logo
#

Latest news with #vanLawick

Jane Goodall, 91, reveals secret wish about first marriage
Jane Goodall, 91, reveals secret wish about first marriage

Yahoo

time21-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Jane Goodall, 91, reveals secret wish about first marriage

Jane Goodall has opened up about her first marriage and how she wishes it could have played out. The 91-year-old primatologist was a guest Wednesday on Alex Cooper's Call Her Daddy podcast, where the two spoke about relationships and how Goodall was able to handle both her job and a love life. She met her first husband, the late National Geographic photographer Hugo van Lawick, when his magazine sent him to take photos of Goodall while she was studying chimpanzees in Africa. 'They wanted to make a film and they wanted good photographs, so they sent Hugo van Lawick, and I really didn't want him to come,' she told Cooper. 'I hadn't met him because I just wanted to be there with the chimps, you know. I didn't want anybody, and I was afraid they'd be scared of him and, you know, all my hard work would be undone.' Goodall quickly learned about van Lawick's love of animals and appreciated the work he was doing to 'share the knowledge that chimpanzees really are like us.' They were soon married for ten years from 1964 to 1974 and welcomed one child together, Hugo Eric Louis. In terms of the couple breaking up, Goodall said their relationship 'ended gradually.' She explained that National Geographic stopped paying van Lawick to come to Gombe in Tanzania, where she was studying chimpanzees. 'He had to go on with his career and he got some money to do films on the Serengeti, and I couldn't leave Gombe,' she said. 'I had to stay … I couldn't leave Gombe, and so it slowly drifted apart. And it was sad.' Despite the relationship not panning out, the primatologist reflected on the decision, saying it was 'the right thing.' But, she added: 'You know, I definitely wish we could have carried on with that marriage because it was a good one.' One year after her divorce from van Lawick, Goodall married Tanzanian parks director Derek Bryceson, who left her widowed in 1980. She has previously talked about her relationships with the two men, revealing in an interview with People back in 2020 why she decided not to get married a third time after Bryceson's death. 'Well, I didn't want to,' she told the publication at the time. 'I didn't meet the right person, I suppose, or potentially the right person.' 'I had lots of men friends, many,' Goodall added. 'I had lots of women friends, too. My life was complete. I didn't need a husband.' In light of how both of her marriages ended, she told the publication that they still had a profound impact on her life. 'If I hadn't married him, there wouldn't be a Gombe today,' she said about Bryceson, noting he helped her establish the Gombe Stream National Park. 'If Hugo hadn't come along, the chimp story [probably] would have ended,' Goodall added. She also noted: ' Unfortunately, they were both extremely jealous. Both of them. Even jealous of women friends. They were really jealous and possessive ... How I could do it twice? I don't know.'

Jane Goodall, 91, Reveals Why Her First Marriage Ended After 10 Years: ‘It Slowly Drifted Apart'
Jane Goodall, 91, Reveals Why Her First Marriage Ended After 10 Years: ‘It Slowly Drifted Apart'

Yahoo

time21-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Jane Goodall, 91, Reveals Why Her First Marriage Ended After 10 Years: ‘It Slowly Drifted Apart'

Jane Goodall is opening up about her previous marriage to late National Geographic photographer Hugo van Lawick. During an appearance on Alex Cooper's podcast Call Her Daddy, the 91-year-old primatologist said she first met van Lawick while studying chimpanzees. Goodall, the world's top expert on wild chimpanzees, said National Geographic sent out van Lawick after learning she 'was finding out exciting things about the chimps' during her research in Africa. 'They wanted to make a film and they wanted good photographs, so they sent Hugo van Lawick and I really didn't want him to come,' she explained. 'I hadn't met him because I just wanted to be there with the chimps, you know. I didn't want anybody and I was afraid they'd be scared of him and, you know, all my hard work would be undone.' Soon, Goodall learned that van Lawick 'loved animals' and 'always wanted to be out there with them.' So, he used photography as a 'route' to explore his passion, she said. 'We got on fine,' Goodall explained, adding that 'it was thanks to his photos and film that everything I was saying about the chimps was corroborated.' 'And so he really, really helped to share the knowledge that chimpanzees really are like us,' she continued. 'They really do have gestures and postures the same as ours that mean the same thing.' Goodall and van Lawick, who died in June 2002, were married for a decade from 1964 to 1974. The couple had one child, son Hugo Eric Louis, 58. As Cooper noted, Goodall previously said she and van Lawick began drifting apart as their careers moved in different directions. Goodall said her relationship with van Lawick 'ended gradually,' especially after National Geographic stopped paying him to come to Gombe in Tanzania, where she was studying the chimps. 'He had to go on with his career and he got some money to do films on the Serengeti, and I couldn't leave Gombe," Goodall recalled. 'I had to stay… I couldn't leave Gombe, and so it slowly drifted apart. And it was sad.' Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Ultimately, Goodall felt she and van Lawick 'did the right thing' by ending their relationship, adding that they 'kind of had to do it.' 'I definitely wish we could have carried on with that marriage because it was a good one,' she noted. Read the original article on People

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store