SIN-HUNGRY PETER DINKLAGE’s WICKED WICKED WAYS

Pals reveal “Game of Thrones” star’s sex-fueled debauched wild nights!
Award-winning actor PETER DINKLAGE stands just 4-foot-5, but he was a big man on campus during his college years!
The 42-year-old star – who’s nabbed both an Emmy and a Golden Globe for his role in the HBO hit series “Game of Thrones” – played up his best assets to win hearts at Vermont’s Bennington College, sources say.
“I tend to be a big flirt. I like to make people laugh,” the blue-eyed lady-killer divulged.
As for Bennington, “it was a debauched, crazy school,” he said. “I loved it. Three girls to every guy – it was very free.”
With his dark wavy hair and bright blue eyes, the pint-size Romeo cut a wide swath among the Bennington coeds, sources say.
“Pete learned how to use his goodlooks and charm to his advantage,” an insider told The ENQUIRER. “He never wanted anyone to feel bad for him, and he never felt any different from a normal-size person.
“Pete always joked with his buddies that all he had to do was keep his dark hair flowing and blue eyes open and he could get any girl he wanted – and he did!”
After graduation, the New Jersey native appeared in several off-Broadway theater productions and made a splash with his big-screen debut in the 1995 independent film, “Living in Oblivion.” He earned critical acclaim and was nominated for multiple awards for his role as a dwarf searching for solitude in the 2003 drama “The Station Agent.”
Dinklage – now the father of an infant daughter with wife Erica Schmidt, a theater actress and director – also appeared in the 2003 comedy “Elf,” the 2008 adventure “The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian” and the TV series “Nip/Tuck” and “Threshold.”
He was born with a form of dwarfism called achondroplasia, in which the body is perfectly formed but the bones of the arms and legs do not grow.
By age 5, he had severely bowed legs and could barely walk. During a grueling operation, his legs were broken, reset and encased in casts with a bar between them to straighten them.
His acceptance speech at the GoldenGlobes attracted international attention when he mentioned British actor Martin Henderson, a fellow little person who was the victim of a “dwarf tossing” incident.
“Peter grew up in a family that encouraged self-confidence,” said the insider. “But he is well aware of the stigma and bullying little people face in today’s society.
“He’s determined to do whatever he can to erase the prejudice and ‘midget’ stereotypes.
“Peter always jokes that he wants his fellow dwarfs to be as popular with the women as he’s been, and he intends to keep mentioning bullying incidents to show that they have feelings like everyone else.”






