27

Aug

No More Monkey Business for Anjelica Huston

Anjelica Huston has decades of experience on the set, tracing back to watching her father, John, filming during her childhood. Given her experiences with animals on the set, we were excited when she sat down with PETA US to discuss the abuses endured by great apes used in film, television, and advertising.

Watch the video and read more about it here!

U.S. Department of Agriculture inspectors have documented that chimpanzees and orangutans were denied even minimal “environmental enrichment” and veterinary care in times of illness. And undercover investigations have shown that trainers beat and scream at great apes in order to force them to perform dumb, confusing tricks, take after take, under the burning arc lights.

Chimpanzees can live to be 60 years old and orangutans can live to be 50, but they grow too strong to be handled around the age of eight. That’s when, useless to the industry, most are dumped in roadside hellholes, where they can live in barren cages, languishing amid their own waste or sold for use in experiments. There is no Hollywood actors’ retirement home for them.

Anjelica also gave an exclusive interview after the filming of the video, explaining how she grew so passionate about this issue, and why the abuse of great apes will never happen on her set.

Thanks, Anjelica, from us and from them!


Tags: ,


2 users responded in this post

Subscribe to this post comment rss
posted by Raul on August 28th, 2008 at 9:38 am

she look like a monkey!

posted by Tom on August 29th, 2008 at 3:31 pm

No she doesn’t, she’s gorgeous. I especially liked her in The Addams Family

Post a Comment

Comments are moderated and any obnoxious or promotional comments may be removed. If your comment is excessively inappropriate, or if you question why a comment was removed, you may be banned.

 Name (*required)

 E-Mail Address (*private)

 Web Site (*optional)

Meet Alexia Bookmark This Blog
  • Friends
  • Disclaimer
  • The information and views expressed here are those of the author alone, are subject to change and may not represent the views of PETA. They are provided here for educational purposes only and have been gathered from the author's personal research and experiences. They should not be construed as legal advice. Except where third party ownership or copyright is indicated or credited regarding materials contained in this blog, copying, reproducing or redistributing any of the documents, data, content or materials contained in this Weblog for personal, non-commercial use is enthusiastically encouraged.