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Starr Saphir

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American birder from New York (1939–2013)

Muriel Saphir (1939–2013), known by her nicknameStarr Saphir, was an Americanbirder inNew York City who led bird walks inCentral Park several times a week for nearly 40 years.

Early life

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Starr Saphir was born Muriel Theodora Saphir on July 21, 1939. Though she was born onLong Island, she grew up inBrooklyn, and started birding inProspect Park, regularly traveling from herBay Ridge home. She cited ablack-and-white warbler as her "spark bird", or bird species which triggers a broader interest in birds or birding.[1] She saw it when she was six years old, on the side of the road when her father's car broke down on a trip to her grandparents' house, and recognized it from looking through her grandmother'sJohn James Audubon illustrations.[2] Other than birding, she was also a fan of theBrooklyn Dodgers before they moved toLos Angeles in 1958.[3]

She was atheater major atAmerican University and worked for a time as an actor inOff-Broadway and other productions.[1] She lived in California for a time, pursuing her acting career, and was active in the birding community there.[3]

Birding

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Saphir was an avid birder, and offered to lead a walk for the first time in 1975, when a plannedAudubon Society walk did not have a leader.[1] She discovered that she liked teaching and wound up leading them regularly, usually four times per week inCentral Park, for almost 40 years.[2] Walk participants paid a small fee, which started at $3 and eventually rose to $8.[3][2] Saphir called the park her "office", but was determined to keep costs low and barely made enough to eke by.[4][1] Her walks could attract more than 20 people, including repeat patrons, at least one of whom regularly attended for more than 20 years.[2][4] She would guide people, holdingbinoculars and wearing a trademark bluebandana, through theRamble andNorth Woods sections of the park on outings that could last five hours.[4][3][5] She was interested in keeping track of lists and numbers, and would often aim for specific numbers of species on her walks, extending their length or deciding to end in order to leave with a round number.[6] People on her walks were expected to keep to ethical birding best practices intended to minimize disturbances to the birds.[6]

Saphir developed a reputation for her skills with bird identification by sight and by sound, and theWall Street Journal said she had "seemingly supernatural powers of hearing and sight".[2] Though her specialty was birds, she would also teach aboutbutterflies anddragonflies.[3]

In May 2005, Saphir was a guest onLate Night with Conan O'Brien, featured in a segment in which she introducesO'Brien to birding.[7][8] Filmmaker Jeffrey Kimball included Saphir as one of the major characters in his 2012 HBO documentary,Birders: The Central Park Effect in 2012. Kimball described her as "thedoyenne or the matriarch of the park".[2]

She persisted giving regular bird walks despite a range of health issues, includingcataracts,arthritis, alimp, and back problems, and after being diagnosed withmetastatic breast cancer.[1]

She did not have a computer and was concerned that the introduction of technology to the pastime would make it inaccessible for some. She did come to use a cell phone to share sightings while out in the park, but otherwise used notebooks to track her sightings.[9] She left 80 such books when she died, tallying 259 different species just in Central Park.[4] Her "life list", a tally of all birds a person has seen at any location, totaled 2,582. Her favorite was thecerulean warbler.[3][1]

Personal life and death

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Saphir was married twice, first to Michael Henisse and later to Stephen Gussman, from whom she was separated when she died, and she had two daughters, Shawna Leigh and Lara Willis.[1] In 2002, she was diagnosed with breast cancer and told it would be terminal, which led her to turn to birding and the walks even more. She died of complications due to metastatic breast cancer on February 10, 2013, at the age of 73.[1]

TheLinnaean Society of New York's March/April 2013 newsletter was a collection of memorials to Saphir from several people in the birding community.[6]

References

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  1. ^abcdefghMartin, Douglas (February 9, 2013)."Starr Saphir, Bird-Watching Guide in Central Park, Dies at 73".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. RetrievedJune 14, 2022.
  2. ^abcdefRothbaum, Rebecca (July 6, 2012)."Bird Guide Is Top Flight".The Wall Street Journal.ISSN 0099-9660. RetrievedJune 14, 2022.
  3. ^abcdefWimpfheimer, David (February 16, 2013)."Goodbye to the Matriarch of Central Park".ABA Blog. RetrievedJune 14, 2022.
  4. ^abcdAdler, Margot (February 9, 2013)."For Longtime Central Park Birder, Walks 'Heightened Joys Of Life'".All Things Considered. RetrievedJune 15, 2022.
  5. ^"Starr Saphir".The Times. February 16, 2013.ISSN 0140-0460. RetrievedJune 16, 2022.
  6. ^abcHays, Helen, ed. (March 2013)."Starr Saphir, 1939-2013"(PDF).The Linnaean Newsletter.67 (1/2).
  7. ^Conan Goes Birdwatching In Central Park | Late Night with Conan O'Brien, retrievedJune 16, 2022
  8. ^Holmes, Linda (February 7, 2013)."Remembering Central Park Birder Starr Saphir: 'Time Has A Different Meaning'".Pop Culture Happy Hour. RetrievedJune 16, 2022.
  9. ^Adler, Margot (May 7, 2012)."These Apps Are Going To The Birds, And People Who Watch Them".All Things Considered. RetrievedJune 16, 2022.

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