Los
Angeles Times
May 28, 2007
By Clair Noland
Original
Article
Gretchen Wyler, an actress who left
a successful Broadway musical career to dedicate
her efforts to protecting animals and eventually
became an outspoken critic of the Los Angeles Zoo,
has died. She was 75.
Wyler died Sunday at her home in Camarillo after
a long battle with breast cancer, her friend
and fellow activist Catherine Doyle said.
Wayne Pacelle, president and chief executive
of the Humane Society of the United States, praised
her commitment as an animal rights advocate.
"She was a person of remarkable vigor and
vision," Pacelle said Sunday. "And
it's the loss of a major figure in the modern
animal protection movement."
A singer, dancer and actress in such Broadway
hits as "Guys and Dolls," "Silk
Stockings," "Damn Yankees" and "Bye
Bye Birdie," Wyler found a new passion in
the late 1960s after visiting a dog pound near
her home in Warwick, N.Y.
Appalled by the filthy, inhumane conditions
she saw there, Wyler decided to take action:
She quit eating meat, gave away her fur coats
and opened a new animal shelter. She kept acting,
but most of her time was spent educating the
public about animal rights.
"Her idea," Pacelle said, "was
never to preach to the choir but to broaden the
message and try to reach mainstream America."
The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty
to Animals made her its first female board member
in 1971 (though she was later dropped in a dispute
with the board). She sat on the board of directors
for the Fund for Animals and was vice chairwoman
until 1991, when she founded the animal rights
group the Ark Trust. In 2002 the Ark Trust merged
with the Humane Society of the United States,
and she served as vice president of the organization's
Hollywood office until retiring last year.
Wyler also created the Genesis Awards, which
since 1986 have recognized the media and entertainment
industries for incorporating animal protection
themes into their work. The films "Fast
Food Nation," "Happy Feet" and "Charlotte's
Web" were among the honorees at this year's
event, which featured actor James Cromwell and
comedian Bill Maher.
Working tirelessly on myriad animal rights issues,
Wyler aimed to shut down horse-slaughtering factories,
end the use of steel-jaw leg hole traps, prohibit
the use of animal testing in research and development,
and improve the treatment of animals in zoos
and circuses — anything that reflected
her motto: "Animals should have the right
to run if they have legs, swim if they have fins
and fly if they have wings."
Her passionate views sometimes ruffled the feathers
of Los Angeles Zoo officials, whom she criticized
from her position on the L.A. Zoo directors advisory
committee.
"Her heart's in the right place, but she
doesn't really know the animals' biology," Manuel
Mollinedo, who was zoo director from 1995 to
2002, said last year. "She tends to look
at animals more from an emotional perspective."
She had come a long way from Oklahoma City,
where she was born Gretchen Patricia Wienecke
on Feb. 16, 1932. A dancer, she made her professional
debut in St. Louis in 1950 in a ballet ensemble.
When she landed a spot in the chorus of "Where's
Charley?" in 1951, she met Ray Bolger, the
Scarecrow in "The Wizard of Oz," who
encouraged her to change her last name to Wyler.
She performed in eight Broadway productions,
including "Sly Fox" with George C.
Scott.
She moved to Los Angeles along with a traveling
production of that show in 1979 and never left,
adding TV, stage and minor film roles to her
increasingly busy animal activism.
One of Wyler's last crusades was on behalf of
Ruby, the L.A. Zoo's female African elephant.
Wyler was an outspoken critic of the zoo's decision
four years ago to move Ruby to Knoxville, Tenn.
She was one of the first voices in the city to
claim that Ruby's move was inhumane because female
elephants are social creatures in the wild and
the move would sever Ruby's longtime connection
with one of the zoo's other female elephants,
Gita.
Ruby was returned to the L.A. Zoo in 2004, and
Wyler took up lobbying the zoo to move her to
an elephant sanctuary.
Two weeks ago, nearly a year after Gita died,
the zoo moved Ruby to a sanctuary in San Andreas,
Calif. Wyler "lived to know that Ruby was
being moved to a sanctuary," said Sue Blackmore
of the Humane Society's Hollywood office.
Wyler, who was divorced with no children, is
survived by a sister, Peggy Hanson of Pacific
Palisades, and a brother, Lou Wienecke of Granbary,
Texas. Services are pending.
claire.noland@latimes.com |