In China, it's a small world after all
The Kingdom of Dwarves theme park features singing, dancing and costumed "little people."
KUNMING, China — The casting call went out across China earlier this year, in newspapers and online: Entertainers needed for a new theme park, no special skills required.
Applicants should be 18-40 years old, from any part of the country. The only stipulation? To work at the Kingdom of Dwarves performers must be shorter than 4' 3".
Since the park opened this summer in the mountains outside of Kunming, about 80 little people have signed on. Twice a day, they take to the stage to entertain smatterings of Chinese tourists by singing, dancing and performing slapstick comedy in the model of ubiquitous Chinese television variety shows. The dwarve are not, for the most part, accomplished singers, comedians or Qi Gong masters. The “king” is a 40-year-old dwarf and the shortest performer on the payroll, a tough-looking, silent character dressed in gold silk pajamas, who cruises away on his three-wheeled motorcycle after the show.
They are on stage because they are different, and in China, being different often means being a spectacle.
“I think this is a very unusual place, and quite funny,” said Li Ximing, a visitor from Kunming.
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| Kingdom of the Dwarves. (GlobalPost) |
To many around the world, the very idea of putting people on stage to perform simply because they don’t look like everyone else is cringe-inducing. But even though they must dress up in frilly princess and caped warrior costumes befitting small children and dance for tourists, performers at the bizarre theme park see this place as a haven from the overwhelming discrimination they face in China at large.
“Back home, strangers will stare at and they look down on us,” said Yang Lichun of Beijing, who moved across the country to work at the park this summer with her fiance. “If we can even find jobs at home, we have to work harder than everyone else to prove ourselves.”
This is not a protective commune founded by dwarves, as some media reports have insisted. The performers do not live in the tiny concrete mushroom houses that serve as a backdrop for their shows, but in nearby dormitories. It is a for-profit theme park run by a Yunnan province-based venture capital company. The workers simply see this as dagong — the modern Chinese notion of migrant work, leaving your hometown for a job elsewhere. Tens of millions do it for factory and construction work; these workers came here to put on a show for tourists who want to see little people.
Disabled and different people are often shunned in China, and hiring discrimination based on physical appearance is widely accepted. Still, parks where the amusement is people are a dicey topic, especially given a shady past rife with stories of China’s ethnic minorities being rounded up and displayed in the mode of circus freak shows.
But to hear the workers tell it, there’s no better place to be right now — the underlying social attitude actually made the workers want to come to the remote park, and want to stay.
"They are on stage because they are different, and in China, being different often means being a spectacle."
"To many around the world, the very idea of putting people on stage to perform simply because they don’t look like everyone else is cringe-inducing."
Oh the irony. I could not decide if this was reportage or the 'Opinions Column' until I got to those lines, when it became evident that it was the latter.
Yet another typical 'I'm-going-to-feel-outraged-for-you-even-if-you're-not' style of poison pen articles about any luckless foreign place that has the ill fortune of falling under the writer's self-righteous gaze.
Wow. Are you the Simpsons' Comic Book Guy?
Wow. No need to worry - I'm sure China'll build a village for Mental Midgets next. You could be King!
"But even though they must dress up in frilly princess and caped warrior costumes befitting small children and dance for tourists, performers at the bizarre theme park see this place as a haven from the overwhelming discrimination they face in China at large."
That's the line that followed one of your carefully selected snippets. Oh, and actually the whole article does a good job of countering any would-be exploitation accusations with a relatively genuine reflection of how the workers actually feel about their jobs.
In composition classes, the paragraph you so tidily cut in half is what's referred to as an anticipatory rebuttal. Maybe try reading what's on the lines before you start reading between them for hidden biases.
On a very different note, having experienced a number of Chinese "attractions," I'm actually curious as to whether the kingdom's employees are Han Chinese paid to pretend they're ethnic minority little people. (After all, there's dancing involved, and we all know the 少数民族 love dancing.)
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