Alert
Close

Find out how much your Social Security or veterans' benefits will get cut if COLA formula is changed. Use our tool

AARP Membership: Just $16 a Year

Highlights

Close

AARP® Prescription Discounts Provided by Catamaran

Members can print a free Rx discount card

AARP Salutes Our Heroes

Thanks to the veterans who served our country

Savings Icon

Tanger Outlets

Access to a free coupon book

Technical Icon

Black Community

How to live your best life

Tell Us Your Story

Let us know how the new health care law helps you

Check your
Horoscope

spring 2013
national event

AARP presents Life@50+

Viva
LAS VEGAS!

May 30 -
June 1

Discover your Real Possibilities and join us to be part of the Life@50+ Community Day of Service.

Most Popular
Articles

Viewed

Recommended

Commented

The Author Speaks

Betty White: My Life at the Zoo

The TV star, animal lover and celebrated AARP member talks about her new photo book.

  • Text
  • Print
  • Comments
  • Recommend

As if Betty White isn't busy enough.

Yes, she juggles two television shows, heaps of guest-star appearances, and AARP celebrity spokesmanship. Yet America's ageless It Girl still finds time to get out to her favorite place: the zoo. And these aren't drive-bys. White has been intimately involved for half a century with the Los Angeles Zoo, where many of the animals run to greet her on sight.

See also: Betty White is AARP's newest celebrity member.

Betty White author of Betty and Friends - My Life at the Zoo kisses a giraffe

Betty White, life-long lover of animals. — Courtesy of Tad Motoyama/Los Angeles Zoo

In her new book, Betty and Friends: My Life at the Zoo, White takes us on an affectionate pictorial tour of her favorite moments, while describing the great asset modern zoos are to the world. The AARP Bulletin spoke with her about her long love affair with the animals who live in them.

Q. From the looks of this book, you get kissed a lot at the zoo.

A. Yes, I do, by some rather unusual creatures. And that's just the staff.

Q. Which animals are the best smoochers?

A. I have some very special friends. I love the elephants; there are a couple who I really am close to. Bruno the orangutan and I have a wonderful relationship. If I get there before the zoo opens, he'll come over to the fence and stick his big muzzle through the chain link so that I can pet it.

Q. Why is this book important to you?

A. This project has been on my mind for decades. I've worked with the Los Angeles Zoo for over 50 years. I've got a wonderful photographer, Tad Motoyama, who takes beautiful pictures. He's always given me a print of the pictures he's taken. So it dawned on me to put a book together to get out the message how much work zoos do, because many people don't realize that.

Q. Work such as?

A. Zoos don't only exhibit animals; they do a lot of wonderful conservation work. Many people say, "Oh, animals should only live in their natural habitat." Well we've done a pretty good job of destroying many animals' natural habitats, and they have really no place to go. Zoos go much farther than just exhibiting animals. They use their animal expertise and knowledge of the wild population, and have saved many species from extinction just by helping them to multiply.

Q. How have the exhibits changed since you started in the 1960s?

A. I got involved with the Los Angeles Zoo because I was kind of shocked that Los Angeles had such a poor zoo inside. I've never been one to stand outside and criticize. I'd rather get inside and see what's going on, see how I can help. In 1966, our present location opened. But now we have a state-of-the-art chimpanzee exhibit, a state-of-the-art orangutan exhibit, and we just opened our pachyderm exhibit. It went from one acre to four and a half over beautiful, wild rolling country. It's really lovely.

Next: Inspiring people to go to their local zoo. >>

Topic Alerts

You can get weekly email alerts on the topics below. Just click “Follow.”

Manage Alerts

Processing

Please wait...

progress bar, please wait

Tell Us WhatYou Think

Please leave your comment below.

You must be signed in to comment.

Sign In | Register

More comments »

Entertainment for
grownups

AARP Bookstore

Discounts & Benefits

From companies that meet the high standards of service and quality set by AARP.

Smart Food

Members can download a coupon offer to save $1.25 on one bag of Smartfood® Selects.

Tanger Outlets

Members receive a free Tanger Coupon Book including discounts from top brand names.

Cirque Du Soleil

Members save up to 20% on live Cirque du Soleil shows with an AARP membership card.

Member Benefits

Members receive exclusive member benefits & affect social change. Join Today

Being Social

Featured
Groups

Book Talk

Share with us what you are reading now and who are your favorite authors. Discuss.

Page Turners Book Club

Discuss mysteries, thrillers, and suspense books that keep you flipping the page. Discuss