Atlantica - 01.06.2001, Qupperneq 40

Atlantica - 01.06.2001, Qupperneq 40
38 A T L A N T I C A Last year, Keiko made six ocean swims – day trips out to the fierce, wind- capped North Atlantic. Trained to follow a small, orange-coloured, rescue-type vessel, Keiko travelled sixty miles from his pen. Tracking was made possible by transmitters attached to his dorsal fin. “He made contact with two whale pods, but it didn’t take,” recalls Horton. “When we turned the boat around to return to Klettsvík, he was right behind us. We’re hoping this year it will work.” Keiko exited his pen on 23 May, and Horton is hoping for a happy Hollywood ending. He wants to see Keiko disappear in the company of an accepting whale pod, or even better, his original whale family, which was last sighted in the vicinity 15 years ago. Out in the wilds, Keiko could live to be sixty. MOVIE STAR Will Keiko ever be able to cut it in the wilds? Only Keiko knows the answer. His long, strange trip began in 1979 when he was a two-year-old calf captured off the coast of south Iceland. One year later, Keiko (which means ‘lucky one’ in Japanese) was sold to Marineland in Ontario, Canada, per- forming with six orcas. In 1985, Keiko, described as ‘timid’, was purchased by Reino Aventura, a Mexico City amuse- ment park. There, for more than ten years, Keiko starred in five daily shows, the gruelling schedule made worse by his life inside a small, overheated tank amongst sea lions and bottlenose dol- phins. As things happen, producer Richard Donner (Lethal Weapon) learned of Keiko and fashioned a tale about a boy and a whale, starring Keiko. The movie, Free Willy, was released in 1993. The story, a tear jerker about a 12-year-old troubled boy who sets a whale ‘free’ from an unscrupulous aquatic park, was a box office smash. In the final scene, an animated model of Keiko jumps over a breakwall to freedom in the open sea. At the end of the movie, a phone number in the United States was displayed for movie-goers who wanted to free Keiko. So began the adoration of Keiko, an animal who magically endeared himself as a favourite pet. An estimated 300,000 fans worldwide clamoured for Keiko’s freedom, fuelled by a LIFE magazine story decrying Keiko’s sorry state of liv- ing. He was pathetic: underweight, men- tally dull, suffering from respiratory problems and covered with ugly, warty- looking lesions. His muscles were atro- phied from his confinements, his dorsal fin had fallen and his teeth were worn down from chewing the sides of his con- crete pool. That’s when the Free Willy Keiko Foundation stepped in: vowing to reha- bilitate Keiko, rejuvenate his dulled instincts and set him free in the North Atlantic. The foundation raised USD 7,300,000 in donations from the public, the movie’s producer, Warner Brothers, and Seattle cellphone billionaire, Craig McCaw. THE WHALE WORKS OUT In 1996, the foundation, having taken charge of Keiko, leased a new facility at Oregon Coast Aquarium in Newport, KEIKO “Keiko captured the hearts and minds of millions of children around the world when they learned that Free Willy’s happy ending was fiction.“ 036-040 ATL 3/01KEIKO-rm 19.6.2001 17:18 Page 38
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Atlantica

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