Verne Troyer- Biography

Also Credited As:

Verne J Troya, Verne J Troyer

About Verne Troyer

At only two feet, eight inches tall, Verne Troyer was one of the smallest performers in Hollywood, but became a star of much larger proportions thanks to a high-profile role in the blockbuster comedy sequel "Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me" in 1999. Getting his start as a stunt double for a nine-month-old child in the 1994 comedy release "Baby's Day Out", Troyer put his size and talents to use performing stunts in the 1996 comedies "Dunston Checks In". Playing babies, animals and even an alien (in 1997's "Men In Black"), Troyer had an average guy role in the anything but average Terry Gilliam feature "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas" (1998), playing a waiter. A performance as a gorilla in 1999's "Instinct" wouldn't garner the actor/stuntman much in the way of notice, but his less costumed, scene-stealing turn in "Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me" offered a high-ranking spot in the court of pop culture. His silent but expressive comedic performance won the actor good reviews and fans, while his unforgettable appearance would help to separate him from the pack of actors his age.

A recurring role on the UPN sitcom "Shasta" (formerly "Shasta McNasty") and an appearance on the syndicated series "V.I.P." would round out the actor's year and by the close of 1999, Troyer's frequent appearance at Hollywood events but lack of strong follow-up work marked him as a celebrity rather than an actor, though behind the scenes, the performer had several projects in the works. Though a proposed "Shasta" spin-off series didn't take off, he reemerged on television with a humorous recurring role on the syndicated period/adventure series "Jack of All Trades", on which he played none other than famed diminutive despot Napoleon Bonaparte. That same year he hit the big screen with a role in the independent "Bit Players" and a part as a musically-inclined citizen of Whoville in Ron Howard's live-action adaptation of "Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas". In 2001, Troyer appeared in the unique romantic comedy "Bubble Boy" and was featured in the highly anticipated adaptation of the popular children's book "Harry Potter and the Scorcerer's Stone". He then made his debut in a supporting dramatic turn in "Run for the Money" (2002) starring Christian Slater and Val Kilmer. In 2002, Troyer also appeared in the third "Austin Powers" installment in the famed role of Mini-Me.

Partners

Companion

Genevieve Gallen. Married from 2004-2006

Family

Brother

Davon Troyer. Born c. 1968

Father

Reuben Troyer.

Mother

Susan Troyer.

Sister

Deborah Troyer. Born c. 1970

Education

Kellogg Community College, Coldwater , Michigan

Centreville High School, Centreville , Michigan

Career Milestones

Raised in Centreville, Michigan

1994

Made film debut as a stunt player in the comedy-adventure "Baby's Day Out"

1996

Performed stunts in "Jingle All the Way"

1997

Appeared in the sci-fi comedy "Men in Black"

1998

Played a waiter in Terry Gilliam's adaptation of Hunter S. Thompson's "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas"

1998

Was a stunt player in the comedy "My Giant"

1999

Breakthrough role as Mini-Me, a miniature clone of Dr. Evil in "Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me"

1999

Cast as a series regular on the UPN comedy "Shasta McNasty"

2000

Appeared in Ron Howard's live-action adaptation of "Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas"

2000

Played Napoleon Bonaparte in the short-lived syndicated series, "Jack of All Trades"

2001

Appeared in the skewed romantic comedy "Bubble Boy"

2001

Featured in "Harry Potter and the Scorcerer's Stone"

2002

Reprised role of Mini-Me in "Austin Powers in Goldmember"

2005

Appeared on the fourth season of the VH1 reality series, "The Surreal Life"

2007

Featured in Uwe Boll's "Postal"

2008

Re-teamed with Mike Myers for the comedy, "The Love Guru"

2009

Cast as part of a travelling theatre troupe in Terry Gilliam's "The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus"