![]() “I often think that’s one of the most magical times of my whole life.” “There were lions and rhinos and giraffes – I mean, everything was there,” she recalls with a flash of excitement. Within months, Leakey and his wife, Mary, set out on an expedition to Olduvai Gorge in what is now northern Tanzania, and Goodall went too. Within hours of meeting, she had so impressed him with her knowledge of natural history that he had offered her a job. Not long after arriving in Kenya, Goodall captured the attention of Louis Leakey, the eminent palaeoanthropologist and curator of the Coryndon Museum in Nairobi. When she describes her earliest experiences of Africa, however, they don’t sound all that different from the jungles of her dreams. In the quiet of the foyer, she composed herself and told her mother firmly: “That is not Tarzan.” When the curtains drew back to reveal Johnny Weissmuller in the starring role, however, the young Goodall burst into a fit of hysterical tears. As a special treat, her mother, Vanne, had taken her to the cinema to see her first Tarzan film. Goodall tells a story from her childhood that demonstrates how fixated she was by the Africa of her imagination. “I never wanted to be a scientist per se,” she says. ![]() Rather, she had a far less specific and more romantic dream inspired by fictional characters from the books she had read as a child, notably Dr Dolittle and Tarzan. When she first ventured to Africa in 1957, Goodall says, it had never occurred to her to work with chimpanzees. Having seen a photograph of that doting little girl clutching Jubilee, her somewhat scruffy birthday chimp, I love the idea that this fluffy character influenced what Goodall would go on to achieve. I don’t want to broach the subject so early in the interview I ask instead about her childhood, which I sense is of great importance to understanding Goodall. She has just been going through proofs of her updated book Seeds of Hope, the first edition of which was troubled by allegations of plagiarism. This is a brief pause in her whirlwind travel schedule of more than 300 days a year, but she displays few signs of weariness – worldly or otherwise. Goodall sits down neatly on the sofa with her back to the bright sun. I flip through its characterful portraits of the Gombe chimps, many of them – like David Greybeard – now household names. ![]() I pick up The Chimpanzees of Gombe: Patterns of Behavior, Goodall’s magnum opus published in 1986. There is a sofa beneath the bay window and next to it – as if only just put aside – a large book. I follow her into the front room and she politely offers me tea or coffee. Though I have only crossed London to meet her, I am struck by the sudden feeling that I have reached the end of some epic, Henry Stanley-like quest… “Dr Goodall?” As I reach out to shake a slender hand, the words “I presume” pop into my head. Along the way she has received nearly 50 honorary degrees, and became a UN Messenger of Peace in 2002 and Dame Jane in 2004. She then packed in her fieldwork to become an activist, campaigning tirelessly for a more enlightened attitude towards animals and the environment. ![]() In the intervening years, her research on a community of chimpanzees in Tanzania revolutionised our understanding of these primates, our closest living relatives, and challenged deepset ideas of what it means to be human. This was Jane Goodall’s first recorded encounter with a chimp. A couple of months later, a little blonde-haired girl was given a soft-toy replica of the zoo’s new arrival to mark her first birthday. In February 1935, the year of King George V’s Silver Jubilee, a chimpanzee at London Zoo called Boo-Boo gave birth to a baby daughter.
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