I try to do three active things a day because I have to fit into costumes that are very tight.
Aren't You a Little Old for Hallowe'en?
1/8 of an excuse. That's all I need to dress in costume. Even the hint of a theme party sends me squealing to my wardrobe, planning an ensemble weeks ahead of time. Come the date, even if the hostess never actually solidified or communicated a theme, I will arrive, overdone and oft the only one, in said-hint: Victorian western, Austin Powers, Bonnie and Clyde, 1970s, Bowl-a-rama, whatever. If I'm the only one in theme, so be it. I can't worry about being the odd one out; it's actually kind of my wheelhouse, being the odd one.
Brushing it off is a leftover coping mechanism from grade school, wherein most years, I was one of only a few kids to dress up for Halloween, during school hours. Most waited until after school, or nighttime. Not Moi! 6:am and in full costume! Most awkward were the years Halloween fell on a weekend. It seems only proper, you dress up on the preceding Friday, right? Apparently, the hip kids don't do that.
Even less hip is dressing up the Wednesday before Thanksgiving break, in pilgrim gear your mom sewed. Beautiful quaity as it was, my pilgrim costume always earned a, "Halloween was last month. Why are you still wearing a costume? You should've kept on your mask!" What I learned, as the smallest, youngest kid, preK -12, was show up to class like you mean it, wear your costume proudly, then, when criticized, ask why they're not dressed up ... or, smile, say nothing, count the hours to lunchtime and, when the bell rings, run and hide in the French room, helping Madame Squires grade French, spelling tests.
Senior year of high school proved different. I dressed as a witch, but with a funky, vintage, pretty twist: more Sarah Sanderson than Winifred. Pretty-weird, vs. weird-weird, was a game changer. It was the first time a boy, any boy, let alone a boy on the tennis team, paid me any mind. *Think: blond Rob Lowe. "You look nice today." That was it: a double-take by the lockers, a perfect-teeth smile and a comment. Cloud 9 was quite a lovely place to float away the day.
By college, I was less intimidated by normal constructs, pretty aware of what pretty could do, and eternally hopeful folks just hadn't experinced the joy of costuming, yet. Freshman year, I threw a North and South party, in which everyone was to dress up as Civil War figures from John Jakes' novel and TV series. (I was Miss Ashton Main: part Scarlett, part Jenna Maroney, part Lucy Van Pelt.) There was also a costumed, Mozart's birthday party and a costumed, French literary figures party, for Bastille Day. Alas, only one friend attended each party, the same pal; but he never dressed.
Over the years, the question of attire, costumed or a tad dramatic for daily life, would morph. "Why are you dressed like that?" changed to, "Aren't you a little old for that?". To date, one of my sisters-in-law likes to ask, every time we meet, "Why do you look like that?". Apropos of our purposes here, let us address the most pressing query: "Aren't you a little old ... for Halloween?".
There's always someone who just needs to know they're not the only dork in the room. Let me be your guide-dork. I've blazed the dork-trail many a mile. It's not as scary as you'd think. Inspiring others is nice, deflecting snark with grace is a skill, but having a blast just for yourself is the best feeling of all! ... chirruped Pollyanna.
Now, along that dork-trail, I will admit, fourteen is a little old for trick-or-treating, which is when I fielded the "old" query for the first time. Out with two childhood friends, in an upscale, San Diego neighborhood, we knocked on our third or fourth door of the night. A grouchy, Larry David-type opened the door, looked us all up and down, begrudgingly handed over small handfuls of candy and asked one friend, "What're you supposed to be?" sans any hint of humour.
She, laughed heartily and replied cheerfully, "I have no idea! Some kind of weird clown thing or something!" She'd put together her costume at the last minute and it consisted of a rainbow clown wig, wacky makeup and suspenders: just a bunch of crap she'd found at home. My other pal was something sensible, like a doctor or a Disney Imagineer: little more than her school clothes and glasses, but she added her dad's briefcase. (She is, in fact, a doctor today. She may have spent her time more wisely than I, now that I think of it.) Moi was a Victorian, dance-hall girl and, as L.D. stood mesmerized by my early-developed, fourteen year-old bosom, he asked it, "Aren't you a little old for Hallowe'en?"
After that, we returned directly to the will-be-doctor's house and spent the rest of the night giggling, avoiding her überhip older brother, watching It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown and Garfield's Halloween Adventure, and eating sooooo many Morton's frozen donuts. Because, after all, Hallowe'en is all about playing dress-up, laughing with friends, hiding from the hip, eating sugar and watching TV.
Proudly, I can say grouchy L.D. did not affect my spirit, mostly. True, I still have that lingering concern of being the odd one out; be it overdressed for a dinner party, too festive for Xmas Day or, as we speak of here, the only one dressed in costume, even when waiting for the train to Comic-Con or entering a Hallowe'en party. Yet, and far more importantly, that concern has never been overwhelming enough to alter my path. When the night is done, I have always had the best time!
If you have a Larry David in your life, ignore him, or her, and wear what you want. What I did learn in my fourteenth year, sartorially, was that I may have been, as a kindly gym teacher told me, "too grown up to wear certain things until you get to college". (I don't think she realized I was about to start college at sixteen.)
By eighteen, I was on the road to more detailed, sometimes obscure, media- and history-inspired costuming. That was the year of my first adult party, somewhere in Back Bay Newport Beach. There, I started out as Sophia Loren, outfitted beautifully in vintage, 1960s, Italian gear, only to realize nobody knew who I was. Mid-party, the hostess, a.k.a. Cleopatra, took me into her bedroom, dug a short, blonde wig out of her closet and said, "Here, be Marilyn. You have the tits for it."
Because, after all, Halloween is all about how your bewwbz look the best.
JennyPop's Halloween Costuming History
For general amusement and my own archval needs: costuming over the years, as best as Moi can recollect, from earliest to current. Why, you plead? IDK. Why not? I have space here.
- geisha
- rabbit
- Catwoman
- Polynesian dancer
- Laura Ingalls Wilder
- Nellie Oleson
- Mary Ann (Gilligan's Island)
- Victorian dance-hall girl
- Civil War nurse
- vintage witch (the costume that changed it all)
- Sophia Loren, then Marilyn Monroe (same party)
- Cinderella
- Roman ceturion
- Mozart
- Anne of Green Gables
- Puss in Boots (basically, Mozart, but with a bird skull necklace)
- Dorothy
- Sally Bowles (Cabaret)
- Abby Sciuto
- Louis XIV
- Mrs. Lovett
- Bellatrix Lestrange
- Louise Belcher
- Lydia Deetz
- Max Black (2BG)
- Maleficent
- Ichabod Crane (FOX's Sleepy Hollow version/Tom Mison)
- 17thC. cavalier
- glam pirate
- Slash
- Lucy Van Pelt (2020)
Note: Weirdly, not a Princess Leia, Wednesday Addams, Morticia Addams or Lily Munster anywhere in my history, save SDCC and WonderCon. Yet, that's another list ...
I love costumes. My dream growing up was always to have my own costume and prop shop.