Bangkok Post

Harry Potter still casts a spell for fans 20 years later

- EMILY G ROE AND NEIL HALL

Dressed in a long black gown and holding a magician’s wand, George Massingham is keen for everyone to know he is a Harry Potter super-fan.

If he isn’t doing Professor Severus Snape, the mysterious potions master at Hogwarts School, the 27-year-old likes to dress for work in some other costume relating to J.K. Rowling’s fantastica­l world of witches and wizards. His colleagues at the Nottingham council office in London are getting used to them.

“They don’t react as much now as they used do,” Massingam said. “They just sort of go, ‘Oh, you’re wearing that again’.” Massingham will again be in wizard garb on Monday, to mark 20 years since the release of Harry Potter And The Philospher’s Stone, the first of seven Potter books in a series that sold 450 million copies in 79 languages and sparked a US$7 billion (237.8 billion baht) movie franchise.

He’s not the only super-fan. Tracey NicolLewis, 43, and her 15-year-old son, Brenden, like to dress up in matching Hogwarts uniforms for trips to the supermarke­t in Cardiff, Wales.

Her obsession with Rowling’s world of wizards started when her late husband gave her one of the books, Goblet Of Fire, shortly before he died. “We kind of clung to that,” she said. She has since spent around £40,000 (1.7 million baht) on all things Harry Potter, putting together a collection of 2,506 pieces of memorabili­a.

South Wales prop maker Victoria Maclean, 37, has a similarly large collection of Potter memorabili­a decorating her home in Cardiff, Wales.

She has a wizard-themed toilet, and her mother’s ashes sit in a glass-jar replica of Wolfsbane Potion — a magical substance from the Potter series that stops werewolves being dangerous.

“People are going to look at it and think I’m a complete freak,” said Maclean, who named her children Harry and Daniel after British actor Daniel Radcliffe, who plays the wizard in the movie franchise.

For 29-year-old Luke Williams, the link to Radcliffe is even stronger. His dark hair, thin nose, brown eyes and even his voice bear a striking resemblanc­e to those of Radcliffe, who first starred as Potter in the 2001 film version of The Philosophe­r’s Stone.

Plans to do a graphic-design course were scrapped as Williams embarked on a 15-year career as a Potter impersonat­or. It has taken him around the world to parties, book launches and shows. But he longs for a different kind of attention.

“The girls still squeal when Harry Potter walks down the road ... but I’d rather be a Brad Pitt lookalike,” Williams said.

 ??  ?? Left to right, fans George Massingham, Abbey Forbes and Karolina Goralik.
Left to right, fans George Massingham, Abbey Forbes and Karolina Goralik.

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