Meet "Little" Kiran Shah

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HUGE STAR: Kiran Shah (Image: @ Kit Shah HCK-Photography)
HUGE STAR: Kiran Shah (Image: @ Kit Shah HCK-Photography)

He has been shot at by stormtroopers, thrown from a horse in Middle Earth and threw himself off the top of a ship's mast while battling Charlton Heston's Sherlock Holmes. Now actor and stuntman Kiran Shah is facing his biggest challenge yet - AI.

The 4ft 1in star, also known as Little Kiran, plays the lead elf in new festive comedy horror There's Something In The Barn.

This Christmas, the film is competing for festive viewers with Wonka, where Hugh Grant was digitally shrunk to play an Oompa Loompa.

Meet "Little" Kiran Shah qhiqhhikxidzuinvHAMMER TIME: Kiran plays an angry elf in There's Something In The Barn (Vertigo Films)

And Shah fears there could be fewer roles for little people in fantasy films as AI technology makes it cheaper and easier to reduce taller Hollywood stars to dwarven and elvish proportions.

"That's going to happen, " says the 67-year-old. "At the moment it's very expensive, but people are trying it out now,"

Housebound ex-serviceman enjoys special window visit from physio's horseHousebound ex-serviceman enjoys special window visit from physio's horse

"It's going to put a lot of people out of work."

But Kiran, who is in the Guinness Book Of Records the world's shortest stuntman, has managed to stay ahead of the curve since he broke into the film industry in the 1970s.

Meet "Little" Kiran ShahHOBBIT FORMING: Kiran went on double for all the hobbits for Peter Jackson (Kiran Shah collection)

Born in Nairobi, he moved to London with his family at the age of 12 and was studying mime at the Red Buddha Theatre Company when he decided to try to get into movies.

One of his earliest jobs was as a scale double for Christopher Reeves in the 1978 hit Superman. Whenever we see Superman flying in the distance, that's a young Kiran in the famous outfit.

"In the last couple of days of the shoot, they were playing around with blue screen, and I thought “they won't need me anymore’.

"And it happened, so I thought I need to use that technology to my advantage".

It was when “blue screen” (where backgrounds are painted in after the shoot) became commonplace that the fantasy blockbuster really took off. And Kiran has appeared in most of them. He served Indiana Jones poisoned dates in Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981). Then he broke into creature work by playing a variety of characters in The Dark Crystal (1982).

And it wasn't just fantasy films that needed his daredevil skills. Sherlock Holmes fans may recognise him as Tonga alongside Charlton Heston in The Crucifer Of Blood. In the 1991 film, he stole a march on Tom Cruise (who he starred alongside in 1985's Legend) by acting and performing his own stunts.

He says the most memorable day on that film involved jumping into a freezing River Thames from the mast of a tall ship. "I can't swim," he admits, "but I know I won't sink".

But he attributes his break to narrowly missing out on playing R2-D2 in the first Star Wars movie. After a successful screen test with a prototype of the bleeping droid, he was told that Kenny Baker, who had left the production, had decided to return.

Legendary chaser Altior out of danger and ready to leave hospital after colicLegendary chaser Altior out of danger and ready to leave hospital after colic
Meet "Little" Kiran ShahEWOK: Kiran preparing for one of his many Star Wars roles (Kiran Shan collection)

But to make up for the disappointment, the casting director set him up with an agent and work began to flood in. He went on to play a robot, an Ewok and perform stunts in Return Of The Jedi. When the sci-fi franchise rebooted with 2015's The Force Awakens, Kiran returned and went onto star in all five subsequent sequels and spin-offs.

"Without that first Star Wars, I don't know what I would be doing," he says.

When Peter Jackson cast Elijah Wood as diminutive adventurer Frodo Baggins in his Lord Of The Rings trilogy, he called on the talented mimic to double for Wood in wide shots.

So Kiran began studying the way Wood moved so he could seamlessly step in. Jackson was so impressed, he asked him to repeat the feat with all five of the film's main Hobbits in all three films.

"I was an acting double not just a double," he says. "You have to look like them, copy their mannerisms and feel what they are feeling".

It worked so well, Kiran returned for Jackson's The Hobbit trilogy. And it was on one of Jackson’s films that he suffered his greatest injury.

"It was the last month of the last pickup from the very last fight in the last Lord Of The Rings film, The Return Of The King," he says.

"I was double riding the horse and fighting. In rehearsals the horse bolted three or four times.

"The riding stunt double said we should call it quits. I said, ‘one more’. And that was one more too many. I came off and broke my back".

After three months in a brace, Kiran was back to work. He says he gets recognised the most for as Ginarrbrik, Tilda Swinton's evil sidekick in 2005's The Lion, The Witch And The Wardrobe.

Meet "Little" Kiran ShahSIDEKICK: Kiran Shah as Ginnabrik in The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrboe (Buena Vista)

"That was a really big part and I wasn't wearing a heavy prosthetic", he says.

And it was that role which landed him the lead role in There's Something In The Barn.

In the new movie, Kiran plays "a barn elf", a dangerous creature taken from Scandinavian mythology. When an American family moves to a mountainous village in Norway they ignore local folklore about honouring the privacy of barn dwelling elves.

Meet "Little" Kiran ShahLEAD ELF: Kiran in There's Something In The Barn (Vertigo Films)

"It was such a funny script, I loved it" he says. "It's funny how I got the part too. It was late 2021 and the director of photography's wife was watching The Lion, Witch And The Wardrobe on TV. She called him in from the kitchen and said 'I think you've got your little guy'".

Kiran has raised awareness of issues facing little people with a speaking tour of Kenya. But even though AI may be a threat, he thinks things are looking up for little actors.

He attributes a change in attitude to director Terry Gilliam, who cast little people as leads in his 1981 fantasy Time Bandits.

"That didn't happen before and I do give him credit for that," he says.

"And there are a lot more opportunities for little people now. You just need to look at what Warwick Davis, Deep Roy and Peter Dinklage are doing".

"They can be doctors, accountants or anything. Why not use little people?"

There's Something In The Barn is available to stream now on all major digital platforms.

Andy Lea

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