Watch Comic Costume Race Online (2017)
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Cosplay - Wikipedia. A group of cosplayers on stage at Yukicon 2. Finland. Cosplay of Lara Croft by Tatiana De. Khtyar at the E3 Expo in Los Angeles 2.
Cosplay of the Yu- Gi- Oh! Dark Magician Girl"Cosplay(コスプレ,kosupure), a contraction of the words costume play, is a hobby in which participants called cosplayers wear costumes and fashion accessories to represent a specific character.[1] Cosplayers often interact to create a subculture, and a broader use of the term "cosplay" applies to any costumed role- playing in venues apart from the stage.
Any entity that lends itself to dramatic interpretation may be taken up as a subject and it is not unusual to see genders switched. Favorite sources include anime, cartoons, comic books, live- action films, television series and video games.
The rapid growth in the number of people cosplaying as a hobby since 1. Japan and some other parts of Asia and in the Western world. Cosplay events are common features of fan conventions and there are also dedicated conventions and local and international competitions, as well as social networks, websites and other forms of media centered on cosplay activities. The term "cosplay" was coined in Japan in 1. It was inspired by and grew out of the practice then- known as fan costuming at science fiction conventions, beginning with the 1st World Science Fiction Convention in New York City in 1.
Etymology[edit]The term "cosplay" is a Japanese portmanteau of the English terms costume and play.[1] The term was coined by Nobuyuki Takahashi of Studio Hard[2] while attending the 1. World Science Fiction Convention (Worldcon) in Los Angeles.[3] He was impressed by the hall and the costumed fans and reported on both in Japanese magazine My Anime.[2] Takahashi chose to coin a new word rather than use the existing translation of the English term "masquerade" because that translates into Japanese as "an aristocratic costume", which did not match his experience of the World. Con.[4][5] The coinage reflects a common Japanese method of abbreviation in which the first two moras of a pair of words are used to form an independent compound: 'costume' becomes kosu (コス) and 'play' becomes pure (プレ).
History[edit]This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it.(February 2. Pre- 2. 0th century[edit]Masquerade balls were a feature of the Carnival season in the 1.
Royal Entries, pageants, and triumphal processions celebrating marriages and other dynastic events of late medieval court life. They were extended into costumed public festivities in Italy during the 1. Renaissance, generally elaborate dances held for members of the upper classes, which were particularly popular in Venice. Costume parties (American English) or fancy dress parties (British English) were popular from the 1. Costuming guides of the period, such as Samuel Miller's Male Character Costumes (1.
Ardern Holt's Fancy Dresses Described (1. Autumn" or "Night". Most specific costumes described therein are for historical figures although some are sourced from fiction, like The Three Musketeers or Shakespeare characters. Fan costuming[edit].
A Mr. Skygack – an early modern costuming or cosplay outfit, Washington state, 1. One of the earliest recorded examples of costuming based on an existing character from popular media (as opposed to legend or history) were costumes based on A. D. Condo's science fiction comic character Mr. Skygack, from Mars. In 1. 90. 8, a Mr.
Mrs. William Fell attended a masquerade at a skating rink in Cincinnati, Ohio wearing Mr. Skygack and Miss Dillpickles costumes. Shortly after, in 1. Tacoma, Washington wearing another Skygack costume.[1. The first people to wear costumes to attend a convention were science fiction fans Forrest J Ackerman and Myrtle R. Douglas. They attended the 1.
World Science Fiction Convention (Nycon or 1st Worldcon) in the Caravan Hall, New York, USA dressed in "futuristicostumes", including green cape and breeches, based on the pulp magazine artwork of Frank R. Paul and the 1. 93. Things to Come, designed and created by Douglas.[1. Ackerman later stated that he thought everyone was supposed to wear a costume at a science fiction convention, although only he and Douglas did.[1. Fan costuming caught on, however, and the 2nd Worldcon, in 1.
Douglas' room and an official masquerade as part of the programme.[3][1. David Kyle won the masquerade wearing a Ming the Merciless costume created by Leslie Perri, while Robert A. W. Lowndes received second place with a Bar Senestro costume (from the novel The Blind Spot by Austin Hall and Homer Eon Flint).[1. Other costumed attendees included guest of honor E. E. Smith as Northwest Smith (from C.
L. Moore's series of short stories) and both Ackerman and Douglas wearing their futuristicostumes again.[1. Masquerades and costume balls continued to be part of World Science Fiction Convention tradition thereafter.[1. Early Worldcon masquerade balls featured a band, dancing, food and drinks. Contestants either walked across a stage or a cleared area of the dance floor.[1. Ackerman wore a "Hunchbackerman of Notre Dame" costume to the 3rd Worldcon in 1.
Ray Harryhausen, but soon stopped wearing costumes to conventions.[1. Douglas wore an Akka costume (from A. Merritt's novel The Moon Pool), the mask again made by Harryhausen, to the 3rd Worldcon and a Snake Mother costume (another Merritt costume, from The Snake Mother) to the 4th Worldcon in 1. Rules governing costumes became established in response to specific costumes and costuming trends. The first nude contestant at a Worldcon masquerade was in 1. This eventually led to "No Costume is No Costume" rule, which banned full nudity, although partial nudity was still allowed as long as it was a legitimate representation of the character.[1.
Mike Resnick describes the best of the nude costumes as Kris Lundi wearing a harpy costume to the 3. Worldcon in 1. 97. Another costume that instigated a rule change was an attendee at the 2.
Worldcon (1. 96. 2) whose blaster prop fired a jet of real flame; which led to fire being banned.[1. At the 3. 0th World. Con (1. 97. 2), artist Scott Shaw wore a costume composed largely of peanut butter to represent his own underground comix character called "The Turd".
The peanut butter rubbed off, doing damage to soft furnishings and other peoples' costumes, and then began to go rancid under the heat of the lighting. Food, odious and messy substances were banned as costume elements after that event.[1. Costuming spread with the science fiction conventions and the interaction of fandom. The earliest known instance of costuming at a convention in the United Kingdom was at the London Science Fiction Convention in 1. However, members of the Liverpool Science Fantasy Society attended the 1st Cytricon (1.
Kettering, wearing costumes and continued to do so in subsequent years.[2. The 1. 5th Worldcon (1. UK.[2. 4] The 1. 96. Eastercon in London may have been the first British- based convention to hold an official fancy dress party as part of its programme.[2.
The joint winners were Ethel Lindsay and Ina Shorrock as two of the titular witches from the novel The Witches of Karres by James H. Schmitz.[2. 6] In Japan, costuming at conventions was a fan activity from at least the 1. Comiket convention in December 1. Costuming at this time was known as kasou(仮想).[1. The first documented case of costuming at a fan event in Japan was at Ashinocon (1.