Sunday Times

Big little people

- PAIGE NICK amillionmi­lesfromnor­mal@gmail.com, Follow Paige on twitter @paigen

IFEEL like dwarves are so big right now. We’re not allowed to call them midgets, though — that’s frowned upon. They prefer little people or small people. My friend Glen has also heard “persons of restricted growth”, which seems politicall­y correct.

Both “dwarf ” and “midget” refer to an extremely short person, but dwarves have a genetic condition, causing disproport­ionate body parts.

Either way, it feels like they’re everywhere I look these days. I think it’s a case of Baader-Meinhof Syndrome. That’s when you hear about something out of the blue, and then you suddenly start to see it everywhere. You can expect to hear someone else mentioning Baader-Meinhof tomorrow, that’s just the way these things go.

Basically, I see little people (whispered in creepy Sixth Sense voice). Peter Dinklage may have started it all. He’s that super-talented actor who won an Emmy and a Golden Globe for his performanc­e as Tyrion Lannister in Game of Thrones.

He got me thinking about how great roles couldn’t have been all that easy to come by for little people in the past. There was Snow White, but there are only seven roles to be had there, and then there was Mini-Me and whoever Danny De Vito played, and that was about it.

But these days, with the popularity of franchises like The Lord of the Rings and Game of Thrones, there’s never been a better time to be a small actor.

Verne Troyer, who is only two feet eight inches (80cm) tall, hasn’t had it so bad. He shot to fame in the Austin Powers movies, and was married to a model for 24 hours in 2004. Making his one of the shortest marriages ever, in every sense.

And then in 2008, a sex tape of him with his then live-in girlfriend was leaked. So maybe that old saying is true and there are no small roles — only small actors.

Then out for dinner the other night, a welltravel­led friend told us they have Velcro dwarf-tossing in Thailand. I’d heard about dwarf-tossing before, but the Velcro adds a whole new element. My initial reaction, after feeling ashamed for laughing, was to be horrified by this practice.

It seems so inhumane and unnecessar­y. What kind of world do we live in where a person’s body can be exploited for entertainm­ent and financial gain? I don’t know, let’s ask a prostitute.

On second thoughts, much like prostituti­on, dwarf-tossing is a thriving industry, providing a solid, lucrative income for many. As long as there are rules, and nobody’s holding a gun to anybody’s head, why not?

At six foot, seven inches (2m) tall, Sean Rooney has been tossing his four-foot-twoinch (1.27m) twin brother for years. It’s no secret which brother drew the short straw in this family. Rooney says there’s a right and wrong way to be a tosser. You grab the handles on the back of your dwarf’s Velcro suit, stand sideways with your feet shoulderwi­dth apart, then swing the dwarf back as high as you can, hurling him or her as far as possible in one swift motion.

The longest dwarf-toss ever recorded was made by a truck driver, who’s reported to have tossed his dwarf (sounds like a euphemism for vomiting) 11 feet (3.35m).

While dwarf-tossing has been banned in France and some US states, it’s treated as a legitimate sport in lots of other places. I doubt we’ll ever see it at the Olympics.

Some of the official rules take the little person’s safety very seriously. “If a dwarf is to be thrown through a glass window or door, he (or she) must wear protective clothing, including a suitable mask.” And: “Extinguish­ers must be provided nearby if a dwarf is being tossed through a burning hoop.” While all reports I could find made dwarftossi­ng seem a mostly kosher enterprise, I’m still glad I’m five foot seven.

In the past, the main options for dwarves who wanted fame and fortune seem to have been getting tossed at a wall in a bar, playing the elves at Christmas, working for rent-adwarf or for a company called Dwarf My Party in Australia (I’m too scared to find out what they offer), or as a dwarf stripper for stag parties in London. But these days, fortunatel­y for dwarves, it looks like the opportunit­ies are growing. LS

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Illustrati­on: Infiltrate Media
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