gentle ben TV premiere clint howard 1967

Famous Bears in Fact & Fiction – Gentle Ben to Grizzly Adams

 

What are the Most Famous Bears?

Who was the most famous bear?

 

gentle ben TV premiere clint howard 1967

Famous Bears in Fact & Fiction – Gentle Ben to Grizzly Adams

 

Gentle Giants: Famous Bears in Fact & Fiction – from Ben to Bozo Bear
famous-bears-grizzly-ben

Famous Bears in Fact & Fiction – Gentle Ben to Grizzly Adams
“If you live with Nature, not against her, she’ll be real good to you.”- Grizzly Adams

“Grizzly bears are the true monarchs of the wilderness.” – Jane Goodall

 

Famous Bears in Fiction

As I said in my post “Bears in Literature” — bears have appeared in our folk tales since we first told stories.

Especially in Northern cultures, where the bear was seen as a fierce and noble animal. Literally, in Northern Europe, the original “King of Beasts.”
Some cultures, especially First Nations and Northern European, believed that Bear was Humankind’s closest blood relative. Many chieftains and war leaders in old Nordic, Celtic, Germanic and Anglo-Saxon clans claimed to have Bear blood in their ancestry.

Trending Facts

Famous fictional bears include Rudyard Kipling ‘s Baloo, A A Milne’s Winnie-the Poo, Michael Bond’s Paddington, Walt Morey’s Gentle Ben. As well as favourites Yogi and Boo Boo.

Perhaps the best known Ursine-themed story is “Goldilocks and the Three Bears” which drifted from fiction to real life when the bear who played Gentle Ben on TV once ran into the woodlands around Miami and met a little girl who was all by herself…

 

Famous Bears in Fact

 

From ferocious and dangerous attackers — to loving and carefree friends — real life bears have appeared in Hollywood productions from the beginning.

In Canada, movies like Nell Shipman’s silver screen classics of the Silent Era, Back To God’s Country and Trail of the Northwind, were popular. Both were filmed with animals from Nell’s own wildlife rescue sanctuary. They included Brownie, a laid-back brown bear Nell had raised from an orphaned cub. [2]

Here are a few of the most famous real bears:

 

Gentle Ben real animal. Bruno, aka Ben. Bruno, along with his brother Smokey, was rescued as an orphaned black bear. He appeared in a number of Ivan Tors film features, including Daktari and Zebra in the Kitchen. And Gentle Giant.

As a young bear he swam with Suzy the dolphin who played Flipper.

Bruno’s career blossomed when he was cast as the title character in the televised version of Walt Morey’s beloved novel GENTLE BEN.

Author Walt Morey was raised in the Pacific Northwest and set his novels in the cold Northcountry of Alaska and Canada, including his popular and best selling KAVIC THE WOLF DOG and GENTLE BEN.

Found in the Everglades…
When Tors adapted GENTLE BEN for the screen, he changed the locale from Alaska to the Florida Everglades, where the producer had a wildlife sanctuary.

Bruno quickly learned to respond to the name “Ben.” While becoming the most famous bear of them all.

Ricou Browning, who directed many episodes, explained, “Ben was a big puppy dog. He wasn’t well-trained; he was just tame. We had other black bears, some trained better than him, that we used as doubles and backups, and also for stunts and tricks. Gentle Ben’s main capacity in the show was to work with the boy (Clint Howard) and to be friendly and nice.”

A bear named Buck was the most commonly used stand-in for Ben. Other bears used for special action scenes were Smokey, Drum, Hammer, Oscar, Baron, Tudor and Virgil. Hammer was used in swimming and bear-fight scenes. Unknown, but famous bears in their own way.

“The boy,” Mark Wedlow, was expertly played by Clint Howard. Clint had already established a buzz by playing the small alien Balok in Star Trek.

Browning recalled, “A number of times Ben accidently stepped on Clint’s foot, you know, a 650-pound bear stepping on your foot can hurt a little. Tears would come into Clint’s eyes. But he was a rugged little boy. He managed well.”

Clint and Ben were immediate friends: “He’s as gentle as my cat Mitts. It doesn’t matter how big he is, I’m not afraid of him and he’s not afraid of me,” Clint said.

Famous Bears in Fact & Fiction – From Gentle Ben to Brutus Bear

Lost in Miami…
The biggest scare they got while filming came the day Gentle Ben, alarmed by a sudden noise, “took off into the woods down here south of Miami. We all went after him with lassoes, but nobody could find him — a 650-pound black bear running loose in Miami…”

What followed was a three day bear hunt, with the crew worried that someone else — with a gun — would find him first.
“On the third day,” continued Ricou, “a little girl was riding her bike on one of the bicycle trails and rode up to our bear. She had her lunch basket with her, so she shared her lunch with our bear then let us know that she’d found him. Why the little girl wasn’t frightened to death, I don’t know.”

Producer Ivan Tors wasn’t surprised at the result of this citywide bear hunt, explaining, “Humans have only given Ben good experiences so Ben only gives good experiences in return.”

Gentle Ben, Clint Howard & Dennis Weaver: Memories of Gentle Ben

 

Although, in his memoir, Ivan Tors admitted to a basic animal training trick: “The room was full of reporters from various magazines and newspapers. They were all elated when they saw me enter with my leading bear. I sat down in a comfortable armchair, and Ben immediately sat down on the carpet right next to me. He did not move or create any disturbance during the interview. This wasn’t really because he was so polite. You see, my pocket was full of lemon drops, and Ben wanted to be close to the origin of this heavenly scent. He also knew that he would, in due time, receive his reward.”

Tors then goes on to warn his readers about meeting (and feeding) bears in the wild — especially in National Parks.

Forever Home on the Ranch…

After the Gentle Ben series was suddenly cancelled as an early victim of the infamous Rural Purge, 0ne of Ben’s trainers, Ron Oxley, moved the amiable bruin back to California. Ben lived a lighthearted life at Oxley’s Action Animals Ranch.

Now called “Bruno” again (at least in the cast credits), he appeared in a number of new productions, including The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean starring Paul Newman. John Huston plays an aging Grizzly Adams in it. And Shadow of the Hawk with Chief Dan George.

Dennis Weaver, by the way, who portrayed the boy’s father (Park ranger Tom Wedloe) used to love to play and roughhouse with Ben the bear between takes. That, and “driving the airboat on the Everglades,” were Weaver’s “fun things to do.”

Weaver, best remembered as Chester Goode on Gunsmoke and Deputy Marshal Sam McCloud, would go on to become a noted vegetarian, environmentalist and animal rights activist.

2. Bozo, aka Ben. Certainly one of the famous bears.

 

Bozo was a female Kodiak bear. She was found working in a travelling circus. Nothing was known about her cubhood.

Though animal trainer Dan Haggerty believed that because of “her amazing affection for humans” she had been raised as a pet and then sold to the circus when she got bigger.

When the independent feature movie The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams was cast, Haggerty was picked as both the bear’s trainer (the bear was supposed to be a male named Ben) and as the actor portraying the title character, James “Grizzly” Adams.

Adams was a real-life independent mountain man who had lived in the Sierra Nevada mountains of California in the 1860’s.
Haggerty had already experienced working with animals in movies and television, including some Disney productions and the live-action Tarzan series. Since “actors didn’t like animals leaping on them,” he easily found work as a stuntman, double and animal handler.

“I had lions and chimps and leopards and all kinds of things. So working with the bear and the eagle and all that was a very natural thing for me to do.”

 

Famous Bears in Fact & Fiction – Gentle Ben to Grizzly Adams

 

For more info, visit Best Bear Books – a List

 

And See My CIVILIZED BEARS HOME!

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