<P> As part of the documentary, Fraser performed in a Coney Island freak show . He was invited to return to work there professionally and has since worked several summer seasons there . </P> <P> Fraser's 2011 show, "From Freak to Clique", charted the history of portrayals of disability, including freak show performers . </P> <P> Fraser was commissioned by the Research Centre for Museums and Galleries at the University of Leicester to create a new artistic work, shaped out of a collaborative engagement with museum collections, research and expertise in medical history, museums and disability . The resulting performance, "Cabinet of Curiosities: How disability was kept in a box" was performed at the Thackray Medical Museum, Leeds, the Silk Mill Museum, Derby and Manchester Museum . It won the Observer Ethical Awards, Arts and Culture 2014 . The Guardian's Lyn Gardner stated that, "by making a spectacle of himself, Fraser is not only raising the spectre of the Victorian freak show but also subverting it by questioning what is exhibited and what isn't, and making us confront what we are shown and what we are not shown, both in art and in life". </P> <P> Fraser married Julie Atlas Muz, a burlesque star, in May 2012 in New York City . </P>

American horror story freak show actor with short arms