Times Colonist

Jaws boat replica back, to support sharks

- PATRICK WHITTLE

The Orca is headed back to the waters of New England, but this time, its mission isn’t to hunt sharks. It’s to help save them.

A group of ocean advocates and movie buffs is turning an old lobster fishing vessel into a replica of the Orca, the boat captained by the grizzled shark hunter Quint in Jaws. The work is taking place on Martha’s Vineyard, where Steven Spielberg shot the blockbuste­r movie in the 1970s.

The occasion doesn’t call for a bigger boat so much as one with a different purpose, said Vineyard native David Bigelow, who acquired the craft and is heading up the project. When finished, he said, Orca III will be used as an educationa­l tool to help the public understand sharks and as a research vessel for scientists.

The project is dear to the heart of Bigelow, who appeared as an extra in Jaws. His drama teacher, Lee Fierro, who died in April, also played the mother of a shark attack victim in the film. Reports of shark sightings on some New England beaches in recent years moved Bigelow to take on the project.

“The need to educate people about the new ecosystem we’re living in, because of climate change and the seal population, is probably our only defence,” Bigelow said, citing two possible drivers of increased shark sightings. “We have basically taken on this role where the boat is going to be used for education.”

Bigelow said that he believes the retrofitti­ng work can be completed by this fall and that the boat can start helping people study sharks by next spring.

The boat will be called Orca III because there were actually two vessels in Jaws — Orca and Orca II. Orca is seen in much of the film, and Orca II was a prop vessel.

Others working on the mission to bring back the Orca have a connection to Jaws, too. Joe Alves, production designer on the movie, is on board, as is Chris Crawford, who retrofitte­d a boat called Warlock into the original Orca in 1974.

The conservati­on group Beneath The Waves has signed on to use the new Orca on expedition­s.

The group’s board of directors includes Wendy Benchley, widow of Peter Benchley, who wrote the 1974 novel on which the movie is based.

“The return of the Orca is a celebratio­n for the fans of Jaws, as well as an exciting new resource in the pursuit of a greater understand­ing about our oceans and the life teeming in it,” she said.

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