Jim Fowler, Emmy-winning host of ‘Wild Kingdom,’ dies at 89

SHARE Jim Fowler, Emmy-winning host of ‘Wild Kingdom,’ dies at 89
ap19130718428338_e1557521927597.jpg

In this July 27, 1998, file photo, television personality Jim Fowler ducks to avoid being battered by a peregrine falcon on a tether at the National Bison Range near Missoula, Mont. | Michael Gallacher/The Missoulian via AP

NORWALK, Conn. — Jim Fowler, a naturalist who rose to fame on the long-running television program “Wild Kingdom” and who famously bantered with Johnny Carson on “The Tonight Show,” has died. He was 89.

Fowler died peacefully Wednesday at his home in Norwalk, surrounded by family, said Jennifer Whitney, a spokeswoman for Mutual of Omaha, which sponsored the show.

“Jim was one in a million, and with his passing we’ve lost a true wildlife icon,” she said in an email. “His memory will remain through the work he did on Mutual of Omaha’s Wild Kingdom, as well as through the many parks, wildlife centers and nature preserves to which he lent his expertise. But perhaps his most important legacy will be the role he played in inspiring the next generation of naturalists and wildlife experts.”

“Wild Kingdom” debuted in 1963. Fowler began as an assistant and later became a co-host with Marlin Perkins before taking over as host.

Fowler had his arm swallowed by an anaconda and was charged by a gorilla and other creatures.

Jim Fowler, host of the original “Mutual of Omaha’s Wild Kingdom,” talks to children at Chicago’s LaRabida Children’s Hospital, East 65th Street at Lake Michigan, in 2002. | John H White/Chicago Sun-Times, File

Jim Fowler, host of the original “Mutual of Omaha’s Wild Kingdom,” talks to children at Chicago’s LaRabida Children’s Hospital, East 65th Street at Lake Michigan, in 2002. | John H White/Chicago Sun-Times, File

He was an athlete in college and turned down offers from the Philadelphia Phillies and New York Yankees to pursue his career in wildlife, according to a biography on the “Wild Kingdom” website.

He had a special interest in training eagles and became an internationally recognized authority on predatory birds.

He also made appearances with exotic animals on talk shows, including “The Tonight Show,” were his educational talks often also served as a foil for the humor of Johnny Carson.

He shook his head when asked by The Associated Press in 1993 about his reputation for wrangling some of the world’s most fearsome beasts while Perkins watched and narrated. Perkins died in 1986 at age 81.

“Johnny Carson started that and I can’t seem to shake the image,’ Fowler said. “It isn’t true, you know. Marlin was right there with me on almost all of the stuff.”

He met Perkins on the “Today” show in 1961 and became his sidekick when the fledgling “Designs for Survival” aired a few months later.

Fowler also was there as host when the last episode of the original “Wild Kingdom” — “Tigers of Ranthambhorn” — was filmed in 1991. The show was revived on “Animal Planet” in 2002.

Fowler’s survivors include his wife, the wildlife artist Betsey Fowler; two children; and two grandchildren.

The Latest
Bevy of low averages glares brightly in first weeks of season.
Too often, Natalie Moore writes, we think segregation is self-selection. It’s not. Instead, it’s the end result of a host of 20th century laws, policies, ideas and practices that deliberately shaped our region, a new WTTW documentary makes clear.
The four-time Olympic gold medalist revealed what was going through her mind in the 2020 Summer Olympics on an episode of the “Call Her Daddy” podcast posted on Wednesday.
We want to hear from diverse voices across the city.
The WLS National Barn Dance, which predated the Opry by two years, was first broadcast 100 years ago Friday, on April 19, 1924.