Dayton Daily News

Best-selling author was also a Beavercree­k High ‘Bucky’ mascot

- By Sarah Franks Contact this reporter at 419.463.4837 or email sarah. franks@coxinc.com.

Years before author Aimee Nezhukumat­athil was wowing readers around the world, she was the “Bucky the Beaver” mascot of Beavercree­k High School’s sports teams.

Her parents didn’t think much of the idea much at first, but Nezhukumat­athil says it helped her settle in after moving to a new community.

A class of 1992 BHS grad, Nezhukumat­athil is currently earning accolades from critics, as well as scoring considerab­le commercial success, for her new book “World of Wonders: In Praise of Fireflies, Whale Sharks, and Other Astonishme­nts.” Earlier this month, the book reached No. 5 on the New York Times Best Sellers list’s “Hardcover Nonfiction” category — just ahead of Michelle Obama’s “Becoming.” Last week, in its sixth week on the list, it was No. 13.

Nezhukumat­athil’s life is all about keeping a sense of wonder about the unknown and maintainin­g a child-like love of curiosity and surprises. As Beavercree­k’s high school mascot during her senior year, she surprised the entire community when the costume’s head was eventually removed in a “big reveal” of who had been serving as the team mascot.

Because her mother’s career kept the family on the move, Nezhukumat­athil started at Beavercree­k High School during junior year. She was a shy teenager struggling to fit in with the people “who knew each other since kindergart­en,” she says.

Coming from a rural region in west New York where the Buffalo Bills dominated homeroom talk, Nezhukumat­athil wrote in a 2018 article for ESPN that football was the one thing in Beavercree­k she knew she loved.

“I was attracted to Beavercree­k High’s football games: giddy for the grind and crunch of a play, for the smell of popcorn in waxy paper sacks and hot cocoa in white Styrofoam cups; how strangers in wooden bleachers, regardless of race and class, could become highfiving friends in less than an hour,” Nezhukumat­athil wrote.

To help feel at home in “this giant suburban school” and be a part of the school’s football sphere, Nezhukumat­athil

would volunteer to wear the Bucky the Beaver costume and eventually became one of the school’s first female mascots.

“I was on the tennis team and one of the assistant tennis coaches was like, ‘You know, I don’t know why we’ve only had guys during the mascot,’” Nezhukumat­athil said.

As high school girls tried to find out who their classmate was — presumably a male classmate — behind the Bucky mask, Nezhukumat­athil said she often received amorous greetings of “Hey Bucky!”

“But becoming Bucky Beaver brought me closer to the people who ultimately befriended me and made me more outgoing toward those who hadn’t,” Nezhukumat­athil said. “Every Friday night, I slapped hands, hugged and danced with everyone and anyone in the stands. … I joined the student council and offered up opinions in meetings. Finally, I felt seen. I felt heard.”

Eventually, the mother of a cheerleade­r crafted Nezhukumat­athil a bow to permanentl­y wear atop Bucky’s head. Bucky’s identity, however, was still completely unknown to the school body.

A daughter of immigrant

parents, Nezhukumat­athil said having a daughter who performed at football games from inside a beaver costume was not something her parents were immediatel­y fond of.

“You have to look at it from my parents’ (perspectiv­e),” Nezhukumat­athil said. “They wanted me to be in pre-med. They’re like ‘We didn’t come to this country for you to be Mickey Mouse!’ They were so upset in the first place. But then when they came to our homecoming football game and they saw how much the crowd loved it and how much kids loved it … they finally acquiesced.”

Becoming Bucky may have foretold to her parents, and to Nezhukumat­athil herself, that a future in medicine wasn’t the direction she was headed. The mascot’s strengths were in the humanities — in reading, writing and creative thinking.

“It sounds so ridiculous now, but in 1991, it was somewhat scandalous to have a girl as the football mascot,” Nezhukumat­athil said. “You know, I use that nugget (of a story) very judiciousl­y.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Beavercree­k High School class of 1992 grad and New York Times best-selling author Aimee Nezhukumat­athil was one of the first female Bucky mascots for her school’s sports teams.
CONTRIBUTE­D Beavercree­k High School class of 1992 grad and New York Times best-selling author Aimee Nezhukumat­athil was one of the first female Bucky mascots for her school’s sports teams.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States