Halloween Costume Guide
Riff Raff spends most of The Rocky Horror Picture Show answering doors, serving meals, and acting like a man with no particular agenda. He has a great deal of agenda. He is a Transylvanian servant to Dr. Frank-N-Furter, Magenta’s brother, and the person who ultimately takes over the castle when he decides the arrangement has gone on long enough. The character was created and originally played by Richard O’Brien, who also wrote the stage musical in 1973 (Wikipedia). He is a parody of Igor, Frankenstein’s servant, which tracks once you notice the hunchback.
Affiliate links. We may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
The hunchback silhouette is the first thing people see, and it has to be visible from across the room to do its job. If the jacket sits too tight over the inflatable hump, the shape gets compressed and reads as a bad fit rather than a deliberate feature. Size up on the jacket if you are between sizes. The wig matters too: flat, low on the forehead, no volume. A fluffy or styled wig turns Riff Raff into a generic Halloween character with a hump, which is a different costume entirely.
In the film, Riff Raff opens the door, serves the dinner, and follows orders, right up until he does not. He has one volume setting for most of the story, which is barely above a murmur, and then one moment at the end where everything he has been holding back comes out at once. At a party, that contrast is the character: quiet, a little too attentive, occasionally smiling at something no one else can see.
Inflate the hunchback before you put the jacket on
Fitting an inflatable hunchback through a jacket sleeve after the fact is exactly as awkward as it sounds. Put the hunchback on first, inflate it to the right size, then layer the waistcoat and jacket over it. Check the side profile in a mirror. If the hump is not clearly visible above the jacket collar, inflate slightly more. The whole point of the item is the silhouette.
Apply the face paint before the costume
Pale face paint on a formal black jacket is very visible and very difficult to remove at a party. Do the makeup first, let it set, then dress. If you are adding grey shading under the eyes or along the cheekbones, use a setting powder over it so it does not transfer onto the collar or bow tie during the night.
Couples Idea
Excellent couple dynamic, though “couple” is a complicated word for two siblings. That tension is built into the source material and the film leans into it, which means the costume pairing comes with a layer of context that either makes it funnier or more awkward depending on who you are with. Visually they contrast well: her wild red hair against his lank blonde, her maid uniform against his formal jacket.
Duo Idea
Strong duo because the power dynamic is the whole joke. One of them is nominally in charge for the entire film. The other one has been quietly planning the end of it. The payoff lands for anyone who knows the story, and the visual contrast between Frank’s corset and Riff Raff’s servant jacket is sharp enough to be readable without explanation.
Group Idea: Rocky Horror Picture Show Cast
Excellent group if everyone commits. The Rocky Horror Picture Show cast is one of the most visually distinct ensembles in musical history, and a full group reads immediately to anyone who has ever seen the film. Riff Raff and Magenta anchor the Transylvanian side of the cast. Frank-N-Furter anchors everything else. The more people in the group, the less explaining anyone has to do.
Group Idea: Iconic Creepy Servants
Might work, but this is a concept group rather than a cast group, which means it needs the crowd to make the connection. The thread between them is real: Riff Raff is explicitly a parody of Igor, so the link to Frankenstein’s servant is built into the character. Lurch and Renfield fit the same archetype. At a costume contest or a party full of horror fans, this lands. At a general event, it reads as four separate costumes that wandered in from different films.
This build is straightforward once the sizing issue with the hunchback and jacket is sorted. Most of the complexity is in the layering order, not in the items themselves.
Riff Raff does not perform. He is present, attentive, and extremely quiet about everything he is actually thinking. That is the character, and it is easier to maintain than it sounds.
The Riff Raff costume set covers the jacket, waistcoat, and bow tie. Add the wig, black trousers, side zip boots with white shoe covers, inflatable hunchback, and pale face paint. The hunchback and the wig are the two items that push the look from “Victorian servant” to unmistakably Riff Raff.
Rocky Horror has been running midnight screenings continuously since 1975, so recognition is wider than you might expect for a film that old. Riff Raff is the second most recognizable character after Frank-N-Furter, and the hunchback silhouette makes him readable even to people who have only seen the film once. A younger crowd may need a second to place him without Magenta standing next to him.
His best line comes near the end of the film, when he finally drops the servant act: “Say good-bye to all of this. And say hello… to oblivion.” It lands harder once you realize he has been planning it the entire time.
Riff Raff was played by Richard O’Brien, who also wrote the original stage musical. O’Brien created the character and then played him on stage in 1973 and in the 1975 film (IMDb). He later hosted the cult game show The Crystal Maze on Channel 4 from 1990 to 1993.
Mostly, but not simply. He takes over the castle at the end and kills Frank, but he also apologizes to Dr. Scott after his nephew dies and lets Brad and Janet leave. He is more of an opportunist who waited until the right moment than a straightforwardly evil character.
You can skip it, but the hunchback is what makes Riff Raff read as Riff Raff rather than a generic Victorian butler. Without it, the costume still works for fans of the film who will recognize the wig and face paint. For a general crowd, the hump is the visual shorthand that does the recognition work.
They are siblings, both Transylvanian, and both servants to Frank-N-Furter. Their relationship in the film is pointed enough that the show has always leaned into it as one of its more deliberately uncomfortable details. As a costume pairing, they are the most coherent duo in the Rocky Horror cast.