Satchel Paige and Bill Veeck: Legends Meet at Spring Training, 1952

Spring training is a beloved ritual for baseball fans, heralding both the end of winter and the start of a new season. LIFE magazine loved to cover spring training. On this site you will find stories on the year the Dodgers held spring training in Havana and also on the legendary Dodgertown spring training complex in Vero Beach, Florida.

In 1952 LIFE turned its focus to the training camp of the St. Louis Browns. The main angle of LIFE’s story was about new owner Bill Veeck hiring the great Rogers Hornsby as his new manager to shake up a team that had finished last and was full of disgruntled players. The great promise of that spring renewal would prove false—Veeck fired Hornsby in June, much to the delight of the players who hated the hard ways of the seven-time batting champ.

But while Hornsby was the primary focus, photographer Edward Clark also captured some pictures of the other certified baseball legend in Browns camp that year, Satchel Paige. The greatest pitcher in the history of the Negro Leagues, Paige was well past his prime when baseball finally integrated in 1947. In LIFE’s 1952 story he was only mentioned in a photo caption: “Oldest pitcher in the majors, Satchel Paige, probably over 50, is still effective for two or three innings. He is also the clubhouse comedian.”

Paige and Veeck were both singular characters. Veeck was a rare and imaginative impresario who once livened up the long summer of a losing team by signing midget Eddie Gaedel as a publicity stunt. Paige memorably bestowed on baseball his six rules for keeping young.

There is no record of what Paige and Veeck were talking about when Clark photographed them in the clubhouse of the Browns’ spring training facility in Burbank, California. But merely seeing them together is a reminder of a plan Veeck once had for bringing Negro League stars into major league baseball years before Jackie Robinson broke the sport’s color barrier.

In his autobiography Veeck wrote that in 1943 he had an agreement to buy the Philadelphia Phillies, with the intention of stocking the roster with the greatest stars of the Negro Leagues, which would surely have included Paige. Veeck wrote that the sale was quashed when his designs were learned. Baseball historians have since disputed the notion that the plan was as far along as Veeck claimed, and whether anyone actually quashed anything. But there is no doubt that Veeck was on the progressive side of history when it came to integration—soon after the Dodgers brought Jackie Robinson to the majors, Veeck signed Larry Doby, the majors’ second Black player, to the team he owned then, then Cleveland Indians. And in 1978, when Veeck owned the Chicago White Sox, he made Doby baseball’s second Black manager.

It’s nice to imagine that, during the slower-paced days of spring training, Veeck might have wanted to speculate with Paige about what an all-Black Phillies team might have accomplished in 1943. It’s also nice to imagine that Paige might have responded to Veeck with the most famous of his six rules for staying young: “Don’t look back. Something might be gaining on you.”

Bill Veeck (left) and Satchel Paige (center) in the clubhouse at spring training for the St. Louis Browns, 1952.

Ed Clark/LIfe Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Bill Veeck (left) and Satchel Paige (center) in the clubhouse at spring training for the St. Louis Browns, 1952.

Baseball St. Louis Browns

Bill Veeck (left) and Satchel Paige (center) in the clubhouse at spring training for the St. Louis Browns in Burbank, California, 1952.

Ed Clark/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Bill Veeck (left) and Satchel Paige (center) in the clubhouse at spring training for the St. Louis Browns in Burbank, California, 1952.

Ed Clark/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Satchel Paige pitched at spring training for the St. Louis Browns in Burbank, California, 1952.

Ed Clark/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

New St. Louis Browns manager Rogers Hornsby signaled for a baserunner to stop during a spring training game, 1952.

Ed Clark/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

New St. Louis Browns manager Rogers Hornsby (left) spoke with team owner Bill Veeck during spring training, 1952.

Ed Clark/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Manager Rogers Hornsby instructed his players at spring training for the St. Louis Browns in 1952; he would be fired three months into his first season with the team.

Ed Clark/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Browns owner Bill Veeck (center), at spring training in Burbank, Calif., read a column picking the Browns to finish in first place in American League, 1952.

Ed Clark/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

St. Louis Browns manager Rogers Hornsby (right) drew a line in the dirt to cautiion Clint Courtney against crowding during spring training in Burbank, California, 1952.

Ed Clark/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Satchel Paige pitched at spring training for the St. Louis Browns in Burbank, California, 1952.

Ed Clark/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Michael Rougier and the Beauty of An Oklahoma Square Dance

A 1949 article in LIFE magazine titled “LIFE goes to a square dance” gloried in the appeal of the popular country pastime. It talked about the exuberance of the evening and the poetry to be found in the calls of the dance leaders, with lines such as, “Form a right eight hands across, turn right back and don’t get lost.”

That last call was for a maneuver called the eight-handed star, one of many that experienced dancers knew well. “There are innumerable variations on a single pattern based on a square of four men and four women,” LIFE wrote. (While the dance variations may have seemed innumerable, this website puts the total at 68).

In any case, it’s a bunch, and the spectacle of it all was enough to inspire LIFE photographer MIchael Rougier to take to the rafters at a square dance in Oklahoma City to capture the pattens from an aerial view. From that angle, the movements of the square dance are revealed to be a human kaleidoscope that is constantly shifting.

Rougier also took plenty of pictures from ground level, with a focus on the fabulous fashions of the female dancers, whose twirling skirts created their own visual display. Square dance clothing is indeed a world unto itself.

However brilliant it all looked through Rougier’s camera, the dances seems to have been a great night of family-friendly fun. “On the night of the big dance at Oklahoma City, the concessionaires sold tons of ice cream, gallons of soda pop, but only three bottles of beer,” LIFE’s story concluded.

It’s why square dancing carries on today, with this calendar forming a burgeoning database for people who still want to become a part of patterns like these.

John Steele Batson called a square dance in Oklahoma City, 1948.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

John Steele Batson called a square dance in Oklahoma City, 1948.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Square dancers in Oklahoma City, 1948.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Square dancers in Oklahoma City, 1948.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Square dancers in Oklahoma City, 1948.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Square dancers in Oklahoma City, 1948.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A child performed at a square dance in Oklahoma City, 1948.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Square dancers in Oklahoma City, 1948.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A square dance attendee in Oklahoma City, 1948.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A couple demonstrated the pigeon wing as they danced to “Cotton-eye Joe” in Oklahoma City, 1948.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The “eight hands across-form a star” formation at a square dance in Oklahoma City, 1948.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

An overhead view of “Ring up four in the middle of the floor” at an Oklahoma City square dance, 1948.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

An overhead view of “Circle eight and spread out wide, slide around the old cowhide” at an Oklahoma City square dance, 1948.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

An overhead view of “swing your partner like swinging in a gate,” at an Oklahoma City square dance, 1948.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

An overhead view of “balance four in line” at an Oklahoma City square dance, 1948.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Couples dancing to “Cotton-eye Joe” at an Oklahoma City square dance, 1948.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Overhead view of an Oklahoma City square dance, 1948.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Joseph Pilates: When the Fitness Guru Trained an Opera Legend

Roberta Peters was a massive opera star in her day—and her day lasted for decades. For 35 years, beginning in 1950, when she was famously called on to take the place of an ailing performer at age 20, she was one of the leading lights of the Metropolitan Opera in New York City.

The singer was a great believer in the idea that opera was for everyone (here is one of many clips of her performing on the Ed Sullivan show), and Peters was likely showing her dedication to popularizing the art form when, in 1951, she allowed LIFE magazine photographer Michael Rougier to chronicle her fitness routine. Peters’ instructor was a supporting character in that story, but today his name is known to fitness devotees around the world.

For her instructor was Joseph Pilates. The fitness regimen that now bears his name is taught at gyms and training studios around the country. The pilates workout didn’t really mushroom in popularity until the early 2000s, but it is now everywhere, and its adherents include celebrities such as Hailey Bieber, Kendall Jenner and Bella Hadid.

At the time of the LIFE story the training method of Joseph Pilates was not actually known as “pilates,” but rather the term he had come up with for it, “contrology.” PIlates first made his name working with ballet stars such as Martha Graham and George Balanchine, so he was well-known in the New York arts world by the time he connected with Peters.

The LIFE article, headlined Diva With Muscle, described Peters as a longtime fitness fanatic, saying that “ever since she began taking singing lessons as a little girl in the Bronx, she has been making regular visits to the gym to build up her torso and strengthen her diaphragm.” Peters was so fit that the LIFE story said Joseph Pilates was “fond of asking strangers to feel her stomach, which is now `like iron.'”

Her dedication to taking care of her body paid off. She performed in recitals well into her 70s, before dying at age 86 of Parkinson’s disease. Pilates, who was born in Germany in 1883, would have been in his late 60s at the time of the LIFE photo shoot. He died in 1967, from emphysema, at the age of 83.

Opera singer Roberta Peters balanced her fitness trainer, Joseph Pilates, on what LIFE in 1951 called “her operatic breadbasket.”

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Joseph Pilates training opera star Roberta Peters, 1951.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Opera singer Roberta Peters working with her trainer, Joseph Pilates, 1951.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Joseph Pilates training opera star Roberta Peters, 1951.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Joseph Pilates’ regimen for opera singer Roberta Peters included 20 squeezes with a springlike steel oval, 1951.

Michael Rougier/Life PIcture Collection/Shutterstock

Joseph Pilates training opera star Roberta Peters, 1951.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Joseph Pilates training opera star Roberta Peters, 1951.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Joseph Pilates training opera star Roberta Peters, 1951.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Joseph Pilates training opera star Roberta Peters, 1951.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Joseph Pilates training opera star Roberta Peters, 1951.

Michael Rougier/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A Tribute to Couplehood

In America today nearly 40 percent of adults are living without a spouse or partner, a much higher rate than in the past. And while the general societal assumption has been that people are happier when they are paired off, recent research suggests the truth may be a little more complicated.

But with those meaningful caveats in mind, we offer up these photos of couples who seem be enjoying each other’s company, at least for the time being. The pictures range from those whose show an idyllic view of young romance, such as the one of a handsome couple on vacation at Lake George, to others of older couples that appear to demonstrate a well-earned comfort, such as the man and woman sitting on rocking chairs on their front porch, each caught up in their diversions while listening to a record player.

This photo set also includes some celebrity couples, for whom more of the romantic backstory is well-known. They range from the famously tempestuous pairing of Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton to the model of a long-lasting (77 years) public marriage, Jimmy and Rosalyn Carter.

The most forbidding couple in this photo set would be the Bergerons of the Quebec town of Saint-Fidele, who were photographed by John Phillips and featured in LIFE as part of a 1942 story on changes coming to French Canada. The story said that the Bergerons had “a true old-fashioned culture,” and described them as “thrifty but not stingy, carefree but conscientious” and, most importantly—and you can kind of tell this just by looking at them—”dead set against the manifestations of the 20th century.”

It’s possible the Bergerons gave Phillips a stern pose to let the readers of LIFE, know that they were not happy with the world. But they were united in their disdain, which can be one of the true joys of couplehood.

A young couple enjoyed a Lake George vacation in a Nina Leen photo entitled “Private Island,” 1941.

Nina Leen/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Janet Leigh with actor husband Tony Curtis, who is holding daughters Kelly Lee (left) and Jamie Lee on his lap as they sit on the floor at home.

Allan Grant/LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Miami Beach, Florida, 1940.

Alfred Eisenstaedt/The LIFE Picture Collection © Meredith Corporation

Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor on the set of Cleopatra.

Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor

Paul Schutzer / (c) The LIFE Picture Collection

A couple on vacation in Cape Cod, 1946

Cornell Capa/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Leonard Bernstein and his wife on the opening night of the New York Philharmonic, 1958.

Gordon Parks/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Bicycle riders in Mansfield, Ohio, 1942

John Phillips/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz

The RKO studio lot was where Lucille Ball met Desi Arnaz, when they co-starred in the 1940 musical Too Many Girls. Here, in a rare color photo from his 1958 spread on the launch of Desilu Studios, LIFE’s Leonard McCombe catches the couple as they ponder their risky new venture.

Leonard McCombe The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A couple listened to the gramophone, 1940.

Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Steve McQueen and his wife, Neile Adams, embrace in the kitchen of their Hollywood home, 1963.

John Dominis The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

French Canadian couple Mr. and Mme. Henri Bergeron, 1942.

John Phillips/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Josephine Baker receiving congratulatory kiss on the nose from her husband, orchestra leader Jo Bouillon, after her show at the Strand theater during her US tour. 1951.

Josephine Baker receiving a congratulatory kiss on the nose from her husband, orchestra leader Jo Bouillon, after Baker’s show at the Strand theater during her US tour, 1951.

Alfred Eisenstaedt The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Winter in Maine, 1942.

Bernard Hoffman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

BOGART/BACALL WEDDING

Lauren Bacall fed wedding cake to her groom, Humphrey Bogart, after their marriage ceremony in Ohio, 1945.

Ed Clark The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Couple kissing in front of the Delta Tau Delta mummy at the University of the South. Girls are told: "Kiss mummy or kiss me." 1940.

Couple kissing in front of the Delta Tau Delta mummy at the University of the South, 1940.

Alfred Eisenstaedt The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A floating party on the Apple River in Somerset, Wisconsin in 1941.

A floating party on the Apple River in Somerset, Wisconsin in 1941.

Alfred Eisenstaedt The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Senator John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline at their wedding reception, Newport, Rhode Island, 1953.

Lisa Larsen The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

American Soldiers in England 1944

American soldiers in England, 1944.

Ralph Morse The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Georgia Govenor Jimmy Carter kissing his wife Rosalynn, 1971.

Jimmy Carter kissed his wife Rosalynn, 1971.

Stan Wayman The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Drive-in movie, Chicago, September 1951.

Francis Miller/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

An elderly Polish couple walked hand in hand in the city of Poznan, 1963.

Paul Schutzer/Life Picture Collection/Shuttetstock

Actress Sophia Loren and husband, producer Carlo Ponti, after moving into their 50-room villa outside Rome, 1964.

Alfred Eisenstaedt/LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A couple danced at Rosie’s Cafe, 1937.

Carl Mydans/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Hippie couple Randy Brook and Laurie Thruelsen hitched a ride in the back of a truck, 1971.

Vernon Merritt III/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A couple walked through Luxembourg Gardens in Paris, 1963.

Alfred Eisenstaedt/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Bette Davis in front of a plane with her third husband, William Grant Sherry in California, 1947.

Bette Davis in front of a plane with her third husband, William Grant Sherry, who was studying to become a pilot under the G.I. Bill.

Loomis Dean The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Bride and groom kiss after underwater wedding.

Bob Smith and Mary Beth Sanger kiss after their underwater wedding in San Marcos, Texas, 1954.

John Dominis The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A street scene in Yugoslavia, 1948.

Walter Sanders/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Why “Voluptua” Was Too Hot For TV

Back in the 1950s, a woman wearing only a pajama top as she spoke seductively to her TV viewers was too much for people to handle.

In 1954 Gloria Pall, a former Las Vegas showgirl, originated a character called Voluptua. The so-called “Living Goddess of Love” hosted a late night show devoted to romance movies on KABC-TV in Los Angeles. The show was a counterpart to a similar late-night program built that station had built around horror movies and hosted by a character named Vampira.

LIFE’s story on Voluptua was headlined, “Love on a Late Night: Hostess Sheds Her Clothes to Hold Audience.” Here’s how the magazine described her act in its issue of Jan. 31, 1955:

Volupta starts by urging each man in her audience to get out of his shoes, loosen his tie and be her very good friend. Between segments of moist celluloid love Voluptua…does some disrobing of her own. By mid-program she is down to a negligee. Then after reading her sonnets and paying tribute to famed lovers, she slips into a nightgown, climbs into bed, throws a kiss at her men and calls it a night.

The images from LIFE staff photographer George Silk captured the come-hither quality of the program. including showing Voluptua changing her costume on camera, behind a screen. One photo shows the words on Voluptua’s teleprompter, seemingly from the beginning of the broadcast: “…dashed home because I knew you’d be here at nine-thirty. But now I feel all good and warm. You and I are together at last. And we will be always…”

This was racy stuff in a time when married couples on TV were shown as sleeping in separate beds. Certain outraged viewers called the character Corruptua and pushed for Voluptua to be banished from the airwaves. And they got their way. “Just seven weeks after it first aired, amid mounting pressure from religious and PTA groups and lackluster commercial sponsorship, the station abruptly canceled the show,” the Los Angeles Times recounted in an obituary of Pall after her death in 2013.

After Voluptua died, Pall carried on. The actress, born Gloria Pallatz, had grown up in Brooklyn and headed west after winning a Miss Flatbush contest. Her screen career consisted mostly of small, often uncredited roles in movies and television, though she did appear in nine episodes of the TV series Commando Cody: Sky Marshall of the Universe. Her brief and uncredited appearance as “Striptease Woman” in the movie Jailhouse Rock resulted in a memorable still in which her legs framed the face of the movie’s star, Elvis Presley.

In the early 1960s Pall moved on from acting and worked as a real estate agent. When she died she was remembered as a pioneer. “She was quite openly in touch with her sexuality, and that was an incredibly dangerous thing to do,” author R.H. Greene, who had recorded a radio piece on Pall, told the Los Angeles Times. “We don’t have too many stories for that time that illustrate that, and Gloria’s does.”

Gloria Pall, playing the character of Voluptua, welcomed viewers to her show, where she hosted romance movies on a Los Angeles TV station in 1955.

George Silk/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Gloria Pall, playing the character of Voluptua, hosted romance movies on a Los Angeles TV station in 1955.

George Silk/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Gloria Pall, playing the character of Voluptua, hosted romance movies on a Los Angeles TV station in 1955.

George Silk/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Gloria Pall, playing the character of Voluptua, hosted romance movies on a Los Angeles TV station in 1955.

George Silk/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Gloria Pall, playing the character of Voluptua, hosted romance movies on a Los Angeles TV station in 1955.

George Silk/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Gloria Pall, playing the character of Voluptua, hosted romance movies on a Los Angeles TV station in 1955.

George Silk/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Gloria Pall played Voluptua, a TV character who hosted late-night romance movies and would change costumes in mid-show, 1955.

George Silk/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Gloria Pall played Voluptua, a TV character who hosted late-night romance movies and would change costumes in mid-show, 1954.

George Silk/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Gloria Pall, playing the character of Voluptua, hosted romance movies on a Los Angeles TV station in 1955.

George Silk/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Gloria Pall, playing the character of Voluptua, hosted romance movies on a Los Angeles TV station in 1955.

George Silk/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Gloria Pall, playing the character of Voluptua, hosted romance movies on a Los Angeles TV station in 1955.

George Silk/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Gloria Pall, playing the character of Voluptua, hosted romance movies on a Los Angeles TV station in 1955.

George Silk/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Gloria Pall, playing the character of Voluptua, hosted romance movies on a Los Angeles TV station in 1955.

George Silk/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Gloria Pall, playing the character of Voluptua, hosted romance movies on a Los Angeles TV station in 1955.

George Silk/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Gloria Pall, playing the character of Voluptua, hosted romance movies on a Los Angeles TV station in 1955.

George Silk/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Gloria Pall, playing the character of Voluptua, hosted romance movies on a Los Angeles TV station in 1955.

George Silk/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Penguins: Their Extraordinary World

The following is from the introduction to LIFE’s new special issue Penguins: Their Extraordinary World, available at newsstands and online:

You never forget your first penguin. Mine stood atop a white slab of ice, the tuxedoed groom on a wedding cake, looking back at our passing ship slicing through the Drake Passage from Argentina to Antarctica. Thousands more awaited on that frozen continent, where gregarious birds gazed into the GoPros of tourists in rubber Zodiacs making landfall on the rocky shore of the Antarctic Peninsula. Solicitous in their feathered dinner jackets, the Adelie penguins were outgoing and unflappable, nature’s maitre d’s.

On another continent, in another year, I stood in Nelson Mandela’s former prison cell on Robben Island, off the windswept coast of Cape Town, in South Africa. The braying of African penguins had been a happy diversion to the political prisoners in their eight-by-seven concrete cells there. Ordered to gather seaweed along the island’s shoreline, Mandela was delighted by the penguins, who offered modest “pleasure and distraction” during his 18 years there. “We laughed at the colony of penguins, which resembled a brigade of clumsy, flat-footed soldiers,” he wrote. Like the Birdman of Alcatraz, dreaming of flying beyond the bars of his island prison, the men of Robben Island were given lift by the flightless penguin.

Long before I saw a penguin in its natural state, I had been delighted by penguins in unnatural states, encountering them from earliest childhood in superhero mythology. Burgess Meredith played the Penguin, Batman’s nemesis, on the kitsch TV series of the 1960s. Penguins were a staple of vintage TV cartoons of that era (Tennessee Tuxedo or Chilly Willy) and remain so in modern animated films (the Penguins of Madagascar and Happy Feet franchises). Penguins star in live-action films (Mr. Popper’s Penguins, based on a 1938 book of the same name) and movies that combine animation and live action (the cartoon penguin waiters in Mary Poppins charmed their costar Dick Van Dyke). Penguins front everything from prestige documentaries to Munsingwear golf shirts to the professional hockey team in Pittsburgh. Why?

“All the world loves a penguin,” noted English explorer Apsley Cherry-Garrard, who lived to tell the tale of Robert Falcon Scott’s deadly Antarctic expedition of 1910, in his classic account, The Worst Journey in the World. “I think it is because in many respects they are like ourselves, and in some respects what we should like to be.” Penguins are physically courageous, maternally inclined, intensely curious, and proud. “They are extraordinarily like children,” Cherry-Garrard wrote of Adelie penguins, “these little people of the Antarctic world, either like children or like old men, full of their own importance.” 

Perhaps that’s why children are so enthralled by penguins, their spiritual counterparts. The international pop stars Harry Styles and Ed Sheeran got complementary penguin tattoos after a night of drinking, both men honoring Pingu Penguin, the stop-motion, anthropomorphic emperor penguin of the children’s show Pingu, which first aired in Switzerland before emigrating to the larger world.

Musician John McVie found the penguins at the London Zoo so enchanting as a young man that his band, Fleetwood Mac, in 1973 named their eighth studio album Penguin and adopted the bird as their mascot. McVie—with his then wife and bandmate, Christine—donated a penguin to the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo before a concert in that city in 1977. “Ever since I’ve known him, John has enjoyed penguins,” Christine McVie, who passed away in 2022, said. “He was always taking pictures of them at the zoo.” Fans sent him stuffed penguins, penguins appeared on the band’s liner notes and album art. John McVie had a penguin tattooed to his right forearm. “It got a little out of hand,” Christine said, but Penguinmania tends to do that. 

“Penguins are habit forming,” wrote Roger Tory Peterson. The artist and author who produced the first field guide to birds, in 1935, and became the world’s most famous birdwatcher, nevertheless retained a special affinity for these birds that cannot fly. “I am an addict,” confessed Peterson.

And yet “flightless bird” is not quite the right epithet for penguins. “Penguins do fly, in a sense,” Peterson noted, “but in a medium heavier than air.” They are strong, beautiful swimmers, porpoising through frigid waters, shiny as seals, diving for fish and squid. Researchers at the University of California report that emperor penguins can stay underwater, breath held, for 27 minutes. Diving as deep as 1,600 feet, they slow their heart rates to 10 beats per minute. 

In his physical prime, Olympic champion Michael Phelps could swim as fast as six miles per hour. Gentoo penguins can swim 22 miles per hour. In short, penguins—often depicted as wobbly bowling pins—are extraordinary athletes. But they are so much more than that.

McVie, Sheeran, and Styles notwithstanding, one of the most famous depictions of penguins is inked on spines, not arms—specifically on the orange spines of paperbacks published by Penguin, purveyor of soft-cover classics, whose British founder, Allen Lane, wanted a mascot in 1935 for his new venture. 

Lane sent 21-year-old Edward Young to the London Zoo for inspiration, and the young designer returned with a sketch of a bird that fit the bill. A long, thin, pointed bill, as it turned out. For books that are upmarket but inexpensive, Lane wanted a mascot that was both “dignified and flippant.” The penguin is both of those.

Dignified? Many of the 18 species of penguin appear to wear tuxedoes. (The much-circulated notion that penguin in Mandarin Chinese translates as “business goose” is the kind of urban legend we wish were true but isn’t.) The penguin’s tuxedo—called countershading—serves as camouflage from predators. Viewed from above, a penguin’s black back blends in with the ocean water, while viewed from below, its white belly resembles the sunlit surface of the sea.

Flippant? A rockhopper penguin has what is often described as a punk-rock hairdo—a multicolored mohawk crest that would have looked at home at CBGBs circa 1977. Penguins are waddling contradictions—black-and-white punks in tuxedoes, flightless birds who soar in water. They contain multitudes. Penguins are at once noble (think of the emperor in winter, standing stoic while protecting the egg of his offspring) and adorable. 

They are wobbling purveyors of happiness. Robin Williams, who grew to love penguins while voicing the rockhopper penguin Lovelace in the animated film Happy Feet, was struck by their communal nature. “The sheer connection that they show for each other is very powerful,” he said. “And they look so cute—until you get them in person, and then if they overheat their eyes get red and they peck you. You have to keep them in a certain temperature zone. But I think people love the fact that they’re so true and loyal and playful.” 

In their family dynamics—stay-at-home fathers, working mothers, coparenting couples devoted to their children, same-sex couples—they are models of the modern family, and have been for centuries.

Picasso painted a penguin in two brush strokes in 1907 and Le Pingouin—like the penguin more broadly—still delights people. Is it any wonder why? The penguin is regal and comical, opera and slapstick, pathos and joy. The greatest film comedian of the silent era—and perhaps of any era—was accused of stealing his entire screen persona from this magnificent bird. Charlie Chaplin disavowed the connection, but in his walk, in his black-and-white plumage, in his continued dignity despite ridiculous circumstances, Chaplin was at the very least penguin-adjacent. And like the penguin, Chaplin made people happy.

When the English philosopher John Ruskin found himself in “states of disgust and fury” at the 19th-century world, he would “go to the British Museum and look at Penguins till I get cool,” as he wrote in a letter to Harvard professor Charles Eliot Norton on November 4, 1860. “I find at present penguins are the only comfort in life. One feels everything in the world so sympathetically ridiculous, one can’t be angry when one looks at a Penguin.”

And yet plenty of people have looked upon them with indifference, malevolence, or desperation. The earliest known recorded sighting of a penguin was likely by Alvaro Velho, sailing around the Cape of Good Hope with the Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama in 1497. In his account of that trip, Velho described a bird, flightless and apparently unfeathered, “as big as a duck” but braying like a jackass. As Velho casually noted: “We slaughtered as many as we could.”

Penguins have been imperiled almost ever since. For centuries, their blubber was used by whalers as fuel. In the 20th century, Peruvian penguin guano was a lucrative, nutrient-rich fertilizer, and the mining of fossilized penguin poop imperiled the colonies that lived atop several centuries of their forebears’ dung. 

In early expeditions to Antarctica—before the practice was made illegal—explorers fed penguins to their sled dogs, and in desperation to themselves. In the natural food chain, the leopard seal and killer whale prey on penguins in the water. On land, their eggs and chicks are vulnerable to skuas and giant petrels. But modern-day penguin populations are primarily imperiled by roundabout means of human predation: oil spills, marine pollution, commercial overfishing, and, above all else, the climate crisis. 

There is no reliable census of the number of penguins in the world—the figure is in the tens of millions—but almost all of them live in the Southern Hemisphere, perhaps 20 million breeding pairs in the Antarctic region alone. As many as half of all penguin species are endangered. 

March of the Penguins won the 2006 Oscar for Best Documentary Feature, enchanting a global audience with the extraordinary lives of emperor penguins trekking to their breeding grounds from the sea and back again, living a flipper-to-mouth existence on Antarctica, in the harshest conditions on earth.

“Despite their charm and worldwide popularity,” notes the aviation conservation charity BirdLife International, “they are marching toward extinction.” But that march is not inexorable, and humans can still prevent the slow fade to black-and-white of a flightless bird, found on and around four continents, in polar and equatorial climates, in 18 different species, each of which is special in its own way.

Here are a selection of images from LIFE’s new special issue Penguins: Their Extraordinary World:

Cover image by Tui De Roy/Minden Pictures

Adelie penguins leapt off a floating iceberg in Antarctica.

Patrick J. Endres/Corbis/Getty

A family of Emperor Penguins; the Emperors are the largest penguins on Earth.

Education Images/Universal Images Group/Getty

African Penguins are an endangered species, with a population below 50,000.

Juergen Christine Sohns/imageBROKER/Shutterstock

A scene from the 2006 film Happy Feet.

Warner Bros/Kobal/Shutterstock

Burgess Meredith played the villainous Penguin on the Batman television series, 1966.

Alamy Stock Photo

Mario Lemieux, star of the NHL’s Pittsburgh Penguins, posed at the Pittsburgh Zoo & Aquarium, 1984.

Lane Stewart/Sports Illustrated/Getty

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