As someone who worked indirectly (and sometimes directly) with 'Cuddles' and closely with the staff who did I would side with John here. I can recall no incident (apart from the Robinson one) where this orca could be described as super aggressive.
Thanks for that Peter. I was going to go re-edit my comment and mention you also as I recall you were working at Flamingo at the time. You beat me to it
I would like to add some observations.
There seems to be a opinion that things were pretty dreadful for many cetaceans held in the UK in past. Indeed, many facilities were very poor and were opened for pure short-term money making - mainly bypeople from the entertainment industry and not zoological collections.
But others for there time could be considered good when looked at with historical context and comparing them with exhibits containing other zoos animals at that time, I am thinking of some big cat exhibits and bears. In the case of
Flamingo Park, Morecambe - both dolphinaria opened in the mid-1960s - and also
Brighton Aquarium the financial investment on building their dolphin exhibits was not small; Brighton dolphinarium cost £200,000 when constructed in 1972 that would now be millions of pounds by today standards.
If one looks at dolphinria been built or refurnished now in other places such as Europe I think you get a truer picture of what could have happened in the UK if some facilities had remained.
The 'problem' with cetaceans is they have achieved a rather silly 'new age' label with even Merlin's Sealife Centres saying they would not keep them because they are not suitable for captive care* And compounding this
by notices at their Brighton Centre saying that dolphin keeping had been ban in the UK and the two dolphins they gave to the Into The Blue project were successfully reintroduced back to the wild via the
Into The Blue project, which is actually not proved.
But as an animal species, animals like bottlenosed dolphins do very well in appropriate captive care and the ethics of keeping them are no greater or lesser than other 'common' zoo species such as the above mentioned big cats and bears.
* Sealife Centre will never have cetaceans because ironically they couldn't or wouldn't put up the huge investment to house them to modern standards. Many of their existing sites also have a constricted foot-print e.g Brighton and just don't have the space to build a modern dolphin facility. They basically display species that are cheap and easy to keep and accommodate and also easy to replace. I personally find there position regarding cetaceans hypercritical to say the least. How many of the Sealife lifestock are captive bred? Very few I would suspect.