Hollywood comes to IPPL
Over the weekend we were delighted to welcome not one, but two bona fide Hollywood actors to the IPPL sanctuary. Actress and animal activist Elaine Hendrix arrived yesterday with her boyfriend and fellow-actor Salvator Xuereb, as well as his young daughter Anouk and son Finnley, as the four of them were in the midst of a family roadtrip.
Elaine had met IPPL’s Shirley McGreal at the Animal Rights National Conference in Los Angeles last month, where Elaine was hosting a benefit auction. She was excited to learn that our gibbon sanctuary is located so close to where her mother lives, so she asked if she and her traveling companions could swing by.
Elaine not only has an impressive list of over 100 film, TV, and other acting credits to her name (including the popular movie The Parent Trap and more recently a stint with Charlie Sheen in the FX series “Anger Management”), she is also passionate about animals. “My heart’s mission is animal rights,” she told me earlier today, but she works on all kinds of animal-related issues—welfare, rescue, conservation, you name it. Basically, “my issue is anything that keeps animals from harm!” she said.
When I asked her how she became an animal rights activist, she talked about how her family had always been very active in the East Tennessee community where she grew up. “When I became an actress, I was invited to a lot of charity events. But I started to feel that I wasn’t really making a difference—and I wanted to make a difference.”
As a result, about 10 years ago she began doing some research, and in the process she came upon a powerful undercover video about fur farming. “Even sitting by myself in front of the computer, I had a visceral reaction, like a kick in the gut,” she recalled. “I just began sobbing.” And her eyes filled with tears once again as she remembered her epiphany. “That moment changed everything for me.”
At the time she had a car with leather seats; she got rid of it. She also tossed out every product that was tested on animals. She was already vegetarian, but she has since adopted a vegan lifestyle. She founded The Pet Matchmaker (an organization dedicated to helping place homeless pets) and writes a “Stages & Cages” blog, where she shares stories of her pro-animal activities (and where you can read about her take on her visit to IPPL!). During their visit, Salvator helpfully took many photos and even filmed Elaine’s interview with Shirley, with an actor’s attention to detail regarding sound quality and ambient lighting; they’ll be posting the footage on Elaine’s blog soon.
She and IPPL are, in fact, already connected via her rescue work. She was part of the team that liberated 55 long-tailed macaques (as well as 118 beagles) from a New Jersey lab that was being shuttered in 2010. She helped get eight of the monkeys to Mindy’s Memory primate sanctuary in Oklahoma, and IPPL helped foot the bill for the animals’ initial rehabilitation.
But she has a gentle touch. “I never preach,” she told me. “I just say, ‘Oh, you have a dog?’ and the conversational floodgates open wide!” She likes to give out the booklets on cruelty-free products to her hair and makeup people as gifts—although, she remarked, the first question from hair and makeup people is usually “what products do you like and not like;” lately, when she asks for cruelty-free products, she usually gets a number of options to choose from.
With her cheerful boyfriend Salvator (his last name, Xuereb, is Maltese—“I’m big in Malta!” he said), she and the children took a tour or two around the sanctuary grounds: taking photos of and with the gibbons, of course, but also asking about fig trees, chasing after field crickets, and avidly filming the release of a female yellow-bellied slider into our pond (the turtle had just been rescued from a nearby intersection by one of our staff members)
When I asked her what she thought of the sanctuary, she said, “IPPL is a magical place, just incredible.” She added thoughtfully, “I’m always impressed with sanctuaries because I know what it takes to run one. But when I see one as beautiful and well-put-together as this one, you want it to continue to thrive.”
And the children? By the end of the visit the kids were ready to join the IPPL staff. When Finnley was asked if he wanted to start a sanctuary of his own, he said, no, he’d just come to work at IPPL.
[…] published at IPPL.org on August 11, […]