Cosplay US 01612

* IMAGES BY STAGE PHOTOGRAPHIC *

W onder Woman hangs suspended from the ceiling by her lasso, one loop of rope around her thigh all that is keeping her airborne as she waves at the crowd. Deadpool balances on one hand on a thin pole three feet off the ground, legs bent as he defies gravity and the laws of physics. Sailor Moon twirls a hula hoop around her waist, executing a perfect cartwheel as it spins. Minions scamper around the edges of the space, building new scenery as Totoro waddles out and begins juggling soot sprites. What is all of this? Is it a multi-genre crossover episode, or maybe someone’s fanfiction? No, this is entirely real—and hopefully coming to a city near you, courtesy of Acrobatica Infiniti, the nation’s first cosplay circus. Founded by Tana “Tank” Kano just over two years ago, Acrobatica Infiniti is a troupe of professionally-trained circus performers whose mission statement is to build a better artistic community and to strengthen the industry by providing work to established and emerging artists, and to bring the art of circus to people in the convention community who have never experienced it before by relating acts to popular characters and concepts in fandom and cosplay. Tana has been a part of the circus industry for over ten years, but cosplay has been a part of her life for even longer. A professionally trained dancer, Tana’s fascination with costumes guided her into a Fine Arts degree at the Art Institute of Chicago. College is when she first discovered cosplay, she tells us, after a friend invited her along to a convention and she spotted people dressing up as their favorite characters. She immediately fell in love with the idea, and says that a large part of that had to do with performing as a character. So a few years later, when she discovered the circus arts, it was all but certain that eventually the two would come together in a glorious display like Acrobatica Infiniti. In fact, even now those two loves mingle constantly; AI creates 2-4 new characters or acts each month (look for something new and exciting at GenCon this August!!) and currently has over 200 costumes, most of which have been made by Tana herself. We’ve said the word ‘circus’ a lot, but what do we really mean by it? What is a circus, anyway? Tana says she’s had to do some clarifying on that point as well. “Many people hear the word circus and think ‘Barnum & Bailey,’ because that’s basically how America came to know the circus arts,” she explains. “They think oh, lion tamers and trapezes and death-defying stunts. Really, contemporary circus is much more Cirque du Soleil—it isn’t just one act after another that are completely unrelated to each other, it’s about telling a story. Your acts have a theme or a message that ties them together,

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