Joe Martin (orangutan)

Joe Martin
Orangutan wearing a suit and top hat, in-photo caption says "This is me, Joe Martin"
Joe Martin at Universal City Zoo, 1919
Other name(s)Chimpanzee Charlie, Giant Gorilla Man
SpeciesPongo (genus), species unidentified
SexMale
BornIndonesian archipelago
DiedUnknown
OccupationAnimal actor, circus-zoo animal
Years active1914–1931
OwnersRobison brothers, Sam Behrendt, Universal Pictures, Barnes Circus
Weight185 lb (84 kg)
Height65 in (170 cm)

Joe Martin (born between 1911 and 1913 – died after 1931) was a captive orangutan who appeared in at least 50 American films of the silent era, including approximately 20 comedy shorts, several serials, two Tarzan movies, Rex Ingram's melodrama Black Orchid and its remake Trifling Women, the Max Linder feature comedy Seven Years Bad Luck, and the Irving Thalberg-produced Merry-Go-Round.

Joe Martin was human-acculturated and was characterized as human-like during his life. Upon entering adolescence, Joe Martin began to physically attack humans and other animals, including studio staff, director Al Santell, his trainers, and actors including Dorothy Phillips and Edward Connelly. At least three of these cases were apparent defenses of a woman, child, or animal. He staged major zoo escapes at least twice, once releasing the wolves and the elephant on the way out, and, separately, while evading recapture, relieving a police officer of his gun.

In 1924, Universal Pictures deemed Joe Martin too dangerous to work in film and sold him to the Al G. Barnes Circus, where he remained until approximately 1931. Although the circumstances of his death are unknown, Joe Martin had a long lifespan for a captive orangutan of his era.