Jay J. Armes

Jay J. Armes

Jay J. Armes (photo by Adam Hicks)
Born August 12, 1932 (1932-08-12) (age 84)
El Paso, Texas
Occupation Actor, private investigator, author
Known for Prosthetic hands
Website Official website

Jay J. Armes (born Julian Armas; August 12, 1932) is an American amputee, private investigator, and actor. He is known for his prosthetic hands.

Early life and amputation

Armes was born Julian Armas to Mexican-American parents Pedro and Beatriz in Ysleta, a low-income area near El Paso, Texas, now a southeast El Paso neighborhood.[1]

At the age of eleven, he and his friend Dick Caples, seven years his senior, broke into a Texas & Pacific Railroad section house and stole railway torpedoes. Armes rubbed two torpedo sticks together, detonating them and causing the mangling of both hands.[1][2]

Caples, who was standing nearby, was not injured. Armes was taken to Hotel Dieu Hospital in El Paso, where his hands were amputated.[3]

Career

In 1958, after briefly working as an actor in California and returning to El Paso, Armes started his private investigative agency, The Investigators. In 1978, he launched The Investigators Security Course. Designed as a mobile patrol and security service, this branch of the organization served the community for a number of years until the patrol division was discontinued. Armes has been a certified Peace Officer.

Books and toys

In 1976, Armes published his autobiography, Jay J. Armes, Investigator; ISBN 0-02-503200-3. In 1977, the Ideal Toy Corp. launched the Jay J. Armes Toy Line, which featured a Jay J. Armes action figure with detachable prosthetics, various gadgets, and a Mobile Investigation Unit. In 1978, Armes and Ideal Toy Corp. launched an Investigative Course for Children which was introduced to a number of school districts throughout the United States. The same year, Armes authored a comprehensive correspondence-based investigative training course, and founded The Investigators Training Academy.

Television

Armes played the villain in the Hawaii Five-O episode "Hookman" (11 September 1973). The updated series, Hawaii Five-0, remade the episode with the same scenes and title on 4 February 2013; Peter Weller remade the role and directed the episode.[4]

Armes' rescue of Marlon Brando's son was described on a season 7 episode of the Travel Channel show "Mysteries at the Museum."

Awards and recognition

References

  1. 1 2 "Is Jay J. Armes For Real?" by Gary Cartwright, Texas Monthly, 1972.
  2. May 19 2015 radio interview on KLAQ El Paso, Texas
  3. El Paso Times, 1946: Ysleta Child Loses Both Hands In Explosion of Railroad Torpedo, elpasotimes.typepad.com; accessed August 25, 2014.
  4. Jay J. Armes at the Internet Movie Database
  5. Wallechinsky, David; Wallace, Irving; Wallace, Amy (1977). The People's Almanac Presents the Book of Lists. New York: Bantam Books. p. 12. ISBN 0-688-03183-8. 15 Prominent Handicapped Persons
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/12/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.