Halloween Costume Guide
Eight items centered on one makeup trick. Anne Hathaway’s Mirana is instantly readable once the pale face and plum lips are on. Without them, it’s just a white dress.
Mirana of Marmoreal rules Underland by the end of Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland (2010), played by Anne Hathaway. The whole character is built on a specific visual contrast: skin that looks drained of color, sharp dark brows, and lips stained a deep plum or wine. That combination is not optional. Without it, the gown is unreadable. People who saw the film in their teens will recognize it quickly. Everyone else might not, and that’s just the truth of a character this tied to one specific movie.
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The face is what people register first, and the contrast has to be sharp. Pale skin with muted or natural lips is just a bride. Pale skin with dark brows and deep plum lips is Mirana. If the paint looks patchy in the mirror, it will look worse in photos. Blend it past your jawline and down the neck. One line where the paint stops kills the whole effect.
Mirana moves slowly and deliberately, as though gravity is more of a suggestion for her than a rule. At a party that means you do not rush anywhere. You drift. When someone asks who you are, you look at them for a beat longer than is comfortable before answering. She never raises her voice in the film. She states things quietly, once. If you commit to that energy for even part of the night, the costume lands better than the gown alone ever will.
The Lipstick Transfer Problem
Liquid matte stays better than anything else, but it still transfers onto cups. Bring a small touch-up amount in your bag and reapply after drinking. A smeared plum lip on a white gown halfway through the night is a specific kind of mess. The gown is unforgiving on stains.
Wig and Crown Together
Pin the wig at the crown of your head before the crown goes on. The crown holds better against the wig than against your scalp, but only if the wig itself is secure first. If you skip the pins, someone bumping into you in a crowded room will do it for you, just at the worst possible moment.
The Wonderland Court
The strongest option in this list. Everyone knows the Tim Burton film, every costume is visually distinct, and the group reads as a unit from across the room. The Red Queen and the White Queen together are a natural pairing that makes both costumes stronger. The only risk is that three people in generic Alice costumes will want to join your group uninvited, and that’s just something you have to accept.
The Ethereal Enchantresses
Conditional. The visual theme works well and every character has its own color logic, so no one looks like a copy of anyone else. But it only functions as a group concept if everyone commits to the same level of costume quality. A fully built Maleficent next to a budget Glinda makes it look like five unrelated costumes that happened to show up together.
The Hathaway Portrayals — Same Actor
Niche. This works well at a film-focused event where people are paying attention. At a regular Halloween party, most people will not make the Anne Hathaway connection without being told, and then you are just explaining your costume all night. Grand High Witch from The Witches (2020) is recent enough to help. Fantine is a harder build and lands only for Les Mis people.
The Whites — Same Name
This concept is funny on paper and requires no visual cohesion because that is not the point. Everyone gets to wear a completely different costume and the joke is in the name. It works at any party where people enjoy explaining their costumes. Snow White ties the group together visually if you need it. Walter White and White Goodman will land with nearly everyone.
Human Chess Pieces — Niche
This is a niche concept even by Halloween group standards. Alice in Wonderland uses chess as a structural theme, and Kingpin and Bishop are recognizable on their own, but the chess connection will not land unless your group explains it. The Black Knight from Monty Python is a strong individual costume, and the group works for people who love the concept more than they care about recognition. Honestly, I like it. It’s just not for everyone.
Every Alice in Wonderland costume guide on CostumeRealm.
The gown, wig, face paint, and dark lipstick are non-negotiable purchases. Everything else has substitutes you may already own.
The White Queen does not react to things the way a normal person does. She observes. She floats. She makes unsettling eye contact and means it kindly. That combination is surprisingly easy to sustain at a party because it mostly involves moving slowly and not saying much.
Eight items: white Queen Mirana gown, white blonde wavy wig, gold crown, pearl choker, white body paint, dark plum matte lipstick, red nail polish, and heeled ankle boots. The pale face and plum lips are what make the character readable. Get the makeup right before anything else and the rest of the build follows from there.
Her most recognizable lines from the film:
She delivers all of them quietly, without urgency. The second one is the most useful at a party: say it to your group once and see who responds.
Among people who were teenagers when the 2010 film came out, yes, the recognition is solid. Outside that group, the White Queen is less immediately known than the Red Queen, so you may need to explain the character more than expected. The costume itself is genuinely striking regardless of whether people place it immediately.
Yes. The whole character is built on the contrast between pale skin and dark lips. Without the white paint, a white gown and blonde wig is a generic fairy or princess costume and nothing more. The makeup is what turns it into the White Queen specifically. It is also the thing that photographs best of anything in this build, which matters if anyone wants photos at the party.
Yes. White flats or white heeled sandals both work fine. A floor-length gown covers nearly all of the shoe, so the specific style has very little visual impact. Wear what you can actually stand in for several hours.
The White Queen, full name Mirana of Marmoreal, is the rightful ruler of Underland in Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland (2010), played by Anne Hathaway. Her elder sister Iracebeth (the Red Queen) took the crown from her. She moves as though gravity is a polite suggestion, speaks in near-whispers, and is unable to bring herself to harm any living thing. She returns in the 2016 sequel Alice Through the Looking Glass, with Hathaway reprising the role.