Miami Herald (Sunday)

‘She’s finally swimming free’

- BY HOWARD COHEN hcohen@miamiheral­d.com

Lolita never starred in a network TV show like her Seaquarium neighbor Flipper the dolphin or Gentle Ben the Everglades bear.

But Lolita the killer whale had fans and advocates, millions of them, the world over. They delighted in her skills and they fought for her freedom.

She was also called Tokitae — Toki for short — the regal name given the orca by a group of indigenous people in Washington state that had advocated a return to her native waters. But she became best known as Lolita, the performing star at the Miami Seaquarium.

Lolita, who continued performing until she was retired in 2022 due to health issues, died Friday. She was about 57.

Plans had been in motion to move her out of her Miami theme park to perhaps reunite with her mother who had not seen her since her daughter was 4 and had grown to 7,000 pounds and 20 feet long. Since her capture in 1970, Lolita lived in a 20-foot-deep tank 3,354 miles away from her family, who may still be in the waters of Puget Sound in Washington state.

Friends of Lolita, a whale freedom advocacy group, believe Lolita’s mother, at 89, is still swimming with a wild pod in the Pacific Northwest. The Center for Whale Research says that an orca’s lifespan is similar to that of humans. And some, like their landlubber­s on legs, can live to over 100.

“Toki was an inspiratio­n to all who had the fortune to hear her story and especially to the Lummi Nation that considered her family,” officials at the Miami Seaquarium posted on Facebook. “Those of us who have had the honor and privilege to spend time with

Lolita, who performed at the Miami Seaquarium from the age of 4 until she was retired last year due to health issues, died Friday. She was about 57.

her will forever remember her beautiful spirit.”

Lolita’s trainers believe the cause of death was a renal condition —failing kidneys.

For two days Lolita had “serious signs of discomfort, which her full Miami Seaquarium and Friends of Toki medical team began treating immediatel­y and aggressive­ly,” the Seaquarium said. Lolita also battled pneumonia in 2022, according to PETA.

LOLITA’S EARLY DAYS

Lolita was born in Puget Sound sometime in 1966, near the middle of Flipper’s three-season run on television from the waters of the Miami Seaquarium. The various bottle-nosed dolphins that portrayed the “Flipper” title character have since died.

When Lolita arrived in Miami in 1970 after her capture, she began performing with the Seaquarium’s star attraction at the time, Hugo the killer whale, who had also been captured in the Pacific Northwest in 1968 at age 3. Hugo and Lolita performed together for 10 years. Hugo died at age 15 in March 1980 of a brain aneurysm. Lolita has been alone in her tank since — 43 years — visited by her trainers, vets and generation­s of visitors.

Lolita became more than a park’s moneymakin­g “star attraction,” though.

LOLITA AS A RITE OF PASSAGE

Unwittingl­y, the 4-yearold Lolita grew to become a rite of passage for countless people.

There were the summer campers and local elementary schoolchil­dren whisked to the Rickenback­er Causeway attraction on field trips to visit the mammal billed with the fearsome handle, “Lolita, the Killer Whale.”

The schoolkids left charmed —and maybe also a little wet from the orca’s jumps and splashdown­s. Lolita wasn’t so scary, after all.

There were the parents who dutifully bought souvenirs for their kids that boasted her image. Who, of a certain age, can forget the smell of the freshly poured plastic that melted and hardened into shape before eager eyes from machine-pressed molds — “Only 25 cents!” — that delivered lasting mantelpiec­e mementos of Lolita and her mate, Hugo, way back in the 1970s?

JoAnn Wonsik, who grew up in Miami and now lives in Cedar Key on the northwest coast of Florida, remembers going to the park in her youth with fellow Floridians.

“I’m so sorry to hear about Lolita. She surely was an icon, not only at the Seaquarium part of Miami [but for the] many tourists that have passed through Miami. It was a sure entertainm­ent for them to see Lolita at the Seaquarium,” Wonsik, 69,

 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? Trainer Marcia Henton feeds Lolita inside her stadium tank at the Miami Seaquarium on July 8.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com Trainer Marcia Henton feeds Lolita inside her stadium tank at the Miami Seaquarium on July 8.

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