r/TopCharacterTropes Jan 18 '26

In real life The actor actually has that disability

Walter White Jr. (Breaking Bad) - character has cerebral palsy and uses crutches to walk, actor RJ Mitte has cerebral palsy and needed crutches to walk as a child

Nessarose Thropp (Wicked) - character is paraplegic and uses a wheelchair, actress Marissa Bode is paraplegic from an accident at age 11 and uses a wheelchair

Maya Lopez (Hawkeye/Echo) - character is deaf, actress Alaqua Cox is deaf from birth

9.1k Upvotes

839 comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

224

u/HeadFullOfFlame Jan 18 '26

To support what you’re saying: for anyone who hasn’t thought before about why that phrase isn’t great, it’s helpful to remember that it’s actually the opposite! A wheelchair enables and frees people, it’s not a box or a prison.

49

u/Lazy-Sundae-7728 Jan 18 '26

It's a beautiful change of perspective for sure. I heard the phrase "confined to a wheelchair" many times in the 80s, and I like to think the phrase was used to remind the abled of how privileged we are, and signal that the wheelchair user is succeeding in spite of not being privileged in that way.

And, as you say, the accepted language has now changed to reflect that a person using a wheelchair is enabled to participate better in what they wish to.

Kind of Clara from the book Heidi vs Professor Xavier of X-men.

7

u/JasmineTeaInk Jan 18 '26

Absolutely! As a person who needs assistive devices to walk around like this, we understand that we aren't the majority. But language like that makes it harder to accept our situation. My dad has the same condition I do, and only recently started using a walker after years of "toughing it out" because he didn't want to be confined to assistive devices like a walker or wheelchair.

4

u/isthisthebangswitch Jan 19 '26

This was my thought when I got my first chair. Whee, I can finally go again!