Halloween Costume Guide
Jareth rules over a chaotic goblin realm and uses enchanted peaches, crystal balls, and a dreamlike ballroom to stop a teenage girl from rescuing her baby brother. The wild blonde mullet wig and the dramatic blue eye makeup are the two items that make this read as Jareth rather than a generic gothic aristocrat. Labyrinth was directed by Jim Henson and released in 1986 with David Bowie in the role (Wikipedia). It flopped on release and has been beloved for forty years since.
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The wig shape is what reads from across the room. If it sits flat rather than having the spiky crown volume, the recognition drops significantly. The eyeshadow is the second most important detail and needs to be applied before the wig, because the ruffled collar and wild hair make it hard to reach the outer eye corners cleanly once everything is on. The tailcoat needs to move dramatically. A stiff or lightweight coat flattens the theatrical quality that defines Jareth’s look.
Jareth deliberately hides from Sarah in the crystal ballroom as she wanders through confused and disorientated, then approaches and draws her into a waltz. He is not menacing in this moment. He is genuinely trying to keep her there. David Bowie described him as “completely smitten” by Sarah’s strong will, and that underlying desperation is what separates this character from a standard fantasy villain.
Makeup Before the Wig
The dramatic eyeshadow needs to extend past the outer corner of each eye toward the temple. Once the wild wig is on, hair falls into that area and makes clean application impossible. Do the full makeup first, use setting spray, then carefully put the wig on.
Practice the Crystal Ball for Ten Minutes
The actual film contact juggling was done by professional Michael Moschen working blind. You have less experience. Ten minutes of slow practice rolling the ball across your palm before the event is enough to do it convincingly. Attempting full juggling moves in a crowd without practice ends with the ball on the floor.
Couples Idea
Excellent couple with the most direct narrative relationship in the film. Sarah’s classic look is a white dress with a red sash, contrasting sharply with Jareth’s theatrical coat and wild hair. Anyone who knows the film understands the dynamic immediately.
Group Idea: The Labyrinth Cast
Strong group for Labyrinth fans. The visual range across these five is enormous: theatrical gothic, simple white dress, grumbling dwarf, huge friendly beast, small knight on a sheepdog. The visual variety is genuinely the best thing about this group. Hoggle, Ludo, and Sir Didymus require significant DIY effort to do properly.
Group Idea: 80s Fantasy Villains
Strong group for people who grew up with 1980s dark fantasy. The common thread is theatrical evil from an era when fantasy villains were genuinely unsettling for children. Each character has a completely different visual identity. Most Halloween crowds will read “memorable 80s villain” without needing specific character knowledge.
Group Idea: Gothic Royalty
Might work, but Jareth is not a vampire and does not belong in the same fictional universe as the others. The through-line is centuries-old aristocratic gothic fashion and disdain for the human world. Most crowds read “gothic villain royalty” which is close enough. Anyone who knows these characters specifically will notice the mixed sources.
The wig and eyeshadow are worth spending on. Everything else can be thrifted or sourced from vintage clothing shops.
Jareth is not a standard villain. He is desperate, theatrical, and funny without meaning to be. Director Jim Henson described him as “devilish more than evil.”
Apply the dramatic blue and grey eye makeup first, before the wig. Then the wild blonde mullet wig, ruffled white Victorian shirt, Goblin King necklace, and black tailcoat over the top. Black trousers, patent leather boots, black leather gloves. Carry the clear acrylic contact ball. The wig and eyeshadow together are what make this Jareth.
Yes, strongly. Labyrinth has a devoted fanbase that has kept it in active conversation for four decades, and the costume functions as a David Bowie tribute as much as a character costume. At a general party it reads as a dramatic gothic villain with excellent hair.
“Just fear me, love me, do as I say, and I will be your slave.” His closing line when Sarah defeats him: “What a pity.” The contrast between the desperation of the first and the quiet resignation of the second is what makes the film’s ending land.
David Bowie played Jareth in the 1986 film directed by Jim Henson. His eyes appear different colors because of anisocoria caused by an injury in a teenage fight when his childhood friend George Underwood accidentally punched him in the eye, permanently dilating one pupil.
Labyrinth, a 1986 dark fantasy film directed by Jim Henson and produced by George Lucas. It was a box office disappointment on release and has been beloved cult viewing for the four decades since. Michael Jackson and Sting were both considered for the role before Bowie was cast.
The film contact juggling was actually performed by professional juggler Michael Moschen crouching behind Bowie working blind. Rolling a clear acrylic ball slowly between your fingers is the move that generates immediate recognition. Ten minutes of practice before the event is enough. Attempting full juggling moves in a crowd without practice ends with the ball on the floor.
Yes. Check what is included before ordering. The wig is almost never part of these sets and must be ordered separately. It is the item that matters most for recognition, so do not skip it regardless of what the set includes.
Who actually performed the crystal ball contact juggling in Labyrinth while David Bowie acted in the scene?
What are Jareth’s famous last words to Sarah before she defeats him?
Which two musicians were considered for the role of Jareth before David Bowie was cast?