But outside of acting and some even more serious allegations against Hitchcock, Hedren has devoted herself to another passion: rescuing big cats, like lions and tigers. She spends her life surrounded by animals—at times in ways that most people would consider too close for comfort. Read on to learn more about Hedren’s life today. RELATED: See Police Woman Star Angie Dickinson Now at 90. Aside from Marnie and The Birds, another of Hedren’s big movies from the 1960s is A Countess from Hong Kong, which co-starred Marlon Brando and Sophia Loren. She kept acting consistently for years to come, but has said she didn’t know about all the roles she was even offered because of the contract situation with Hitchcock. Some of her most recent projects were an appearance on Cougar Town in 2013, the movie Return to Babylon that same year, as well as the movie The Ghost and the Whale in 2017. In 2018, she starred in a campaign for Gucci and explained to The Hollywood Reporter, “I am at the time in my life when I have done almost everything I wanted to do. My constant work here at the preserve to care for my rescued and abandoned big cats fills my days now. I doubt that I will do much work in the motion-picture business or television again, and I suppose that is why this commercial was such a special offer.” In 2016, Hedren released her memoir, Tippi: A Memoir. In the book, she claims that Hitchcock, who died in 1980, sexually assaulted her. “I’ll simply say that he suddenly grabbed me and put his hands on me,” she wrote in her book (via USA Today). “It was sexual, it was perverse, and it was ugly, and I couldn’t have been more shocked and repulsed. The harder I fought him, the more aggressive he became. Then he started adding threats, as if he could do anything to me that was worse than what he was trying to do at that moment.” In a 2016 interview with NRP, she said that Hitchcock refused to let her out of her contract. “It became such a problem for me that I demanded to get out of the contract,” Hedren said. “And he said, ‘Well, you can’t, you have your daughter to support and your parents are getting older.’ And I said, ‘They wouldn’t want me in a situation in which I’m not happy.’ And he said, ‘Well, I’ll ruin your career.’ And he did. He just kept me under contract, paying me my salary, a lot of directors and producers wanted me for their film, but to get to me, they had to go through him.” For more celebrity news delivered right to your inbox, sign up for our daily newsletter. Hedren got interested in big cats after filming two movies in Africa in the late ’60s. She, her husband at the time, Noel Marshall, and her daughter, Melanie Griffith, even made a movie, Roar, about a family confronted by big cats. It was filmed with actual animals, which caused many injuries on set. At this point, Hedren and her family had actually lived with big cats in their home, and there are many photos that show them in this precarious situation. She called the situation “stupid” in an interview with the Daily Mail. In the ’80s, Hedren changed her tune on living with lions and tigers, realizing that people should not own them as pets. She started the Roar Foundation in 1983, which funds the Shambala Preserve in California. The animals have been rescued by authorities “from roadside zoos and private citizens who realize they have purchased an animal they can no longer handle,” according to the Shambala Preserve website. Hedren also helped get a bill passed related to big cat ownership. “It’s called the Captive Wildlife Safety Act. It regulates ownership of these animals and the breeding,” she told Smashing Interviews in 2016. Hedren’s only child is actor Melanie Griffith, and one of her three grandchildren, Dakota Johnson, is also an actor. The three women, along with Griffith’s ex-husband Don Johnson, all appeared together in a Hollywood Reporter video in 2017. In a 2014 Q&A with The Guardian, Hedren was asked about her most treasured possession. She responded, “My beautiful child Melanie, and grandchildren Alexander, Dakota, and Stella.“ae0fcc31ae342fd3a1346ebb1f342fcb RELATED: See Jane Fonda’s 2 Grandchildren, Who Are Following in Her Footsteps.