Ottawa Citizen

CREATIVE COSPLAY

All dressed up with nowhere to go, fans found a way

- LAUREN ORSINI

It took Michelle Anderson a month to create her E3 2019 outfit. It took her an hour to put it on. She wore a wig with red Afro puffs, an army-green tactical vest and fake bloodstain­ed bandage. She completed the look with medical gloves and a mask looped around her neck. She was dressed as Lifeline, a playable combat medic from the video game Apex Legends.

Anderson is a cosplayer, a person who dresses up as a fictional character from a video game, book, or film. A portmantea­u of “costume” and “play,” cosplay has been steadily growing in popularity as a hobby, and sometimes even a profession.

Wherever fans congregate, be that on social media or at in-person convention­s, cosplayers can be found dressed up, and sometimes even performing, as their favourite characters.

Anderson's screen-accurate outfit, complete with a high-tech healing drone accessory, made a big impact on E3 2019 attendees.

She had no idea it would be among the last times she would cosplay in public.

The following year, most of the United States went into lockdown to mitigate the pandemic. As an essential front-line worker, Anderson didn't have the privilege of staying home. Working in the San Francisco Bay area for a cable and internet company, Michelle's job was deemed critical to the new work-from-home paradigm. Each day she went to work wearing the same type of medical gloves from her Lifeline cosplay, but for a very different reason.

“I'm happy I was able to help other people work from home and stay safe,” she said. “But, and I'm getting emotional thinking about this, it was really stressful. I had to worry if I was going to get COVID or not because I was seeing hundreds of people a day.”

To unwind from a job that was alternatel­y exhausting and scary, she turned to her favourite hobby: cosplay. Anderson, like most cosplayers, was accustomed to planning her outfits around events. When they disappeare­d, she found herself adrift.

But in that uncertain period, Anderson and other cosplayers around the country applied the same creativity they showed in making their costumes toward new ways to share them.

Ejen Chuang, a cosplay photograph­er and the author of Cosplay In America, said that based on his informal polls, it wasn't unusual for cosplayers to have pared down their participat­ion during the pandemic. However, there have been a few opportunit­ies over the past year: Even as some events took on a virtual format, a handful brought cosplay along with them. Hashtags like Anime Expo's #MaskYourMa­squerade and #DragonConG­oesVirtual encouraged cosplayers to show off their looks and win prizes while they were staying safe at home.

Some cosplayers also found ways to meet safely in person during the pandemic. Chuang organized multiple socially distanced photo shoots in Austin, Texas. By shooting with a long lens, he could photograph from six feet away or more while simulating proximity.

For career cosplayers, the event-focused nature of the work threatened their livelihood. Profession­al cosplayers pay their bills with event appearance­s; cancellati­ons mean no paycheques.

Yaya Han, a profession­al cosplayer, needed to come up with a Plan B. Since beginning as a hobbyist in her teens, Han has spent the past few decades perfecting her craft. Through a combinatio­n of paid event appearance­s, selling signed merchandis­e, designing cosplay patterns, fabric and trims for mass retail, and operating a cosplay accessorie­s and materials store with three full-time employees (her husband and two fellow cosplayers), it is now her full-time job. Or it was, before everything changed.

“I really thought that my career was set,” Han said. “I'd just written a book introspect­ing on my past 20 years of cosplay. The pandemic has really upended my mindset and made me think about what my next steps are.”

What came next gave Han “multiple tiers of dread and worry.” With family members living in China, she worried about their health and survival. With all of her cosplay appearance­s cancelled, she was also worried about keeping her three employees paid. The pandemic also sparked a tinderbox of anti-Asian sentiment in her home of Atlanta, Ga. Han still avoids going out alone.

But most of all, Han was overwhelme­d by the sheer loss of life.

While she thought about what to do next, she began sewing face masks for elderly neighbours, and then delivering hundreds of them to her local hospitals. Since Han runs a cosplay shop where she sells supplies and handmade accessorie­s for cosplayers, she already had a ready supply of the cotton fabric and elastic ties that could be difficult to find in the early days of the pandemic.

Eventually, Han taught her employees to craft masks and began offering them in her shop alongside cosplay props. This helped keep the small business afloat.

“I realized I could either cut everyone's hours, or I could teach them how to make face masks and figure out the system of working from home, avoiding each other, while still making this new product,” she said.

The other component of Han's new career was a burgeoning new pandemic-based field of remote sponsored cosplay. In one example, Han was approached by a marketing team working with Capcom's Resident Evil Village, a horror-focused shooter starring the villainous vampire Lady Dimitrescu. Han was given two weeks to create the outfit, design a background set, take pictures and video and post it to all of her social media with specified hashtags and phrasing. The process culminated in an 11-hour shoot with her husband and photograph­er Brian Boling. The company compensate­d her with a four-figure payment.

“It's difficult to gauge your worth,” Han said. “I have all these years of experience negotiatin­g convention­s. But this brought me back to a starting point. I'm a newb again. I'm still learning.”

These days, when Han partners with a company, she signs a nondisclos­ure agreement before she even knows which character she will be cosplaying. That same NDA keeps her from sharing progress shots or discussing costume constructi­on with other members of the cosplay community. It's not clear how sustainabl­e this new income stream will be, Han said.

“During the pandemic, a lot of these companies shifted to online promotions because they didn't have events either,” she said. “Once events come back, will they even want me to do these types of collaborat­ions?”

Despite all the changes and turmoil, Han remains hopeful.

“I have survived more than 20 years,” she said. “I'm sure I will find a way to move forward.”

For hobbyists as well, social media replaced events as the ultimate destinatio­n to show off a costume. In the middle of 2020, Anderson joined the video-sharing social network TikTok and found a new way to network with other cosplayers. A video of Anderson modelling several of her cosplays to a Nicki Minaj song netted tens of thousands of views.

“Stuff like that kept me sane because it showed me that I was still able to have fun with my community, even in a pandemic,” said Anderson. “It kept my confidence up.”

Marie Chante Ramos, an ICU nurse and cosplayer, also turned to social media during the pandemic, though at first she had little time to post her costumes. Working night shifts at Raritan Bay Medical Center in Old Bridge, N.J., she saw so many COVID-19 patients that the small hospital's ICU was overflowin­g for months.

“When we got our first COVID patient in the ICU, it was almost like war was coming,” Ramos said. “Even nurses who had 30-plus years of experience were shaken.”

Ramos found solace among fellow cosplayers in the health industry. In a group chat, she and others shared their experience­s, encouragem­ent and the occasional cosplay meme. One of the most popular memes in the early days of the pandemic was the #passthebru­sh challenge, in which participan­ts simulate passing a makeup brush, briefly blotting out the screen with its bristles before revealing a dramatic cosplay transforma­tion. That gave Ramos an idea. What if she and her friends did the same thing, but with a stethoscop­e?

“We are health care profession­als, but we transform ourselves into whoever we want to be through cosplay. So I told the chat, `Hey, wouldn't it be cool if we did a video in our PPE garb?'” Ramos said.

With their bodies concealed by head-to-toe PPE, Ramos knew that it was easy for patients and the public to see them as a faceless bloc instead of real people who were just as, if not more so, affected emotionall­y by the daily loss of life.

The resulting video, Heroes Behind the PPE, shows Ramos and 22 other cosplayers sharing their dual roles as first responders and costumed heroes. At the time of this publicatio­n, the video has nearly half a million views.

“I liked being able to shine some light on these health care profession­als who also have a creative side,” said Ramos.

“The hospital isn't the only thing going on in our lives.”

 ?? DUSTIN CHAMBERS/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Cosplay profession­al Yaya Han strikes a pose during a photo shoot to advertise costume antlers in her warehouse studio in Marietta, Ga.
DUSTIN CHAMBERS/THE WASHINGTON POST Cosplay profession­al Yaya Han strikes a pose during a photo shoot to advertise costume antlers in her warehouse studio in Marietta, Ga.
 ?? AMY OSBORNE/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Michelle Anderson, known as Tatted Poodle, in costume as Shinra Kusakabe, at her home in San Francisco.
AMY OSBORNE/THE WASHINGTON POST Michelle Anderson, known as Tatted Poodle, in costume as Shinra Kusakabe, at her home in San Francisco.
 ?? MELANIE LANDSMAN/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Marie Chante Ramos shows off the Boba Fett costume she made at home in Metuchen, N.J.
MELANIE LANDSMAN/THE WASHINGTON POST Marie Chante Ramos shows off the Boba Fett costume she made at home in Metuchen, N.J.

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