![]() ![]() ![]() It was also featured prominently in an episode of the television show Route 66 (Season 2, Episode 31, "Hell Is Empty, All The Devils Are Here"). Many TV and movie productions used the park's trained animals, and many productions were filmed there, including The Birth of a Nation, The Fugitive, Tarzan the Ape Man, Doctor Dolittle, and The Adventures of Robin Hood. The zoo's residents included Leo the Lion, mascot of the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studio Mister Ed, the talking horse from the television show of the same name Bimbo the elephant from the Circus Boy television series and Tamba the chimpanzee, featured in the Jungle Jim movies and television series. Mabel Stark, the "lady lion tamer", was featured in these shows she also doubled for Mae West in the lion-taming scenes in the 1933 film I'm No Angel. Wild animal shows entertained thousands in the 1940s and 1950s. ![]() The facility later became a theme park, opened to the public in 1929. Soon a wide variety of exotic animals were obtained, trained, and rented to the studios for use in films. The facility was originally called Goebel's Lion Farm and then Goebel's Wild Animal Farm. Five of the Universal Studio lions formed the nucleus of Goebel's collection. He had been employed at Universal Studios when the studio decided to close its animal facility. Louis Goebel created Jungleland in 1926 as a support facility for Hollywood. At its peak the facility encompassed 170 acres (69 ha). ![]() Jungleland USA was a private zoo, animal training facility, and animal theme park in Thousand Oaks, California, United States, on the current site of the Thousand Oaks Civic Arts Plaza. Defunct private zoo, animal training facility, and theme park Children on an elephant at Jungleland, 1962 ![]()
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