![]() As each child makes his/her exit, they sing disparative songs accompanied by a drum beat. They are also mischievous, love practical funny jokes, and singing. Presumably, the females remain in the village seen briefly from the Great Glass Elevator. ![]() Only the male Oompa-Loompas are seen working in the factory, though in Quentin Blake's illustrations, both male and female Oompa-Loompas are shown rolling away Violet Beauregarde after her transformation into a blueberry. (In both movies, they wore typical factory worker uniforms.) However, the Oompa Loompas insisted on retaining their native clothing: men wore skins and women wore leaves, while the children wore nothing at all. Wonka was fortunately fluent in), they all now spoke English. Although the Oompa Loompas initially spoke only their own language, Oompa-Loompish (which Mr. They are only knee-high, with astonishing haircuts, and are paid in their favorite food, cocoa beans, which were difficult to find in Loompaland. Wonka will allow to work in his factory, because of the risk of industrial espionage committed by his candy-making rivals. In the book, the Oompa Loompas are the only people Mr. Wonka went to Loompaland and saw the terrible conditions in which the Oompa Loompas were living, he invited them to come and work at his factory to get away from the terrible country they inhabited and the creatures that preyed on them: namely, the Whangdoodles, the Hornswogglers, and the Snozzwangers. They come from Loompaland, which is a region of Loompa, a small isolated island in the hangdoodles. Following criticism, in later editions of the book, they are white-skinned and golden hair. ![]() In the early edition of the novel, they are shown as African pygmies. The Oompa-Loompas were the workers at Willy Wonka's Chocolate Factory, who were imported by Willy Wonka direct from Loompaland. ![]()
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