Remembering Tony Morrison

Obituary


Originally published in The Peruvian Times

Tony Morrison, the naturalist, filmmaker and writer whose enthusiasm and talents over half a century were focused on Peru, the Andes and the Amazon, has died at his home in Woodbridge, Suffolk after a short illness. He was 83.

Tony, one of the pioneers with David Attenborough of the BBC’s world-leading wildlife film tradition, was lucky to get to 2020 and he always blessed his good fortune during an enormously productive career and a happy home life with his wife Marion, whom he met on the shores of Lake Titicaca in 1963.

Marion was, and indeed still very much is, a Welsh girl, social investigator and writer. Much of Tony’s film and writing trips to the Andes and the jungle were made together. At an early stage, in the early 1960s, they became friends of C N (Griff) Griffis, editor and publisher of the Andean Air Mail & Peruvian Times. Dozens of the Morrisons’ travels and stories on the coast, the highlands and jungle appeared first in the PT. In those days the Peruvian Times was famous for publishing every week first-hand accounts of travels in the often remote and little-travelled corners of the Andes and the Western Amazon.

I met Tony and Marion in Lima at that time and we have been firm friends since, as also with Ellie Griffis, publisher and today editor of the Peruvian Times.

Looking back just a few years ago on what turned out to be the last of a lifetime of visits to Cusco and Urubamba, which he knew from the days half a century earlier before tourists, Tony reflected that he and a few others of his generation were the last to travel through the Amazon and the Andes “when the going was still good.”

“When we started, they didn’t even give us plastic bags to keep our film or our matches dry. It was canoes, the back of a lorry, a clapped out World War II plane if you were lucky. The jungle really was awful, difficult, dangerous even. Keeping your notes and food from the ants and your precious film out of the river was a bugger.

“Thank goodness we don’t have to do it again but I’m glad we did when you still could. Today it’s just hotels, box lunches, airports.”

In 1970 Tony was lucky to survive a car smash in which two others died. A hundred yards behind his car was a US Bolivia-based surgeon. He, together with Bolivian colleagues, saved Tony despite multiple injuries.

Tony took his degree at Bristol University in Zoology, followed by a 13-month-long Trans-Continental Expedition around-the-world with five other Bristol students. The expedition included two- to three-month-long projects in rural villages in India and Bolivia.

This was followed by a stint in the Middle East working as a cameraman for Tom Stobart, who filmed the successful 1953 ascent of Everest, and Ralph Izzard, ace reporter of the Daily Mail. Another member of the team was Joe Brown, the UK’s leading rock climber, there to scale the walls of Petra, Jordan’s leading ancient ruin, and get into one of the caverns above the main portals. Probably the first human to do so in 2000 years. Joe loudly announced that ‘there was bugger all up there’ adding a bit of untraditional, for the BBC, spice to the film.

Tony’s other adventures included a dinghy trip down the River Jordan, a close run-in with swirling dervishes in Baluchistan, discovering what was left of Lawrence’s Hejaz railway, and the purchase of a fox. This was the famous fox given to Kim Philby, a friend of Ralph Izzard’s, who was reportedly very upset when he found it dead in the street, below the balcony of his Beirut apartment shortly before he defected to Russia —a similar ending to that of many Philby connections.

In 1963 Tony formed Nonesuch Expeditions with Mark Howell, with a contract to make films in South America for David Attenborough’s BBC Adventure series. These were some of the first films to show people and places on the Andean side of the continent and included a first account of the Nazca lines with Dr Maria Reiche, the German mathematician trying to resolve the mystery. An attempt to raft through the fierce Pongo de Mainique, downstream of Machu Picchu, almost cost the lives of Mark, and Johannes Von Trapp as well as Tony himself.

Marion Morrison

It was during this year that Tony met Marion, an unexpected bonus as it were, working as a graduate volunteer among the Aymara on the shores of Lake Titicaca. Together in the mid-60s, they returned to South America filming for BBC World About Us and Anglia TV’s Survival series. They drove the length of the Andes many times in their Land Rover and ventured into the Amazon to make the first film of the wildlife, rain and cloud forests of the newly designated Manu National Park.

Tony and Marion later made a best-selling film of the people and wildlife of the Falkland Islands, which led in turn to the filming for the BBC the extraordinary salvage and tow home of the SS Great Britain, which had foundered nearly a century earlier in the Falklands. The Great Britain was then restored in Bristol docks.

In those days, filming was a matter, with a 16mm Bolex, as like as not hand-held, clockwork-powered, using 200 or 400-foot reels of expensive black & white film. The heavy tripods of those days were part of the filmmaking baggage.

On a trip through the Vilcabamba jungles below Machu Picchu in 1964, Tony left his tripod a mile away from camp in this apparently deserted corner of the western Amazon. Next morning, he discovered a deep hole below the tripod. Some observant Machiguenga nativos had supposed the tripod part of the equipment was for locating buried treasure.

Tony, always watchful, spotted a thick layer of burnt earth which he later reported to his friend John Hemming, the Inca historian. Hemming saw this as proof this Vilcabamba site was certainly the real ancient capital of the Incas fleeing the Spanish after the arrival of the Pizarros, who had burned the Inca refuge. In this roundabout way, Tony proved conclusively that it was Vilcabamba, not Machu Picchu, which had been the last refuge of the Incas. The story appears towards the end of Hemming’s classic The Conquest of the Incas.

In 1971, Tony was on a Hovercraft expedition from Manaus in Brazil to Georgetown in Guyana for a BBC production. Later that year, working on another BBC production, came the car crash near La Paz. This did not deter Tony with Marion getting back into the field three years later, and film production, books and photography followed, always in South or Central America and Mexico. Subjects were diverse, including The Andes for Time-Life World’s Wild Places, still one of the best books on the Andes; a search for Vilcabamba, the real lost city of the Incas; two books on the Nazca Lines; award-winning Great Railway Journeys Peru with Miles Kington; a BBC film Lizzie, a rubber boom classic Victorian lady’s Amazon adventure; and a collaboration with the group Incantation, taking them to South America, for a Channel 4 production Music of the Andes. Together he and Marion created the South American Pictures archive, and their children Kimball and Rebecca often travelled with them.

Bolivia had a special place in Tony’s affections, not only because he and Marion met there. But also for the amazing care he received after the car crash. He liked to recall how he had been in La Paz, on his way through as it were, for half a dozen revolutions and coups. But he was most in his element exploring remote areas like the department of Lipez, with its deserted Spanish mining villages and the great Salar of Uyuni which he first crossed by jeep with much trepidation in the early 1960s. Or researching a rubber story in the Amazon region with its great rivers, or following the trail of herbal witchdoctors in the Andes. (After which he and Mark were made Honorary Kallawaya witchdoctors). And so it was that he and Marion took the family to Bolivia for their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary, and again to celebrate fifty years since their first visit with friends in La Paz whom they had known since that time.

Tony edited and published the diaries of Margaret Mee, botanical artist extraordinaire. For the final chapter of her book, he took Margaret and her friend Sally, Duchess of Westminster, both in their 80s, into a remote part of the Rio Negro, an Amazon tributary, on a successful search for the night cactus Selenicereus wittii, also known as the ‘Amazon Moonflower’.

A big regret was almost but not quite getting the Royal Opera to perform in the wonderful Teatro Amazonas in Manaus — an idea pursued with the BBC over many years. Tony, with Marion, travelled hundreds of miles by bus across Amazonia, to see the many changes since their first visits. At a talk in London in 2012, Tony described the impact of the Interoceanic Highway.

Tony was a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society for almost 60 years, one-time Chairman of the Anglo Peruvian Society in London, a Trustee of the Bolivian Wildlife Society and a Trustee of the Yavari, a project dedicated to restoring the oldest British-built steamship on Lake Titicaca. He was educated at Taunton School and Bristol University.

Tony was born in Gosport on 5th July 1936 and died on 8th May 2020 from a brain tumour.

Tony Morrison with author Nick Asheshov in Urubamba, Peru, 2013

Photos courtesy of Marion Morrison. See more Tony Morrison photos here.

First Published August 18, 2020 by Andean Air Mail & PERUVIAN TIMES. The author Nicholas Asheshov was Editor of the Peruvian Times during the 1970s and 1980s.

Tony Morrison – Early Films

• 1960/1961 Two short films of University of Bristol expedition for Television Wales and West, one in India, one in Bolivia

• 1962 – Five films in Jordan, Iran and Afghanistan for BBC Adventure (David Attenborough)

• 1963 – Seven films for Adventure, each 30 mins, b&w: Mystery on the Desert (Nasca); Descendants of the Incas; Children of the Lake; Treasures of Chuquisaca; A Forgotten Empire; Search for a Lost Language (Chipaya); After the Jesuits

• 1964 – Two films for Adventure, Quest for Gold; and Search for a Lost City (Vilcabamba); one for Anglia Survival (wildlife), A Drop in the Ocean – Peru, Niño, fishing, birds

*1966 Black Sea and Blue River, a BBC film following the journey of the first British yacht up the Danube after WWII

*1969 BBC’s World About Us: Enchanted Islands – the people and wildlife of the Falkland Islands

*1970 BBC’s Chronicle: The Great Iron Ship: the salvage of the SS Great Britain from the Falkland Islands

One comment on “Remembering Tony Morrison

  1. Penelope says:

    What a remarkable man.

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