The letter arrived in Molesey, outside of London, in June 1942, during the bleakest days of the war. Food and clothing were rationed. Citizens also wore metal identification bands, in case they couldn’t get to their air-raid shelter before deadly Nazi bombs started dropping.
The mysterious letter from America also appeared to have been strafed, albeit by a government censor whose black slashes were visible throughout. Still, Veronica Tudor-Williams easily made out its contents.
“I spent last winter in the Southern part of the United States where I was born, where the Mississippi is more than a mile wide,” wrote James Street of New York City, whom Tudor-Williams had never met. “One day I stepped into a bar run by a friend and he showed me a picture in a magazine of a charming young lady with some dogs.”
The young lady in the photo was, and the dogs were her Basenjis – erect-eared, curly-tailed dogs from the rainforests of the Congo in central Africa. “I had never heard of the breed before,” Street admitted, describing himself as a “Bird Dog, Coonhound, and Foxhound man.”
But Street was also a writer, intrigued by Tudor-Williams’ clutch of elegant African canines. Inspired, he wrote a series of stories about a Basenji lost in the swamps of Mississippi. These stories were so popular that he later published them as a novel: “Good-bye, My Lady.”
“Good luck,” Street wrote from across the ocean, “and thanks for having your picture in an American magazine.”
Basenjis in the Spotlight
The story, of course, didn’t end there. “Good-bye, My Lady” – about a teenager raised by his toothless uncle who finds a mysterious yodeling dog wandering outside their cabin – became a best-seller. Hollywood perked up its own ears, and in 1956 planned to release a movie of the same name. It cast 13-year-old Brandon deWilde of “Shane” fame as the youngster who acquires the dog, only to find she has a rightful owner. Character actor Walter Brennan co-starred in the film.
The role of the Basenji, however, was still open. So Tudor-Williams received another communication from across the pond – this time, a 2 a.m. phone call from Hollywood. Tudor-Williams had just the Basenji for the title role – a precocious and photogenic 6-month-old female she named “My Lady of the Congo.”
In truth, the Basenji had already made her cinematic debut, however briefly, in 1951’s “The African Queen.” In this film, starring Humphrey Bogart and Katharine Hepburn, she appeared on the lap of a native in a church scene. But compared to that eyeblink of a cameo, in “Good-bye, My Lady” the Basenji received top billing. As a result, interest in the breed increased.
This quick-witted, cat-like creature was new to most American theatergoers. However, the breed had left the central Congo more than a century before. In 1843, a captain returning from an expedition to Niger gifted an “African dog” with hooded ears and fine bone to Queen Victoria. In the 1920s, Lady Helen Nutting acquired a half-dozen Basenjis in South Sudan, only to have them all die after receiving the new distemper vaccine – which, unlike modern vaccines, could become virulent. Still, more British breeders struggled with vaccination losses. Breeders finally established the breed in the U.K. by the late 1930s.
The Land of the Barkless Dogs
For her part, Tudor-Williams returned to “the land of the barkless dogs” in an effort to get the native peoples to part with their treasured hunting dogs. These intelligent, speedy dogs silently hunted birds and other small animals in the thick jungle vegetation. They often wore wooden bells with monkey bones as clappers. These dogs flushed game into the waiting nets of hunters and led the way to nests containing eggs. Plus, they exterminated rodents and other vermin in the villages.
“Owners apparently considered their Basenjis as precious as their children. Their dogs followed them quietly to heel and, if we stopped to observe, were picked up protectively in their arms,” wrote Tudor-Williams, who often drove 100 miles a day over dirt roads in search of the dogs. “I had been told that natives seldom parted with adult dogs — a statement I could hardly credit, but it proved true. Occasionally we saw a young adult that we wished to buy. Through our interpreter, we would offer jewelry, cigarettes, and finally large sums of money” – up to triple the price of a bride’s dowry – “but to no effect, the native owner walking away, a disdainful expression on his or her face.”
Undaunted, Tudor-Williams changed tactics, deciding to purchase puppies instead. But she soon found that word preceded their arrival, with the empty-handed villagers explaining the puppies had already been sold. In truth, they had been hidden because of rumors that the European visitors were looking to shoot them. Tudor-Williams guessed this misunderstanding “stemmed from memories of the days when white men shot dogs because of rabies outbreaks.”
More Unique Than Most
Due to the remote natural range of the Basenji, modern breeders could return to Africa themselves for new imports. In 1990, the Basenji Club of America petitioned the AKC to open the studbook, and numerous successful Basenji safaris have ensued. Each import was evaluated, and many were approved and incorporated into the gene pool.
Every purebred-dog fancier considers his or her chosen breed to be unique. However, the Basenji is arguably more unique than most. They have their yodel-like vocalizations, due to the unusual flattened shape of their larynx. Plus, they lack a distinctive doggie odor. Unlike most modern breeds, Basenji females only come into heat once a year, similar to wild canids.
DNA studies have found that the Basenji doesn’t cluster with any of other breeds. Instead, they hold a genetically distinct position of their own. Their DNA predates not just the evolution of purebred dogdom, but likely agriculture itself. Research in 2021 found that, like wolves and dingoes, the Basenji has lower numbers of the AMY2B gene that produces amylase, an enzyme that helps digest starch. This is a hunter-gatherer’s dog, through and through.
If there was one criticism of “Good-bye, My Lady,” it was of the ending. In this coming-of-age story, My Lady’s young owner eventually returns her to her rightful owner. But real life, at least, was much more satisfying. The contract with Tudor-Williams stipulated that My Lady would belong to young Brandon deWilde once filming was complete.
So that’s a real-life happy ending for a boy and his dog – which, Basenji lovers would be quick to add, isn’t just any dog.