World's 'smallest' man tours Big Apple

07:45PM Tue 7 Sep, 2010

NEW YORK - A Nepalese teenager set to be declared the planet's smallest person got the big star treatment Tuesday on a tour of New York.

Crowds at Times Square jostled for a glimpse of Khagendra Thapa Magar who at 17 is the size of a baby and has stopped growing.

The Nepalese teen was making his first visit to New York as part of a publicity trip organized by the freak-show museum Ripley's Believe It or Not!

Wearing a white shirt and doll-sized pin-striped grey jacket, Magar smiled shyly, blinking at rows of cameras and the vast neon billboards lining Times Square.

Ripley's declares Magar - at 22 inches (56 centimeters) tall and 11 pounds (five kilograms) - the world's smallest person.

The Guinness Book of Records this Monday named Colombia's Nino Hernandez to the title but only because Guinness doesn't consider Magar an adult - at least not until he turns 18 next month and takes the undisputed mantle of mini-king.

Ripley's, a chain of museums specializing in oddities and bizarre acts of nature such as a five-legged cow and two-headed sheep, said Magar suffers primordial dwarfism, which typically reduces life expectancy to as little as the 20s.

But his translator, Min Bahadur Rana, said Magar was in many ways a normal teenager.

"He's very happy. He laughs a lot. He wants a girlfriend - a big one, not a small one," Rana said. "He wants to be a doctor. After school, he wants to study."

Edward Meyer, vice president for exhibits at Ripley's, said that during an evening out on the town Monday, Magar developed a particular interest in New York blondes. "He's fascinated with blondes because there are virtually no blonde women in Nepal."

After posing in Ripley's alongside a life-sized figure of the tallest man in history - the 8-foot-11-inch American Robert Wadlow - Magar stopped at Times Square and was to have lunch at a famous deli and go up the Empire State Building.

Magar smiled at the gawking crowds and showed off a dance move for a bank of news cameras, but he sometimes looked overwhelmed on his whirlwind tour of the Big Apple.

"It's unbelievable," said Brazilian tourist Loiana Cortez, 22, after catching sight of the tiny celebrity. "I don't know if he likes to be famous. There's a lot of pressure around him."

Meyer denied that Magar was being exploited in a modern version of the 19th century traveling freak show.

"I don't use the word freak," he said. "He can make a living. Quote-unquote 'freaks' have the right to make a living and if the only thing they can do is have pictures taken of them then that's what it is."
(AFP)

7 September 2010,