pool, lounging in Melanie’s bed and becoming a
distraction in the office.
But
Hedren has revealed that looking back she finds the pictures
humiliating and admits she ‘should never have taken those risks’.
Mane event: Neil grabs Melanie's leg as she jumps into the pool, aged just 14, in her Sherman Oaks, Los Angeles, home
Life in the roar: Melanie Griffith's
mother Tippi Hedren, muse to the famed director Alfred Hitchcock,
fearlessly toys with Neil the lion
‘I
cringe when I see those pictures now,’ she told...
me this week. ‘I have
to tell you we were stupid beyond belief. We should never have taken
those risks. These animals are so fast, and if they decide to go after
you, nothing but a bullet to the brain will stop them.’
Although
she stresses now that his trainer, Ron Oxley was always shadowing his
animal, Hedren writes in her memoirs of how their ‘first live-in lion’
had ‘no room off limits to him’.
He
loved to sleep on Melanie’s bed, she writes, and ‘one night I went down
to find them both asleep, side by side’. Neil’s mouth was no more than
two feet from her daughter’s body, she recalled, adding: ‘It was a sight
some mothers might not relish.’
While
her family were never harmed by Neil, one night he attacked his owner
Ron Oxley during a dinner party for British guests at their home.
The
pair ‘battled it out’ for dominance in the kitchen, with the lion
snarling and batting at the man with a huge paw. Oxley tried to regain
control by raising his hands and arms threateningly.
Neil eventually tossed his head and mane in surrender, making subdued muttering noises, and the pair marched out of the house.
Slumberland: A remarkable image of Melanie sharing her bed with a snoozing Neil the lion, who would often sleep in her bedroom
‘We’re
dealing with animals who are psychopaths,’ says Hedren now. ‘They have
no conscience or remorse genes, and they will kill you for their
dinner.’
Though
Melanie Griffith became a classic Hollywood wildchild - who was going
out with Miami Vice actor Don Johnson by the time she was 14 - she says
Neil was her ‘best friend’. And she clearly loved being photographed
with him.
‘She
was the talk of her school, it was fun for her,’ explains Tippi Hedren.
But wasn’t she scared that she or her daughter would be injured or
killed?
‘No,
it’s not good to be scared around lions. Ron told us exactly what we
could do and what we couldn’t do. And we listened very carefully to
him.’
She
adds: ‘He taught us, and Melanie especially, to respect the animal and
not do anything that might annoy him, like scratch his nose or suddenly
run up and put your arms around him.’
Other
advice included not turning one’s back on him as he loved to come and
trip people, knowing that if you move quickly he will want to play and
he plays ‘rough’ and to pet him under his chin or deep in his mane but
not on his face.
Most
important, they were warned to take care the lion didn’t become
possessive about anything, even a chair, which is when they are at their
most dangerous.
Casual:
Neil is seen above bothering Hedren's then-husband Noel Marshall at
work, and enjoying a session by the pool with Griffith
She
also revealed that their extraordinary experience with Neil lulled them
into a false sense of security which was to have disastrous, almost
fatal, consequences.
Indeed,
after she, Melanie and the rest of their family suffered a string of
serious injuries inflicted by the big cats they went on to adopt after
Neil, Hedren has turned full circle in her attitude to such exotic
pets.
Now
84, she runs a sanctuary, California’s Shambala Preserve, for some 32
big cats, and is an outspoken critic of the practice - still legal in
much of the U.S. - of keeping them as domestic pets. As an activist she
was successful in lobbying Congress to pass a 2003 bill ending the
traffic between states of big cats.
She
is now trying to push through another bill that will stop the breeding
of these animals for personal exploitation or their sale as pets.
But
how on earth did two generations of Hollywood royalty come to be
sharing a sofa - and a swimming pool and bedroom - with the king of the
jungle?
The
answer is pure Tinseltown eccentricity. Tippi Hedren had been filming
in Africa in 1969 when she and her husband Noel Marshall - a Hollywood
agent who would go on to produce the horror film The Exorcist - stumbled
across an abandoned game warden’s house in Mozambique. It had been
taken over by a pride of 30 lions who regarded it as their home.
The
encounter gave the two animal-lovers an idea for a feature film about a
family who share their house with scores of lions, tigers and
panthers.
Nobody
had ever attempted this before – and with good reason, animal experts
warned them, because big cats will instinctively fight each other unless
they know each other well.
Sensibly,
Ron Oxley, who ran a business training and renting animals to film
studios in Los Angeles, advised the couple that if they really hoped to
understand these deeply individualistic creatures, they must first live
with one.
Grappling: Hedren takes on Neil in a
dangerous-looking wrestling match on the floor of their California home.
She now says she regrets letting the huge animal stay in her home
admitting 'we were stupid beyond belief'
It
might have sounded like an invitation to an early and painful death,
but Oxley insisted he had just the sweet-natured lion for them, which
had been trained to interact with humans. Born in Africa, Neil used to
play ‘baddie’ lions on screen in the 1960s TV series Daktari.
He
has been brought to the U.S. as a young adult, and was good natured
because Oxley had put a huge effort into training and bonding with him.
According
to Hedren, during training Oxley would sit outside Neil’s cage almost
every day for three or four hours at a time, before finally going inside
the cage.
Then
he would sit quietly four feet away from Neil every day for more than a
month, until Neil eventually came over to him, indicating he wanted to
be friends.
Even
so, one might have thought that, of all people, Tippi Hedren, an
actress who endured having gulls, ravens and crows thrown at her while
filming The Birds, might have hesitated.
But
a mixture of naivety, impulsiveness and sheer determination to make
their film made the couple agree. Four or five days a week, Oxley would
bring Neil over to their spacious home in the wealthy Los Angeles suburb
of Sherman Oaks.
Thankfully,
Neil was always kept well-fed. The lion would dine once a day, eating
as much as 12lb of raw meat, with added vitamins and minerals.
Plush sofa: Hedren uses Neil as an oversized pillow while catching up on the news. Now aged 84, she still keeps lions
Non-plussed: Noel Marshall, a major Hollywood agent, tries to get some work done despite Neil roaring in his face
In
these photos, taken for LIFE magazine, it suggests they were all one
big happy family. In one shot, the nine-foot-long, 400lb animal is
play-fighting with Melanie by the pool, grabbing her foot with his paw
and pretending to bite it as she jumps into the water.
In
another, she stands in the water at the pool edge, absent-mindedly
reaching up to stroke the chin of the beast looming above her as a giant
paw rests gently on her small head.
Catnap: Neil dozes while star of The Birds Tippi Hedren poses with huge animal
Hedren
– who knew all about unpredictable wildlife as the celebrated star of
Alfred Hitchcock’s The Birds – is snapped using Neil as an oversized
pillow as she leans against him while reading the newspaper.
In another shot, they lie on the floor wrestling, the film star’s shoulder disappearing into his gaping maw.
He
was even allowed in the kitchen, lying in everybody’s way like an
oversized Labrador in the middle of the floor as a maid is snapped
carefully stepping over him.
In
another kitchen shot, Hedren is looking in the fridge with her
four-footed friend thrusting his huge muzzle as far as it can get
towards the meat compartment.
Perhaps
the most remarkable picture of all is of Neil sharing a bed with
Melanie - who went on to star in Working Girl - his long tail hanging
out from under the covers.
And
Neil proved such a delight that, within a few months, Hedren and her
husband decided to adopt their own four-month-old cub. Then they took on
more and more, usually from private owners who couldn’t cope or who had
abused them.
They
would keep the cubs in the house until they were about seven months
old, before moving them to an animal sanctuary – the Shambala Preserve –
they had set up on the edge of the Mojave Desert.
Hedren,
whose home was so neat and tidy that her clothes were colour-coded in
her wardrobes, says she watched helplessly as they ‘destroyed’ her
house.
By
the time she had six cubs charging around the house and alarming the
neighbours, she realised they had to leave, and moved the family to the
preserve. By 1980, they had 71 lions, 20 tigers, 10 cougars, nine black
panthers, four leopards, two jaguars and even a tigon (a lion-tiger
cross-breed).
Many
of the beasts (though not Neil) ‘starred’ in Roar, the 1981 film Tippi
and her husband had always dreamed of making. Featuring the whole family
– including Griffith and Marshall’s two sons from a previous marriage –
it involved a flimsy story that involved them getting chased around
their house by the big cats.
Roar
cost a walloping $17 million and took five years to make, largely
because the animals were so unpredictable as actors. It was a box office
flop, and the stress of making it finished off the Hedren-Marshall
marriage. It also convinced Tippi that treating big cats like household
pets had been an awful mistake.
‘There
were seven big incidents, and two people were almost killed while
making the film,’ she says. The director of photography, Jan de Bont,
had to have his scalp sewn back on after being attacked. Everyone in
Hedren’s family was injured by the cats: she was bitten on the head,
while Melanie had to have plastic surgery after a lion raked her in the
face with its claws.
If
only Neil hadn’t been such a pussycat, Tippi admits now, they might
never have been tempted to make the film. But the pictures with him
don’t tell anything like the whole story, she admits. ‘The breeders will
tell you lions are wonderful pets - and it’s an absolute lie
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