Alternative Media Group

Alternative Media Group RSS feed

City News News Article

Cartoon Characters Come Alive

Author:
Angus Thompson
Posted:
Thursday, 9 April 2009

Last Saturday people from all over Sydney came together to show that cartoons aren’t just for kids. At the Citigate Hotel, Sydney, adults dressed as Japanese cartoon characters to compete over who would represent Australia on the international stage of the World Cosplay Summit.

Among the competitors was 20-year-old Hayley Williams, who wore a red hand made Victorian-era dress, complete with matching bonnet, green bow and long stockings.

Ms Williams won the female runner up prize in the preliminary round of the competition, after having spent six months and $370 making her costume.

Short for ‘costume-play,’ cosplay is a subculture in which people dress as characters, most commonly from Japanese manga (comic books) and anime (cartoons).

The costume character she chose was Shinku, a Victorian aristocrat from the anime series Rozen Maiden, about a group of dolls that come alive and compete for supremacy.

Many of those competing describe themselves an ‘otaku,’ someone who is obsessed with Japanese anime.

Many ‘cosplayers’ are in their early teens to late twenties and spend much of their time reading or watching Japanese anime and collecting associated games, comics and figurines.

The Cosplay Championships encourage anime fans from across Australia to create, dress and compete as their favourite anime character. In addition to making their own costumes they are asked to perform a skit or scene in front a judging panel and audience often in the hundreds.

“It’s a way of exploring our personality while also having the opportunity to be someone different,” said 20-year-old Anita Lun. Her competition partner Ailee Webb, 19, said she just enjoys “making people smile.”

The stakes for Cosplay can be high, with the winner of the Australian competition being flown to Japan to compete in the World Cosplay Summit, where they will face competitors from all around the world, a live audience in excess of 12,000 and a Japanese television audience possibly in the millions.

2008 Australian competition winners Gabriella Lowgran and Catherine Lee, who are part of the 2009 judging panel, described the competition as intense, with many frayed tempers and often a few tears.

Thousands of anime fans will watch the Cosplay Champions as part of the 2009 Animania Festival, a series of conventions which brings together anime fans from across Australia. Among the events included in the 2009 festival are anime screenings, video game competitions, drawing activities and karaoke.

female-2nd-original

Like this article? Register as a subscriber here. It's free! We'll keep you up to date with new stories on the site.

Post a comment

  • Rail tunnel for Surry Hills on the table

    The state government will discuss whether to construct a tunnel through Surry Hills or to install surface rail between Central station and Anzac Parade as part ...
    Read more

    Alternative Media Logo

  • Fighting poverty with photos

    A free exhibition in Newtown will display a broad collection of photographs united under the banner of fighting poverty for a quarter century. The event is jointly hosted by CARE Australia ...
    Read more

    DROUGHT - EAST AFRICA

  • Newbies revive pub with grub

    A Sydney couple is revamping a favourite Leichhardt haunt with a new lick of paint and some fresh ideas. Norton’s on Norton Streetwill now be managed by ...
    Read more

    OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

  • New lease on life for Sydney designers

    Four Sydney designers are injecting some creative energy into one of Oxford Street’s long-vacant retail spaces. He Made She Made is an art and design collective formed by friends and designers Patrick Chambers, Laura ...
    Read more

    shemade

  • New Theatre seeks manager

    The departure of New Theatre’s manager has thrown the Newtown venue into unsteady times with no appointed replacement and undetermined financial backing. The theatre’s manager, Luke Rogers has spent five years at the iconic ...
    Read more

    theatre

Arts & Entertainment