Saturday, February 20, 2016

COSPLAY NATION


  

Cosplay has been around in one form or another for a millennium. I won’t rehash the whole history but trust me people have been dressing up in costumes and prancing around masked balls for centuries. Not just the idle rich either. The Mexican Day of the Dead is a great example of a cosplay festival. Whether a religious celebration, Halloween or superhero convention it matters not. People love to transform into something else from time to time. It can be a spiritual expression, an escape from reality or an art form. For some it’s all three.
 

Actors who work in theater, television and movies call it a craft. They have elevated their performance to its highest levels. But it’s still cosplay.
 

Comic and Anime Cosplay in its popular form while similar to simple costume parties and contests should be separated into its own genera because there is a performance element. Not as complex as a theatrical play but more of a skit; reenacting a scene from a movie, video game or comic book. Most popular themes are super heroes, anime, Sci-Fi, horror and Video game characters. While really big at comic conventions cosplay events are popping up all over.  
 

True cosplay is also different from Live Action Roll Play LARPing. The latter involves becoming a character in a game system and emersion into the game’s world and interacting with other characters. A game master arbitrates the rules and game mechanics. In the nineties it was Vampire games, most recently dystopian zombie LARPS are all the rage.
 

Then there is the Creative Anachronism persona. Large groups of people who gather at festivals and fairs to reenact civil war battles, rendezvous as frontier mountain men or medieval knights. These societies pay particular attention to the accuracy and details of their costumes. Keeping within their persona’s time period is a key factor.

This obsession with perfecting costumes has given rise to a fascinating and rewarding industry within the cosplay world. Crafters have become merchants. And every con and festival has a vendor class of artist, molders and builders who hawk their wares for fun charity and profit.
A very popular crossover character architype is the Pirate. This character along with vampires and the western style gun fighter shows up in every form of cosplay. The Star Wars franchise is set in a galaxy far-far away and yet Han Solo is a classic old west gunfighter. The crew of Star Trek’s Enterprise encountered several types of space vampires.
 

The Pirate however shows up everywhere. Anime is crawling with Pirates, super hero comics and video games have many examples of piracy and then you get the inevitable hybrid Steampunk-Vampire-Pirate. Pirates are fun and represent the ultimate escape from our hum drum over regulated civilian life style. Rules routines responsibilities and regulations dominate our existence. What a life to be a roughish renegade off on a quest for treasure and adventure with only one rule? Take what you want and do as you damn well please. Aarrrggue!

What is so cool about cosplay is the community it has become. Creatures from every cosplay genera merge from one group to another. No matter what your particular style of costuming, modeling and prop building you will find acceptance. Becoming a cosplayer links you with a weird quirky family of geeks and nerds that will take you in as one of their own.
 

You are never alone. There is a costumed event happening near you someplace, sometime, every weekend of every month. We number in the millions and that is not just a community that is Cosplay Nation.


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