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Leo Grillo
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Leo Francis Grillo Jr. (born 1948) is an American film actor, producer, and animal welfare activist. He is best known for founding Dedication and Everlasting Love to Animals Rescue, an animal welfare organization based in Acton, California. The not-for-profit organization was incorporated in 1981. The refuge has grown to become the largest care-for-life animal sanctuary of its type in the world.[1][2]
Key Information
Early life
[edit]Grillo was born in Lawrence, Massachusetts, to Carmela de Lucia and Leo Francis Grillo, Sr., both Italian-Americans.[3] Grillo appeared in the 1972 television series Banacek. Grillo majored in theatre at Emerson College in Boston, MA.[3]
Career
[edit]In 1977, Grillo moved from Boston to Los Angeles, California, to pursue a film career. He appeared in the 1977 John Heard film Between the Lines. Grillo studied under the tutelage of Charles E. Conrad, an acting coach credited with launching the film careers of Dee Wallace and Diana Ross, both Academy Award nominees.[2][3][better source needed]
Grillo was the lead actor in Dierdre's Party, a feature film he produced in 1998. Grillo played lead actor, opposite Katherine Heigl, in the 2006 independent film Zyzzyx Road. In 2009, Grillo co-wrote, produced and starred in Magic, opposite Sammi Hanratty, Lori Heuring, Christopher Lloyd and Robert Davi, who directed the movie.[4]
Humanitarianism
[edit]Grillo and his staff of seventy care for more than 1,500 previously abandoned and abused animals on a daily basis at the D.E.L.T.A. Rescue sanctuary in Glendale, California. According to tax documents, Grillo takes no salary to run the 150-acre No-Kill refuge. Grillo founded Horse Rescue of America in 1988.[3][5]
In 2008, Grillo created "Animals on the Edge," a global project that allows animals from other nations to benefit from Grillo's initiatives. Grillo co-conceived with wildlife photographer and author Chris Weston a book by the same name. The book identifies those animals currently living on the frontline of extinction.[6]
Family
[edit]Grillo is the father of Meguire Elizabeth Grillo and Erica Lee Grillo.[3]
Filmography
[edit]Actor
[edit]- Magic (2010) (film) – Brad Fairmont
- Zyzzyx Rd (2006) (film) – Grant
- Deirdre's Party (1998) (film) – Leonard
- The Defection of Simas Kudirka (TV) (1978) – Thomas
- Between the Lines (1977) (TV) – Car Owner
- Banacek (1972) (TV) – Mat
- Detour to Nowhere (1972) (TV) – Mat
Self
[edit]- Your Mommy Kills Animals (2007) (documentary)
- Cats: Caressing the Tiger (1991) (National Geographic)
Producer
[edit]- Magic (2010) (film) – executive producer
- Zyzzyx Rd (2006) (film) – executive producer
- The Rescuer (2005) – executive producer
- Deirdre's Party (1998) – executive producer
Writer
[edit]- Magic (2009) (film)
References
[edit]- ^ "Is This The Place?,” Is This The Place?, 1995, by Leo Grillo. Retrieved on September 25, 2009.
- ^ a b "Gimme Shelter,” The Magazine of Santa Clarita, January 2003, by Elodie Ackerman. Retrieved on September 25, 2009
- ^ a b c d e [1][dead link]
- ^ "DAVI: Our pets are family, too". Washington Times. April 21, 2009. Retrieved October 19, 2010.
- ^ "Shelter Embodies Activist's No-Kill Philosophy,” Los Angeles Times, May 17, 2006, by John Spano. Retrieved on September 25, 2009.
- ^ "How it Started – About AOTE – Animals on the Edge – Together we can make a difference". Animals on the Edge. Archived from the original on September 4, 2010. Retrieved October 19, 2010.
External links
[edit]Leo Grillo
View on GrokipediaEarly Life
Childhood and Upbringing
Leo Grillo was born in February 1949 in Lawrence, Massachusetts, to Carmela de Lucia and Leo Francis Grillo, Sr., both of Italian-American descent.[5][6] His family's heritage traced back to southern Italy, with his maternal grandfather Luigi de Lucia emigrating from Casino as a farmer in 1917 to settle in nearby Stoneham, Massachusetts, and his paternal grandfather Pasquale Grillo arriving from Prata De Principata Ultra in the Avellino province to Lawrence.[7] The Grillo lineage included a great-grandfather who owned the 51-room Villa Grillo estate near the Bay of Naples before disowning sons who left seminary, reflecting a traditional Catholic background among early 20th-century Italian immigrants.[7] Grillo was raised in Lawrence, an industrial city with a strong Italian-American community centered around textile mills and manufacturing, in a household shaped by these immigrant roots; his mother, who outlived his father, remained connected to the family's extended network, including uncles who had also emigrated from Italy.[7] Specific details on parental occupations or formal education are not publicly documented, but the socioeconomic context of working-class immigrant families in mid-20th-century New England provided the foundational environment for his early years.[7]Initial Interests in Animals
Grillo demonstrated an early affinity for animals during his childhood, frequently aiding injured birds and attempting rudimentary surgery on a goldfish to prolong its life.[7] His family's dog, Frosty—a Labrador mix—held a sibling-like status in the household, often sharing his bed and shaping his emotional bond with canines.[7] These personal encounters, recounted by Grillo himself, preceded his relocation to Hollywood and formal animal welfare efforts, laying the groundwork for a persistent commitment driven by direct observation of animal vulnerability.[7] Familial influences, including his maternal grandfather's background as an Italian farmer who emigrated to Massachusetts in 1917, provided indirect exposure to rural animal care practices, though Grillo's hands-on interventions remained informal and self-initiated.[7] Such experiences underscored a causal progression from youthful empathy toward animals to later advocacy, without reliance on organized structures or professional involvement at the time.[7]Professional Career in Entertainment
Acting Roles
Grillo's acting credits are sparse, spanning supporting television roles in the 1970s and lead parts in independent films from the late 1990s onward.[1] His earliest known role was as Mat in an episode of the television series Banacek in 1972.[1] In 1977, he appeared as the Car Owner in the ensemble film Between the Lines, directed by Joan Micklin Silver and featuring actors such as Jeff Goldblum and John Heard.[8] The following year, Grillo acted in the television movie The Defection of Simas Kudirka, a dramatization of a real-life Cold War defection starring Alan Arkin.[1] After a two-decade gap in credits, Grillo took the lead role of Leonard in the 1998 independent film Deirdre's Party.[1] He played Grant, one of the central characters alongside Katherine Heigl and Tom Sizemore, in the 2006 low-budget thriller Zyzzyx Rd, filmed in the Nevada desert and released with limited distribution.[9] Grillo's final credited acting role was as Brad Fairmont in the 2010 horror film Magic. These later projects often involved small-scale productions with minimal commercial impact.[1]Producing and Writing Contributions
Grillo served as executive producer on the independent thriller Zyzzyx Rd. (2006), which he also financed through a limited liability company and starred in alongside Katherine Heigl and Tom Sizemore; the film, directed and written by John Penney, achieved notoriety for grossing just $30 during its initial one-day theatrical release in Dallas on February 23, 2006, before being pulled due to distributor issues.[10][11] In this role, Grillo handled funding and production oversight for the low-budget project shot in the Mojave Desert, marking one of his early forays into behind-the-scenes decision-making amid a career primarily focused on acting.[1] Earlier, Grillo produced Deirdre's Party (1998), a lesser-known independent film that represented his initial steps into production without widespread commercial impact or detailed public records of box office performance.[1] His producing involvement remained modest, centered on small-scale independent efforts rather than large studio ventures, often tied to projects where he took lead acting roles to leverage personal investment.[12] In 2010, Grillo expanded into writing by co-authoring the screenplay for Magic with John Penney; he also executive produced the family-oriented film, directed by Robert Davi, featuring a plot about a magical dog aiding a widowed lawyer (Grillo's character), his daughter, and a scientist.[13] The movie received mixed reception, holding a 3.6/10 rating on IMDb from limited viewer feedback, underscoring the niche scale of Grillo's creative outputs.[13] These contributions reflect a pattern of self-driven projects, with no evidence of broader industry influence or high-profile collaborations beyond these credits.Animal Welfare Activism
Founding D.E.L.T.A. Rescue
Leo Grillo initiated D.E.L.T.A. Rescue in 1979 after rescuing an emaciated black Doberman pinscher he named Delta from abandonment near Bakersfield, California, an event spurred by recurring dreams of a dog and his growing awareness of pets dumped in remote areas. The organization's name, Dedication and Everlasting Love to Animals, directly honored this dog, reflecting Grillo's foundational commitment to a no-kill approach amid widespread euthanasia practices by other animal welfare groups.[2][14] That same year, Grillo encountered 35 starving dogs in the Angeles National Forest, a common dumping site for unwanted pets in Southern California, prompting him to personally feed and medicate them over the following year rather than surrender them to lethal outcomes elsewhere. By 1980, his efforts had expanded to rescuing about 70 dogs total from similar wilderness abandonments, with 20 retained due to severe abuse rendering them unadoptable.[14] Grillo formally incorporated D.E.L.T.A. Rescue as a non-profit in July 1981, basing initial operations in Hollywood while targeting rescues in nearby forested and desert regions. These early activities were self-funded through his earnings as an actor and producer, signaling his transition from entertainment pursuits to dedicated animal welfare as abandonments persisted unchecked by authorities or traditional shelters.[14]Sanctuary Operations and Scale
D.E.L.T.A. Rescue functions as a no-kill, care-for-life sanctuary on a 115-acre mountaintop site in Acton, California, providing permanent housing for approximately 1,500 dogs and cats rescued from wilderness abandonment.[3][15] Daily operations center on comprehensive care, including provision of food, water, toys, and affection; routine spaying and neutering; and continuous veterinary services through two on-site hospitals equipped with state-of-the-art technology for treatments like kidney dialysis.[15][16] The facility enforces a strict no-adoption policy, ensuring all residents receive lifelong support tailored to their needs, with specialized infrastructure such as expansive dog yards featuring straw bale houses and wading pools, and cat enclosures with suspended walkways and perched condos to accommodate mobility-limited or elderly animals.[15] Funded solely by private donations without government assistance or other revenue streams, the sanctuary sustains an annual budget exceeding $8 million through donor contributions.[16] It employs around 50 paid staff members, including full-time veterinarians, attendants, and a construction crew for ongoing expansions, while forgoing volunteers due to regulatory constraints on labor.[16] Security measures, such as 24/7 guards, fire sprinklers, and a dedicated fire department established in 1986, underpin operational reliability amid the remote hillside location.[15] Since its founding in 1979, the organization has grown to house over 1,500 animals—roughly 700 dogs and 800 cats—representing thousands of rescues accumulated over 46 years, with capacity expansions enabling this scale as the largest no-kill, care-for-life sanctuary of its type worldwide.[3][16] This model prioritizes long-term capacity over turnover, focusing intake on high-need cases from natural environments rather than public surrenders.[15]Rescues and Key Initiatives
Grillo initiated wilderness rescue efforts in the late 1970s by personally locating and feeding abandoned dogs in Angeles National Forest, beginning with the rescue of a black Doberman named Delta in 1979 and expanding to provide daily food and medication for 35 starving dogs in the area.[14] By 1980, these patrols resulted in the rescue of approximately 71 dogs from abandonment sites, many of which faced imminent death from starvation or exposure, with Grillo securing homes for most while retaining care for about 20 abused individuals.[14] These operations prevented euthanasia by diverting animals from potential shelter intake or wilderness demise, scaling to feeding over 150 dogs by 1983 through consistent patrols and community-supported resources.[14] In 1988, Grillo orchestrated the rescue of more than 120 cats from a seaside resort where abandonment had persisted for 25 years, halting the cycle of dumping in that location and demonstrating expertise in large-scale intervention against habitual neglect.[14] A key initiative, the 1999 "Spay LA 2000" program, funded spay and neuter procedures across Los Angeles to curb overpopulation, directly reducing the incidence of unwanted litters that lead to abandonment and subsequent euthanasia risks in shelters or remote areas.[14] Complementing this, 2005 efforts coordinated feral dog removal across 25 million acres of desert land via partnerships like the Desert Management Group, mitigating population booms from dumped pets that exacerbate wilderness survival threats.[14] Ongoing rescues, such as the 2024 recovery of 16 dogs abandoned in the desert, underscore Grillo's sustained focus on patrolling remote dumping grounds, with cumulative outcomes including over 900 dogs and 600 cats saved from abandonment by 2014, contributing to a care-for-life model that has housed more than 1,500 animals spared from natural or institutional euthanasia.[17][14] These initiatives emphasize causal prevention of dumping through direct intervention and awareness of abandonment patterns, evidenced by Grillo's decades of field expertise in locating and rehabilitating wilderness-discarded animals.[17]Achievements and Recognition
Grillo's animal welfare initiatives have received media coverage highlighting his dedication to wilderness rescues. A 1983 NPR radio feature, "Cross my Path," profiled his early efforts to save abandoned dogs, produced by Jay Allison and emphasizing Grillo's intolerance for animal suffering in natural settings.[18] In a more recent interview with radio host Dana Loesch, Grillo addressed the 2018 Woolsey Fire's proximity to D.E.L.T.A. Rescue, detailing evacuation challenges and the sanctuary's resilience amid threats to its 300-acre facility.[19] D.E.L.T.A. Rescue maintains a 100% no-kill policy through its care-for-life model, ensuring no healthy or treatable animals are euthanized and providing permanent sanctuary rather than relying on adoptions.[15] The organization currently houses over 1,500 dogs, cats, and horses rescued from abandonment, abuse, and wilderness dumping, operating on a 300-acre compound with on-site veterinary facilities including specialized treatments like kidney dialysis.[20] This scale reflects 45 years of consistent operations since Grillo's initial rescue of 35 dogs in 1979, expanding from leased kennels to a self-sustaining nonprofit incorporated in 1982.[14] Grillo has earned specific honors for innovations in animal care. In 1997, he received the El Blanco Award from the University of California, Davis School of Veterinary Medicine for establishing the world's first canine kidney dialysis center, enabling life-saving treatments previously unavailable to shelter animals.[21] The sanctuary has also secured a Gold Seal of Transparency from GuideStar (now Candid), affirming its accountability and effectiveness based on financial reporting and impact metrics evaluated by independent evaluators.[22]Controversies and Criticisms
In April 2025, CharityWatch published an investigative report highlighting financial irregularities at D.E.L.T.A. Rescue, including millions of dollars in unreconciled donations, opaque accounting practices, and substantial transfers to affiliated entities such as Living Earth Productions ($914,587 in fiscal 2023) and Horse Rescue of America ($491,963 in the same year), raising questions about transparency in nonprofit operations.[4] The report noted discrepancies in IRS Form 990 filings, where reported revenues exceeded verifiable donation records, prompting concerns over potential mismanagement despite the organization's no-kill mandate.[4] A significant legal challenge emerged from a 2024 employment dispute involving former employee Adriana Duarte, who secured a $6.7 million judgment against D.E.L.T.A. Rescue in December 2024 after alleging wrongful termination; the case involved claims of fraud in her hiring process, including misrepresentation of immigration status, and drew criticism for perceived judicial bias, including remarks by Judge Escalante labeling founder Leo Grillo a "racist" during proceedings.[23] [24] In response, D.E.L.T.A. Rescue filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on May 9, 2025, to appeal the judgment while continuing operations, arguing the ruling threatened the sanctuary's viability and the welfare of over 1,500 animals.[23] Critics have questioned the long-term sustainability of D.E.L.T.A. Rescue's strict no-kill policy, originally championed by Grillo since the organization's founding, with some animal welfare observers noting that such models can strain resources and compromise care standards in large-scale sanctuaries, though empirical data on outcomes at D.E.L.T.A. remains limited.[25] Earlier disputes, including a 2006 lawsuit lost by Grillo challenging Los Angeles County inspection requirements for rendering services, underscored tensions over regulatory oversight of sanctuary conditions.[25]Personal Life
Family and Relationships
Leo Grillo has been married since approximately 1997 to a hospital chaplain.[7] He is the father of two daughters, Erica and Meguire, both of whom have contributed to the operations of D.E.L.T.A. Rescue.[17]Retirement and Current Activities
Grillo effectively retired from acting and producing in the late 1970s after initiating animal rescues in the Los Angeles wilderness, redirecting his career toward full-time dedication to animal welfare.[26] Born on February 6, 1949, he marked his 76th year in 2025 while maintaining oversight of D.E.L.T.A. Rescue's operations, including care for over 1,500 animals across its facilities.[1][27] In recent years, Grillo has focused on advocacy through media engagements to sustain the sanctuary's no-kill, lifelong care model amid financial and legal pressures. On September 24, 2025, he appeared on America's Voice with host Grant Stinchfield to announce initiatives for donor support and recount experiences with sanctuary lawsuits, underscoring his resolve to prioritize animal protection over personal gain.[28][29] He has also contributed to public discourse via platforms like Newsmax, discussing rescue efforts and operational expansions as of mid-2025.[30] At this stage, Grillo's activities reflect a sustained emphasis on experiential knowledge from decades of hands-on rescue work, including compiling personal accounts for a forthcoming book on enduring human-animal bonds beyond death.[31] This aligns with his long-term shift away from entertainment, viewing the sanctuary's persistence—despite scrutiny from watchdogs like CharityWatch—as validation of direct, outcome-driven animal advocacy over institutional norms.[32]Filmography and Works
As Actor
- The Defection of Simas Kudirka (1978, TV movie) as Thomas[33]
- Deirdre's Party (1998, film) as Leonard[34]
- Zyzzyx Rd (2006, film) as Grant[11]
- Magic (2010, film) as Brad[13]
