• In
Wolfen (1981), the bodyguard killed by the Wolfen at the beginning of the film is referred to as being tough and formerly of the Tonton Macoute. •
The Comedians (1966) is a novel by
Graham Greene about the struggle of a former hotel owner against the . It was adapted as a
feature film starring
Richard Burton,
Elizabeth Taylor,
Peter Ustinov and
Alec Guinness. •
Ton-Ton Macoute!, a 1970 album by
Johnny Jenkins. • "
Heaven Knows," a song by
Robert Plant on his album
Now and Zen, references the Tonton Macoute. •
The Serpent and the Rainbow (1988), a horror film directed by
Wes Craven, loosely based on
the book of the same name, deals with
Haitian Vodou and political repression under the Duvaliers. •
The Dew Breaker (2004) is a novel by
Edwidge Danticat that features the Tonton Macoute as important in the plot. • Prior to her solo career,
Sinéad O'Connor sang in a band called Macoute. • The Tonton Macoute is also mentioned in
season 1,
episode 9 of the television series
Dexter. In the episode, an ex-Cagoulard is recognized and killed by Miami-Dade police sergeant
James Doakes, who was formerly stationed in Haiti as an Army Ranger. Despite having evidence that Sergeant Doakes lied about firing his weapon in self-defense, the DA's office drops the investigation into the killing at the request of the federal government. •
Don Byron mentions the Tonton Macoute while describing Haitian immigrant
Abner Louima's brutal interrogation by the
NYC Police in his song "
Morning 98 (Blinky)" from the 1998 album
Nu Blaxploitation. • The track "Tonton Macoutes" appears on the 1987 album ''Coup d'État'' by
Muslimgauze. • In the 2016 video game
Mafia III, the New Bordeaux Haitian Mob is composed mainly of refugees who fled Haiti to escape from persecution by the Tonton Macoute. • In the television series
The Thick of It, the character Malcolm Tucker jokes in response to why he enters a room without knocking that it is due to his "time with the Haitian death squads". • In
NSV, the character Nasalis states that in 1974 he felt sympathetic towards the Haitian national football team, not being aware of
Jean-Claude Duvalier at the time. The character Erik replied that the Tonton Macoute was already keeping an eye on him. • In
Toni Morrison's essay, "The Habit of Art", she refers to the practice of the Tonton Macoute targeting those people who attempted to bury their loved ones who had been murdered and displayed by the paramilitary. •
Shrunken Heads (film), features the character Aristide Sumatra, a voodoo priest and former member of the Tonton Macoute. He uses that background to train three shrunken heads to fight criminals. • In Shannon Mayer’s
Forty-Proof series, the 4th installment (titled Midlife Ghost Hunter) uses a voodoo
zombie army called the Tonton Macoutes as the main villain’s army. The story takes place in
New Orleans, also a center of Vodou. • In the TV series
Justified, Season 5, Episode 01, "A Murder of Crows", Raylan, the protagonist, mentions the Tonton Macoute while questioning a Haitian suspect. He says that the man's appearance and attitude suggests he had been a member of the paramilitary. • In the TV series
Two and a Half Men, Season 3 Episode 17: "The Unfortunate Little Schnauzer", Archie Baldwin makes a reference to Tonton Macoute in his UN jingle for orphaned children. •
Roxane Gay's short story "A Cool, Dry Place" (in
ayiti Creole language) features characters who recall losing their parents to the Tonton Macoute. ==See also==