Where Is Tonka Now? All About “Chimp Crazy”'s Star Primate and the Fla. Sanctuary He Calls Home

Tonka is the chimpanzee at the center of HBO's new docuseries from "Tiger King" director, Eric Goode.

<p>HBO</p> Tonka the chimpanzee

HBO

Tonka the chimpanzee

Tonka, the chimpanzee at the center of the HBO docuseries Chimp Crazy, is far removed from the drama included in the show today.

The 32-year-old primate first rose to fame in the 90s, when, as a young primate, he appeared on television and in numerous films, including George of the Jungle, Babe: Pig in the City, and Buddy — in which appeared alongside Alan Cumming — according to Save the Chimps, Tonka's current sanctuary home.

After Tonka matured and grew too large and unpredictable for entertainment work, he started residing full-time at a primate breeding facility that later became a nonprofit called Missouri Primate Foundation (MPF) (previously known as Chimparty). In the late 2010s, Tonia Haddix, a former nurse turned exotic animal enthusiast, took over ownership of MPF's seven primates, including Tonka, from Connie Casey.

Chimp Crazy reveals that in 2019, after ownership of the animals was transferred to Haddix, she was added as a defendant to the lawsuit PETA filed in 2017 against Casey and MPF, alleging the chimpanzees' unsatisfactory living conditions violated the Endangered Species Act.

The docuseries from Tiger King director Eric Goode, finds Tonka at MPF amid Haddix's drawn-out legal battle with PETA.

Related: Alan Cumming Says He Can 'Empathize' with Chimp Crazy Subjects' Love of Chimpanzees

According to paperwork from PETA, Haddix and MPF reached a consent decree with PETA in 2020 that said four of the chimps at MPF would be moved to a sanctuary, and Haddix could keep three of the chimpanzees, including Tonka, if she met certain conditions and upgraded the Festus, Mo., facility.

<p>Courtesy of HBO</p> Tonka and Tonya Haddix in 'Chimp Crazy'.

Courtesy of HBO

Tonka and Tonya Haddix in 'Chimp Crazy'.

Haddix claimed in an interview with the St. Louis Post-Dispatch in 2021 that she had signed the consent decree "under duress."

Haddix did not meet the decree's agreed-upon conditions, so a judge found her in contempt of court and ordered all seven chimpanzees transferred to a sanctuary. But when sheriff's deputies and U.S. Marshals went to carry out the order to remove the seven primates in July 2021, Tonka was gone. Haddix claimed the chimp had died before officials arrived.

Episode two of Chimp Crazy shows Haddix in Jan. 2022, claiming under oath that Tonka died of natural causes. In the same episode, she later shows the cameras that she lied about the chimp's death by revealing that Tonka is living in the basement of her Sunrise Beach, Mo., home.

The shocking reveal likely left many wondering where Tonka is now and if he is still under Haddix's care. Chimp Crazy is set to provide the answers in its upcoming episodes, but the chimpanzee's current home is not a secret.

In the spring of 2022, PETA learned that Haddix was keeping Tonka in her basement. This led to the chimp's removal from her custody and transfer to Save the Chimps.

Save the Chimps is a privately funded chimpanzee sanctuary in Fort Pierce, Florida, with the mission "to provide sanctuary and exemplary care to chimpanzees in need," according to its website.

<p>HBO</p> Tonka in his enclosure inside Tonia Haddix's home

HBO

Tonka in his enclosure inside Tonia Haddix's home

Related: Former Lab Chimpanzee in Awe After Seeing Open Sky for the First Time After Years in Captivity

At Tonka's sanctuary home, resident chimpanzees — all incapable of living in the wild after early lives spent in the entertainment industry, under private ownership, or at animal testing labs — live in large family groups on 12 separate 3-acre islands. On these islands, the primates, including Tonka, are given "choices and control over their own lives."

"An enriched outdoor environment allows the chimps to roam, visit with friends, bask in the sun, or curl up in the shade. These freedoms provide them with the dignified and peaceful retirement they have always deserved," Save the Chimps shared on its website.

Save the Chimps also noted online that the sanctuary's caregivers and veterinarians do not have physical contact with resident primates unless the animal requires it for a medical procedure. Sanctuary staff members talk to and interact with the primates without physical touch. Save the Chimps is closed to the public but offers a limited number of ticketed events each year.

Save the Chimps said it minimizes human contact to "ensure a peaceful retirement" for the animal residents. According to the sanctuary, Tonka retired to Doug Island, one of Save the Chimps' 12 island habitats, where he lives with 17 other chimps, including his new friends Jacob, Cayleb, Ursula, Angie the 2nd, Andrea the 2nd, Lil' Mini, and September.

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"When Tonka came to us, he was more human-oriented than chimp-oriented and rarely involved himself in group politics. Now, you would never know that Tonka is new to the group. He interacts affectionately with all the chimps and will drop everything to join a grooming session, especially if his beloved Ursula invites him," Save the Chimps care staffer Jenny Friedman said in a statement.

Save the Chimp's profile on Tonka added that the primate has made up for his time spent indoors by
"soaking up the Florida sunshine, playing and relaxing with his family." He also enjoys enrichment activities, juice and fleece blankets, the sanctuary added.

To learn more about Tonka's life today, visit the Save the Chimps website.

New episodes of Chimp Crazy air weekly on HBO on Sundays at 10 p.m. ET/PT and are also available to stream on Max.

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