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Disability is everywhere: Lady Tanni and Little People of America
22nd July 2010
dispatch.
I caught the end of a politics programme, reporting on the days' events at the Houses of Parliament. Post election, it's not just about changes to government and MPs, there are newly appointed Lords and Ladies, and they all get to make a maiden speech.
I nearly slipped off to sleep - as most of the House of Lords seem to do even when sitting - but I decided to give it another five minutes. I'm so glad I did.
Like a gift from heaven, on screen was a sight to behold, a scene that made my chest rise just a little bit. There, in the House of Lords, were three women in a row, all of them wheelchair users.
Three visibly disabled people in the House of Lords is a pretty awesome thing. However with respect to the Lords and Ladies, 2000 people of short stature in downtown Nashville is truly amazing. You may have heard me talking to Liz Carr on this month's Ouch Talk show about attending the Little People of America annual convention, which this year was in Nashville, Tennessee. Despite this being my sixth convention, it still shakes me when surrounded by 1999 people who have a similar condition; the mirror image moment where I see others how others see me.
The convention provides heaps of useful information such as the medical workshops where the best US skeletal dysplasia doctors and surgeons offer free consultations. For new parents of a short baby, this is a god send, for adults with increasing mobility difficulties this is a boon. There's the added reassurance that the medics have worked with people with your condition before.
It's not all education, socialising plays a big part with day trips, a nightly disco (which I am too old for) and the more sedate Barty Club (which I hope I am too young for). I managed to reconnect with someone with whom I should have never lost contact with for which I'm truly grateful.
On the final night, after midnight, I went out walking with two friends, one short, one average sized. We went down to the heaving Nashville bar scene which was thronging with drunken bar hoppers and a few undesirables.
Bracing myself for comments or confrontation, there was unbridled joy when I realized no one even took a second glance. For one week in Nashville, disability was everywhere so nobody cared about our 'difference'.
There was no time to watch television during convention but if I had I would have sought out HBO, America's high brow, down and cool, cable television channel. HBO has produced a long list of modern classics including: The Wire, The Sopranos, Six Feet Under and more recently True Blood.
American friends of mine (and a few British) happily sit down for a day or two with DVD box sets - of a series or 'season' if you're from the US - and lose themselves for hours.
I'm guessing that, if you get a role, initially you'll be a warrior wearing a prosthetic limb and later on you may well lose said limb in an epic battle.
Peter Dinklage, an actor with dwarfism best known for the film The Station Agent is in the production. I admire Peter as he tends to avoid dressing up in costumes, but this being a fantasy I'm anxious he hasn't been swayed by the dollars. Strangely though, I didn't see him at the Nashville convention.
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Comments
Hey! No worries about Dinklage's choice of a fantasy costume epic. My sister is avidly reading the series of novels it's based on and says that the character he'll be playing is one of the heroes... not an extra, not comic relief or "curiosity" but genuine hero. I personally can't wait to see it!
And of course Dinklage did "dress up in costume" as Trumpkin for the Narnia movie but again he was playing a leader and hero (if a crotchety one) and did so very well.
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