Bill Barty https://billybarty.com The Biggest Little Person! Mon, 26 Jul 2021 16:07:23 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 A Giant Crusader https://billybarty.com/a-giant-crusader/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=a-giant-crusader Mon, 26 Jul 2021 06:36:24 +0000 http://billybarty.com/?p=55 Continue reading A Giant Crusader]]> As mentioned before Billy lived a Giant life. Part of that was his activism and spreading the word about dwarfism. He actively promoted the rights of others with affected by dwarfism and unhappy with the fact that some viewed them as just midget actors.

Finally in 1957 he founded the Little People of America organization. He announced a gathering to be held in Reno Nevada. The first meeting there had all of 21 people but later grew into the organization which by 2010 had over 6,800 members.

The Little People of America was the first North American Organization for little people. It is a non-profit organization that gives support, info, and other resources to people and their families that are affected by dwarfism. in order to qualify you must be under 4 foot 10 inches in height.

The organization was initially known as the midgets of America. But later on they made a distinction between midgets and dwarfs and renamed it to “Midgets and Dwarfs of America”.  Those affected with dwarfism voiced forcefully the fact that there were more dwarfs than midgets and the name was changed later on to “the Little People of America”. They have grown:

  1. to over 70 local chapters
  2. they meet regullarly
  3. they have a week long conference
  4. They now have incorporated as of 1984 Canada into the mix and created “Little People of Canada

For those of you who do not know it is usually offensive to call a dwarf a midget.  In fact many of the LPA members have filed complaints with the FCC (federal communications commission) over the use of the word midget when referring to dwarfs on public television.

If you want more information on the Little People of America just do a google search for their website – it looks like this:

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Billy Barty Life https://billybarty.com/billy-barty-life/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=billy-barty-life Mon, 26 Jul 2021 06:31:03 +0000 http://billybarty.com/?p=52 Continue reading Billy Barty Life]]> In 70 years of acting Billy Barty had roles in 200 Plus films. Additionally he played on Vaudeville, tv shows and tv commercials,played in night clubs and various other entertainment specials. Until “The Little Couple” he was probably the most recognized of all dwarfs on the planet. At just 3 foot 9′ he brought more awareness than anyone ever to cartilage-hair hypoplasia or dwarfism. According to Billy,

“Most difficult to overcome are the attitudinal barriers which Little People have to face – the notion that we are only found in show business or at the circus. Among the ranks of Little People can be found doctors, lawyers, teachers, psychologists and judges, and the only way to approach the problem is to influence minds while they are young so prejudice won’t appear later.”

… and that can even be seen with “The Little Couple” show where they are a doctor and business owner as well as having an immensely popular reality show.

He appeared in his first Hollywood film at the age of 3 in 1927. A friend of his, Shirley Bolingbroke who was a member of the Latter Day Saints, introduced him to missionaries for the LDS. Eventually Billy and Shirley became a couple and married on Feb 24, 1962. Most people do not know that Billy Barty and his family were members of the Church of The Latter Day Saints but he was officially baptized in 1968.

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Movies and Filmography https://billybarty.com/movies-and-filmography/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=movies-and-filmography Mon, 26 Jul 2021 06:29:02 +0000 http://billybarty.com/?p=49 Continue reading Movies and Filmography]]> Here is a partial list of some of Billy’s movies. You can find a more complete  list at IMDB.

2000 The Extreme Adventures of Super Dave (Video)
Funeral Eulogist (uncredited)
 1999 L.A. Heat (TV Series)
Morty Feinberg – In Harm’s Way (1999) … Morty Feinberg
 
1997 The New Batman Adventures (TV Series)
Hips McManus – Double Talk (1997) … Hips McManus (voice)
1997 An Alan Smithee Film: Burn Hollywood Burn
Billy Barty
1996 Frasier (TV Series)
Chris – High Crane Drifter (1996) … Chris (voice)
 1991 Life Stinks
Willy
 1991 Bride of Violence (TV Movie)
Victor
 1991 The Munsters Today (TV Series)
Genie- Genie from Hell (1991) … Genie
 1976 W.C. Fields and Me
Ludwig
 1976 Chico and the Man (TV Series)
Little hold-up man- Too Many Crooks (1976) … Little hold-up man
 1962 The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm
The Court Jester (uncredited)
 1962 My Three Sons (TV Series)
Billy Longfellow- Coincidence (1962) … Billy Longfellow
 1960 Mr. Lucky (TV Series)
Tommy the Midget – Taking a Chance (1960) … Tommy the Midget 

 1958 Shirley Temple’s Storybook (TV Series)
Dwarf- Rip Van Winkle (1958) … Dwarf
 1957 Alfred Hitchcock Presents (TV Series)
George- The Glass Eye (1957) … George
 1955 The Colgate Comedy Hour (TV Series)
Liberace
 1952 The Dennis Day Show (TV Series)
Leprechaun – Episode dated 15 March 1952 (1952) … Leprechaun 

 1935 A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Mustard-Seed (as Fairie)
 1935 The Bride of Frankenstein
Baby (uncredited)
 1933 Alice in Wonderland
White Pawn / The Baby (uncredited)
 1933 Footlight Parade
Mouse / Little Boy (uncredited)
 1931 The Dog Doctor (Short)
Little Boy at Curb
 
1930 Mickey’s Musketeers (Short)
Mickey’s Brother
 1928 The Cockeyed Family (Short)
Gillig’s Younger Son (uncredited)
 1928 Mickey’s Big Game Hunt (Short)
Mickey’s brother
 1928 Follow Teacher (Short)
The Baby
 1927 Mickey’s Eleven (Short)
Baby (unconfirmed)

 1927 Mickey’s Pals (Short)

INCOMING SEARCH TERMS:

  • billy barty films
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Photos and Pictures of Billy Barty https://billybarty.com/photos-and-pictures-of-billy-barty/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=photos-and-pictures-of-billy-barty Mon, 26 Jul 2021 06:26:02 +0000 http://billybarty.com/?p=36

http://BillyBarty.com

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Rumplestiltskin https://billybarty.com/rumplestiltskin/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rumplestiltskin Mon, 26 Jul 2021 06:22:15 +0000 http://billybarty.com/?p=34 I remember as a very little kid (back on the edge of black and white tv) seeing the movie Rumplestiltskin.

Enjoy it right here:

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Famous Quotes https://billybarty.com/famous-quotes/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=famous-quotes Mon, 26 Jul 2021 06:16:01 +0000 http://billybarty.com/?p=31 Continue reading Famous Quotes]]> The name of my condition is Cartilage Hair Hypoplasia, but you can just call me Billy.
~~
The general public thinks all little people are in circuses or sideshows. We have doctors, nurses, just about every field covered.
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That’s where it starts and sometimes finishes. My parents never told me I was small, so I never knew any better. They had to sign for me to play football and basketball, but they never said, “No, you can’t. You’re too small.” I’m not the only one who has proved little people can get along in a big world. There are other little people out there who are doctors, lawyers, school teachers, electronics engineers.
~~
“I have a feeling that we have been placed on this earth for a special reason and although I have not fulfilled all my missions, I am trying.”
~~
“We are people with all the hopes, dreams, passions, and faults of everyone else. Eighty percent of us are born into families with no history of dwarfism.”
~~
ALT-complete-lead-generation“Try being my size and going into a public restroom.”
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“We are your brothers, your daughters, your friends. We just happened to have been wrapped in a smaller package.”
~~
Auromatic-Leadt-Tools-Review-ALT-1What do you mean, kid? I’m 38.
~~
BillyBarty.com
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Life and Times https://billybarty.com/life-and-times/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=life-and-times Mon, 26 Jul 2021 06:12:14 +0000 http://billybarty.com/?p=24 Continue reading Life and Times]]>

Billy Barty was born October 25, 1924 in Millsboro, Pennsylvania. His real name was William John Bertanzetti. He was an American Actor and a giant who stood only 3 foot nine even as a full grown adult. He was born with what is called cartillage-hair hypoplasia dwarfism according to Wikipedia. However dwarfism wasn’t really understood back in the 30′s and 40′s.
 
Billy started acting when he was just a child at the ripe old age of 3 years old.
When he was a child, he acted in films like Alice in WonderlandA Midsummer’s Night’s Dream and The Mickey McGuire Comedies. He had a steady acting career and performed on the vaudeville circuit until he quit acting to go to college. He even has his own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
He went on to act in silent films and vaudeville. By the 1950′s Barty had become America’s most famous little person, acting in many films and television shows.

Mickey Rooney and Billy Barty Partnered Up Again.

Billy quickly became America’s most popular little person.  He was able to star in movies like WillowFoul PlayRumpelstiltskin and Day of the Locust. Even later as an adult he had the Billy Barty show and starred along side of Mickey Rooney as well as many other minor film and TV roles.

Billy knew that parts for little people in Hollywood were limited in both number and variety.Even though Barty died in 2000 at age 76 from heart  failure he was named the 6th most popular “little person” in 2011. appeared on numerous variety programs,

He was also very active in spreading the word about dwarfism and opened the discussion to make the public aware. He even founded the little people of America as far back as 1957.

After he passed from heart and lung failure in 2000 (he was survived by his wife Shirley and their 2 children) a tribute book was written on his life “Within Reach: An Inspirational Journey into the life Legacy and Influence of Billy Barty” by his nephew and nephews wife.

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BillyBarty.com
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Eulogy https://billybarty.com/eulogy-htm/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=eulogy-htm Mon, 26 Jul 2021 04:38:31 +0000 http://billybarty.com/?p=12 Continue reading Eulogy]]> Billy Barty Memorial / December 27, 2000

Good Morning, I am Billy Barty’s brother-in-law, Wesley Morse, and I would like to talk about Billy for a few minutes.

No Matter how I struggle, I have to open this talk with a cliche.
We are here today to remember and to honor a giant!
Small in stature-great in heart, Billy epitomized the best of American virtues: strong, self reliant, compassionate of others. He was an icon, not just to the film industry but among all people.
He never learned to be small. He often said “To be BIG you must think BIG” and he did.

Albert and Ellen Barty, his wonderful parents, instilled in him the self- reliant attitude of doing for himself what needed to be done.

I remember Ellen telling about when as a small child he asked for a drink of water. Ellen said, “I told him to get a chair and push it to the sink, stand on it and get your drink” so in this simple way among many others, Billy learned to rely on himself.

“My parents early on instilled within me the belief that there wasn’t anything I couldn’t do if I worked hard enough.” Billy has said, “so that’s the advice I give others. Work hard and keep busy-you never know when your big break will come along and you’ve got to be ready.”

He passed this lesson on to his children and others, for he believed in it. His children Lori and Braden are today outstanding examples of that credo.

One of the principles of the Billy Barty foundation is the concept that little people can take care of themselves if they are given a hand up, not a hand out.

Al Barty brought his family: Ellen, Billy, and his two sisters Evelyn and Dede from Millsboro Pennysylvania to Hollywood in 1928. Billy was three years old.

Billy was taking a walk with his dad that year near Santa Monica boulevard and Gower, when they stopped to watch a silent film being made on the sidewalk. Billy had learned to stand on his head and spin around. Quite a trick for a three year old.

Billy, on his own, trotted over and pulled on the pant leg of the director, Jules White, and then went into his head spin. White, amused by Billy’s stunt asked Billy’s dad Al if he could use Billy in the film. Billy had a role in the two reeler silent comedy “Wedded Blisters.”

Later Billy appeared in such early reels as Smitty comedies as well as Max Sennetts comedy shorts. He then starred in dozens of episodes of the Mickey McGuire comedies as Mickey Rooney’s younger brother.

In 1934 when Billy was 10, the Barty family took to the road with a vaudeville act called “Billy Barty and Sisters.” It was to be a seven year odyssey covering all 48 contiguous states. Their act was a brand of musical comedy and they played almost everywhere there was a theatre from big cities to hamlets.

It was while touring in Kentucky that Billy perhaps first blended his humanitarian instincts with a deep interest in sports, which would be with him all his life.

On Christmas morning in 1935 in Louisville, the family started out to do a benefit at the local orphanage. When they were a few blocks from their hotel, Billy shouted that he had left something behind and needed it badly. Back to the car, went to the hotel, and in went Billy. Minutes later he emerged with a football, saying “Some kid might like to play a little football with me.”

The family once performed in Pittsburgh where the child labor laws wouldn’t permit children under 18 on the stage. Billy and his sister Dede were both under that age limit, so….older sister Evelyn performed on the stage, while Billy and Dede played from the audience.

During this time Billy returned occasionally to Hollywood to act in a picture. Goldiggers of 1933, Roman Scandals, Footlight Parade and Alice in Wonderland were among the products of this period in which Billy was featured.

The family returned to Los Angeles in late 1941 when it became apparent that World War II would end vaudeville. It was time for Billy to finish school and go to college.

In High School, Billy played all the sports he could. Later he, Max Fine and Jerry Brown founded a magazine called High School on Parade. Billy was the sports editor. It gave him a taste of writing, which he enjoyed, coupled with his great love, sports.

In college, at LACC, he majored in journalism thinking he would perhaps find a niche as a sports announcer or writer. He finished his formal education at LA State College, the successor to LACC, and while there, he lettered in basketball and football. In November 1945, Billy played in an exhibition football game between LACC and UCLA’S freshman squad at the Los Angeles Coliseum, receiving a standing ovation from the crowd when he caught a 17 yard pass in a play especially designed for him.

He was awarded an honorary doctorate in letters in 1996 by this same Alma Mater, now Los Angeles State University.

He went back to films in 1946 with a leading role in “Three Wise Fools.” After playing the Palladium in London with Donald O’Connor, he became a regular for two years on the Ford Festival TV show with James Melton.

Next he starred with the Spike Jones Band and Comedy Troupe for several years. His performances included many TV appearances with Jones.

Many of you will remember his signature number in which he lampooned Liberace (a huge favorite at the time).

Recall him if you will in a silver wig, tails and high-topped tennis shoes, playing a miniature piano and singing, “I’m in the mood for love” as shaving cream bubbled from a candelabra. This was comedy at it’s best.

Billy’s own TV show, a kids special “Billy Barty’s Big Show” ran from 1963-1967 and is remembered by the boomer generation as their early must viewing.

I’m reminded that about 20 years ago, one of the younger members of our family who has since distinguished himself, decided to go to London. Billy was making a film there at the time, though this had nothing to do with the young hero’s journey.

When the young man arrived, it was discovered by customs at Heaththrow, that he had neither a return ticket nor enough cash to purchase one. They decided to hold him in a cell in Heaththrow and send him back on the next available plane. Then he mentioned that his Uncle Billy was making a film in London.

Uncle Billy to the Rescue!–with a late night dash to the airport, a guarantee of the boys solvency and a room to roost at Billy’s apartment in Chelsea. He was a good uncle!

In 1957 Billy had founded the “Little People of America”, one of his greatest philanthropic accomplishments. With a start of 21 attendees in Reno Nevada to a present day membership exceeding 6,000, this fine organization provides a forum, and a support to people of small stature and their families. There are affiliated organizations now in 20 foreign countries.

Later Billy started the “Billy Barty Foundation,” a resource center for little people. The Foundation provides help with job placement, answers medical referral questions, and funds educational scholarships for little people.

He has served on many boards and committees to benefit the handicapped. He was honorary chairman of president George Bush’s access to opportunity program, which led to “The American’s with Disabilty Act.” One of the most sweeping legislative efforts to benefit all handicapped people ever undertaken by the U.S. Congress.

He also served on both the city and county commissions on disability, here in Los Angesles, and has been included in a seemingly endless list of honors for his charitable work.

Among these, he received the California Governors Trophy and was inducted into the Governors Hall of Fame in 1999. He was nominated for these honors by the Honorable Michael D. Antonovich of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors.

Just this last October, he was presented the first of the annual Billy Barty Humanitarian Awards by the Long Beach International Film festival. He has been honored by the Pacific Pioneer Broadcasters.

Billy appeared in over 200 films in the 70 years of his career, and his STAR is on Hollywood Boulevard. A remarkable body of work. In addition, his vaudeville years, his television credits, commercials, stage roles and nightclub appearances, made him among the most prolific of all performance artists.

He has left this remarkable legacy of work and philanthropy to us all, and especially to his fine family, many of whom are with us today. They include his beloved wife Shirley, his daughter Lori and her husband David Neilson, his son Braden and granddaughter Tina.

Also with us are my wife, and his sister Dede, his niece Christine Piper and her husband Michael and their daughter Jessica, his nephew Richard Copeland and wife Linda and their children Rachael and Sam. His nephew Michael Copeland and wife Debbie were unable to attend today.

We are also privileged to have with us Robert Ahmanson, one of Billy’s oldest friends. Among all that he has left and that will live on, my favorite is Billy’s sense of humor.

When speaking about the various types of dwarfism, he was once asked about his immediate family. He quipped:

“As far as our physical descriptions go, Braden is average, I’m a Cartilage Hair Syndrome, Shirley is a Multiple Epi-pes-ial Displasia, Lori is a Turners Syndrome and our dog is a Maltese.”

In remembering Billy Barty, I choose to let him live on in my heart tethered there by thousands of kind acts, of smiles on faces and of dedication to others. I hope you will let him live that way with you as well. Thank you.

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Welcome to the Billy Barty Website https://billybarty.com/welcome-to-the-billy-barty-website/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=welcome-to-the-billy-barty-website https://billybarty.com/welcome-to-the-billy-barty-website/#comments Tue, 29 Jan 2019 18:34:25 +0000 http://billybarty.com//?p=1
Welcome to the Official, 
Genuine, Authentic, 
Unique, True…

Through out his 70 year career of entertaining, Billy had a multitude of stage, screen and TV appearances to his credit and was considered to be one of the most recognized and talented “little people” of all time.

It is with our deepest sympathy that we are announcing 
the passing away of Billy Barty on Saturday, 
December 23rd, 2000 at 9:20 am PST in Glendale, California. 
He will be missed greatly by all those that knew him.
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