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Left arm Trauma Nebula: Self-amputation Black Knight: Monty Python and the Holy Grail: Quadrilateral Trauma (sword) Ronny Cammareri Moonstruck: Left hand Trauma (bread slicer) Lady Kushana Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind: Trilateral (left arm and both legs) Trauma (insect) Captain Hook: Peter Pan: Left hand Trauma (knife) Cherry Darling ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... This category contains films in which a major character is an amputee. ... Hook (film) How to Train Your Dragon (2010 film) ...
Sullivan is a four-time US champion in the 100 m. She was among the first bilateral above-knee amputees to compete in the Paralympics in ambulatory track when she ran in the London 2012 Paralympic Games, setting a new American record of 17.33 seconds and finishing 6th in the World.
Whole had its official premiere at the Los Angeles Film Festival in June 2003. [2] It went on to screen at several other film festivals, including the Calgary International Film Festival, the San Francisco IndieFest, the Florida Film Festival and the Wisconsin Film Festival, [3] before it was picked up by the Sundance Channel, which screened the documentary on May 17, 2004.
A woman who is missing part of her arm became fed up with a lack of amputee representation in media, so she decided to create her own — and the result has warmed the hearts of thousands.
Mandy Horvath (born June 10,1993) is a Colorado based American bi-lateral above knee amputee, creative writer, public speaker, actress and mountaineer. She is notable as the first female bi-lateral amputee to summit the Manitou Incline, Pikes Peak (twice), the Statue of Liberty stairwell to the crown, and Tanzania's Mount Kilimanjaro, without the use of prosthetic equipment- using her arms and ...
Amy Palmiero-Winters (born August 18, 1972) is a below-knee amputee, long-distance runner, and triathlete. She holds eleven world records in various events. In 2010, she was awarded the James E. Sullivan Award as the top amateur athlete in the United States and the ESPN ESPY Award as the top female athlete with a disability in the world.
These days, Tennessee middle school student Aubrey Sauvie, 12, who was born with no hands, says she can bang on her drums as hard or fast as she wants.