The Marquis Chimps were a group of trained chimpanzees that were used in variety shows and television programmes and commercials, initially in Britain and then in the United States, from the late 1940s to the 1980s. They were owned and trained by Gene Detroy (born Samuel Wood; November 15, 1909 – July 11, 1986).
History
Samuel Wood was born in Stockport, Cheshire, England, in 1909, to a family of circus performers. He left school at an early age, only learning to read and write in his teens,[1] and worked in the family act as a tightrope walker in music hall shows and carnivals in England, where he was billed as "The Vagabond of the Wire".[2] He developed the idea of working with animals, and attempted to train rhesus monkeys and baboons before buying a chimpanzee, which he named Marquis.[1] He trained Marquis to roller skate, ride a bicycle, and then a high unicycle. By the late 1940s, he had started appearing on stage with several chimpanzees, billed as Gene Detroy and the Marquis Chimps.[3]
In 1950 the Marquis Chimps appeared on the bill at the London Palladium, and visiting American entertainer Danny Kaye suggested that the troupe would be successful in the US. Detroy set up business in Las Vegas, training about twenty different chimpanzees over a thirty-year period, putting them in clothes and training them to use props. They worked principally as a cabaret show in nightclubs in Las Vegas, but became known nationally and internationally through television appearances.[4] They featured regularly on The Ed Sullivan Show, on which they made about thirty appearances, and made many appearances in television commercials for Brooke Bond tea.[2] These included commercials for Red Rose Tea in the United States, and in 1956 on ITV in Britain advertising PG Tips tea; later British advertisements used chimpanzees from Billy Smart's Circus.[1][5]
The Marquis Chimps continued to appear in cabaret shows in Las Vegas through the 1970s. Detroy retired in the early 1980s, and died from a heart attack in Las Vegas in 1986.[1] The troupe was taken over by trainer Dan Westfall, a nephew of Detroy, and continued to appear in shows in Las Vegas for some years, before Westfall established a primate sanctuary that also included one of the chimpanzees credited in films as Cheeta.[2]