The Scotsman

TRIBUTE

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Deborah Carrington, actress and stuntwoman. Born: 14 December 1959 in San Jose, California. Died: 23 March 2018 in Pleasanton, California.

Deborah Carrington, who broke into Hollywood by answering an ad for dwarf actors, and later performed stunt work and “costume-specific” roles in Hollywood blockbuste­rs and campyhorro­rmovies,died at her parents’ home in Pleasanton, California. She was 58.

Her sister, Kathy Ellis, said that the cause had not been determined but that Carrington had dealt with health problems over the past year.

Audiences might best remember Carrington, whose stage name was Debbie Lee Carrington, for her violent performanc­e as Thumbelina, the 3ft, 10inch pink-clad prostitute in the 1990 sci-fi action film Total Recall.

The movie told the story of a constructi­on worker in the future who visits a colonised Mars.during a mob scene, Thumbelina stabs one of the movie’s villains with a Bowie knife before jumping on a table and mowing down the police with a machine gun.

Beyond her infamous shoot’em-up scene, Carrington played various costume-specific roles – suited performanc­es that completely obscure the actor – in film and television. Such roles included Idee, one half of the Geex in the Disney short Captain EO, starring Michael Jackson, and the Alien Father in the original Men in Black.

She also performed as a stunt double – often for child actors and dolls that had come to life – in films like Titanic and the Child’s Play slasher film series.

“She was incredibly tough in the suits,” said Kirk R Thatcher, who worked with her on a couple of Star Wars films, including Return of the Jedi. “She could do anything. She was a great body actor, like a mime.”

Deborah Lee Carrington was born on 14 December 1959 in San Jose, California, to Fred Carrington, an insurance manager, and the former Marlene Langen, an elementary school teacher. As a child Carrington visited the hospital for regular check-ups related to her dwarfism, and these inspired her to pursue studies in early childhood developmen­t at the University of California, Davis.

While in college, Carrington’s life changed after she answered a casting advertisem­ent in a newsletter published by Little People of America, a non-profit support group. The ad was for the 1981 movie Under the Rainbow, which was loosely based on the dwarfs who auditioned to be Munchkins in the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz.

The production was looking for dwarfs as extras, and after Carrington landed a part she took time off from her studies to work on the production. She later returned to finish her degree.

A subsequent costumed role as an Ewok in the 1983 Star Wars sequel Return of the Jedi launched her decadeslon­g career in film and television, which included a variety of costumed parts in films like the Star Wars spin-offs and as ducks in Howard the Duck. She was also the voice of Valerie Vomit in the 1987 cult classic The Garbage Pail Kids Movie.

Carrington said she had faced prejudicia­l attitudes as a dwarf during her time in Hollywood. In an interview with the trade publicatio­n Back Stage West, she recalled once being overheated in a costume and a director telling her, “I know you guys have different body temperatur­es than us tall people.”

She tried to support dwarfs in Hollywood, insisting that they received credit for their work, since many costumespe­cific parts often went uncredited. She would also confront writers and directors about clichéd and cheap jokes about her height.

By the 1990s Carrington began to push back against being typecast in costumeonl­y roles. On television, she played character roles like Tiny Avenger on In Living Color, Tammy in Seinfeld, and Doreen in The Drew Carey Show.

More recently she played an elf in the 3-D computeran­imated Christmas musical The Polar Express (2004) and the friend Tina Marie in Netflix’s sitcom Grace and Frankie (2016).

In addition to her acting work, Carrington was an advocate for animal rights, worked with the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, and she walked dogs in her spare time.

In addition to her sister, she is survived by her parents and a brother, Robert.

“She played the gamut, from action to horror films to commercial­s,” said Gregg Sargeant, a filmmaker who first worked with Carrington on Total Recall and who had cast her for his forthcomin­g film Escape From Paradise.

“She was about everything you’d dream of in an actress.” New York Times 2018. Distribute­d by NYT Syndicatio­n Service.

“She played the gamut, from action to horror films to commercial­s – she was about everything you’d dream of in an actress”

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