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Cecilia Peck, daughter of actor Gregory Peck, is an Emmy-nominated director of documentaries including Escaping Twin Flames (currently on Netflix) and Seduced: Inside the NXIVM Cult. In this photo essay, Cecilia, 68, recounts her father’s love for and devotion to his dogs over the years. In the fall, she plans to release an e-book about the mystery surrounding her father’s dog Raj.
Gregory Peck, His Dog and a 45-Year Mystery
After a teenage driver found a gravely injured animal, Peck arrived to collect it. The driver waited decades to learn what happened.
People remember my father, Gregory Peck, as a movie star, the Academy Award-winning leading man of iconic films like To Kill a Mockingbird and Roman Holiday. But they may not know about his lifelong love of dogs. His dogs went to the studio with him, traveled on location, curled up under his desk at home, and accompanied him when he tended his gardens. As a boy, my dad suffered an early heartbreak when he lost the dog that had been his closest friend through a lonely childhood. After that, dogs were a constant presence in his life.
During a childhood marked by divorce and loneliness, my dad’s faithful companion was Bud, a black and brown former stray. In this photo, taken in his hometown of La Jolla, California, in 1925, my dad is nine years old. Bud walked his young master to school every morning and waited for him at the gate every afternoon until the bell rang.
After my dad was sent to military boarding school at 10, he found the adjustment from small-town life difficult. He could hardly wait for Christmas vacation and a reunion with Bud. But when he returned to La Jolla, Bud wasn’t there. His father told him Bud had died. My dad continued searching for Bud every time he returned to La Jolla — and in many ways for the rest of his life.
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