The sad twilight of Koko the gorilla and her 'mother'
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Every year on July 4, Penny Patterson throws a birthday party near
her Woodside, Calif., home. There are the usual markings of such an
occasion — wrapped presents, a cake with candles, the singing of “Happy
Birthday To You.” Except here, the annual guest of honor is a nearly
300-pound Western lowland gorilla named Koko.
Patterson, 69, first met Koko at the San Francisco Zoo in 1971, when
she was a 24-year-old graduate student at Stanford University. The
following year she began teaching sign language to the baby gorilla as
part of her Ph.D. project, which made Koko famous around the world for
her ability to “talk.” But over the course of 45 years, what started as a
scientific experiment has evolved into an unconventional family
arrangement in which love and commitment mix with controversy and
regret.
Today, Patterson is still serving as the gorilla’s primary caregiver
and their remarkable bond is the subject of the one-hour documentary
“Koko: The Gorilla Who Talks,” premiering Aug. 3 at 8 p.m. on PBS.
“Right from the beginning Penny has given Koko birthday parties very
similar to the birthdays you would give a child, and I think that
reflects Koko and Penny’s relationship: that Koko is like a child to
Penny,” says Bridget Appleby, a producer at BBC’s Natural History Unit.
Appleby was part of a three-person crew that spent a month in
Woodside in June 2015 filming the gorilla and her adopted mother and
combing the 2,000 hours of archival footage collected over 44 years of
their sign-language experiment, known as Project Koko.
Ron Cohn, Koko & Penny Patterson inside Koko’s trailer.Photo: Courtesy of The Gorilla
For the first two years of the study, Patterson tutored the gorilla
at the San Francisco Zoo, then in 1974 she got permission to move Koko with her to Stanford.
When the zoo demanded the five-year-old primate back for breeding two
years later, Patterson, fearing Koko would be rejected by the other
gorillas after being reared by humans, raised $12,500 to officially
adopt her and agreed to find a male gorilla to mate with her.
Koko would go on to achieve global fame in the late 1970s and early
’80s, when National Geographic put her on its cover twice, including an
image of her mourning the death of her pet kitten, which made headlines
worldwide. She spawned the children’s book “Koko’s Kitten” and her own
branded line of toys, and over the years she’s met celebrities such as
William Shatner, Sting and Leonardo DiCaprio. She can even select her
own films to watch. (“I understand her favorite movie is ‘Tea With
Mussolini,’ ” Appleby says, referring to the 1999 drama starring Cher
and Judi Dench as women who raise a young boy in 1930s fascist Italy.)
But not everyone was so impressed with the human-like Koko. As the
documentary explains, after Patterson published her dissertation in
1979, behavioral scientists expressed skepticism of her language claims
(Koko is now said to understand 2,000 words of spoken English and knows
1,000 signs). The most vocal critic was Herb Terrace, founder of the
chimpanzee language experiment Project Nim, who published his doubts —
claiming Koko was just mimicking her handler — in a 1982 paper in the
New York Academy of Sciences titled “Why Koko Can’t Talk.”
Such naysayers made it harder for ape language studies to get
funding, forcing researchers to abandon their animal subjects or be
shunned by the scientific community, as the documentary notes. Patterson
fell into the latter group, and decamped Stanford for Woodside in 1979,
where Koko has lived in a wooded sanctuary located a 20-minute drive
from her home ever since.
Nearly 40 years later, Patterson’s life still exclusively revolves
around gorillas. As Appleby observed, her day starts around 11 a.m. and
she spends the late morning and early afternoon doing managerial work
for The Gorilla Foundation, the organization that supports Koko — taking
phone calls, doing interviews and making staff schedules. Penny passes Koko a kitten, and Koko signs “good” inside her trailer
Five days a week around 3 p.m., Patterson drives to the 7-acre
sanctuary where Koko and a male gorilla named Ndume live. A team of
eight caregivers are available to sit with Koko whenever she’s awake, as
well as Ron Cohn, Patterson’s 73-year-old Stanford classmate who has
filmed the signing project from the beginning and who has a house on the
compound.
There, Patterson does signing and other enrichment activities with
the gorillas, feeds and sees them to sleep. She often stays at the
on-site research facility until 1 or 2 a.m. preparing their food for the
next day — a diet that includes raw vegetables, soups, smoothies,
juices and sometimes even human food such as pizza.
“I didn’t see Penny with very much ‘me’ time,” Appleby says. “It felt
like her entire conscious, living, waking time was all focused around
Koko, which you seldom see apart from a parent-child relationship.”
Patterson had the maternal instinct from a young age. She grew up in
Illinois and Minnesota the second eldest of seven siblings, whom she
helped raise after her mother died of cancer when she was a teen. But
her absolute devotion to Koko has affected her relationship with her
family as an adult.
One brother, Chris, lived in the Bay Area for years, so he was
familiar with his sister’s unusual living situation; her other five
siblings are less involved and have accepted her absence at family
functions.
Patterson never married and while she once considered having
children, as she says in the documentary, “I don’t think I was made for
it. I think I was made for what I’m doing.”
As Appleby puts it, “From what we’ve seen, Koko is the love of her
life — although obviously Ron has been a huge fixture in her life and a
big mainstay in terms of partnering. The way they talk about it is Ron’s
Koko’s father, Penny’s Koko’s mother; they [are] a cross-species
family.” Penny Patterson signing to Koko in her trailer.
But a baby gorilla has remained elusive. The first male companion,
Michael, joined Koko in 1976, but she treated him like a brother (he
died in 2000), and mating attempts with Ndume, who joined the group in
1991, have also been unsuccessful.
While Patterson expresses a feeling of privilege for her unique
relationship with Koko, the topic of not being able to see her
“daughter” become a mother is an emotional one, and she tears up when
speaking about it in the documentary. Gorillas can live to their early
50s in captivity, and though Koko is technically still of reproductive
age, time is running out.
“If [Penny] did the experiment again today … her effort to integrate
Koko with other gorillas would have been [greater],” director Jonathan
Taylor says. “She certainly regrets Koko not having a family and not
being able to provide that for her.” Koko takes a picture of herself in a mirror.
Today, the scientific community seems to agree Koko exhibits special skills — a 2015 study in the journal Animal Cognition
found evidence of Koko performing learned human behavior not inherent
to gorillas, such as coughing and mimicking phone conversations — but
most remain skeptical of Patterson’s language claims, especially since
she does not make her data available to outside researchers.
And yet criticism hasn’t slowed Patterson’s efforts as she nears 70
years old. While she is past normal retirement age, relaxation is not a
part of her life, according to the filmmakers. She doesn’t go on
vacation, her weekends are not spent socializing with friends.
“A big effect on her life is as long as Koko’s alive it will be
absolutely devoted to looking after her,” Appleby says. “It’s not like
having a child who leaves home at the age of 18. Koko won’t ever leave
home. There is no end to that.
Koko holds a flower to Penny’s nose.
“It’s made her very single-minded.”
Koko turned 45 in July, and with both human and primate approaching
their twilight years, the topic of what should happen in the case of
death is a sensitive one for Patterson. While there are staff members
who could physically look after Koko, as they did when Patterson was in
the hospital for three weeks with a broken hip, the pair’s bond is
irreplaceable — an effect the grad student likely never considered when
first admiring that baby gorilla in the zoo decades ago.
“Penny began this when she was in her 20s. I don’t think she ever
thought it would turn into this,” Taylor says. “You weren’t planning a
40-year experiment, you were planning a four-year experiment and then
like a lot of things in life, it takes on a momentum of its own.”
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