Halloween Costume Guide
Lucy van Pelt has been pulling the football away from Charlie Brown since the strip was still finding its voice in the early 1950s. Peanuts ran from 1950 to 2000 and was drawn entirely by Charles M. Schulz for its whole run (Wikipedia). Lucy’s turquoise dress is the single most consistent visual detail in the strip’s history, which makes this one of the more forgiving builds on the site as long as you don’t cut corners on that one color.
Five pieces and a football you can actually use as a prop. There’s no makeup to fuss with and nothing about the build that needs special ordering or alterations. The dress and wig do the identification work, the socks and shoes place it in the right decade, and the football gives you something to do with your hands all night.
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The dress color is what people clock first, and it’s also the easiest thing to get slightly wrong. A dress that reads as “blue” instead of “turquoise” under indoor party lighting drops the costume from Lucy van Pelt to generic 1960s kid. The wig sitting too high on your forehead has a similar effect, softening the serious, don’t-argue-with-me look that’s actually the point of the character. Get those two things right and the socks and shoes barely matter.
Lucy runs a psychiatric advice booth out of a cardboard box and charges five cents a session, and she means it. When Charlie Brown asks if he can ever become a mature, well-adjusted person, she tells him she needs to be paid in advance, because she doesn’t think he’ll like the answer. That’s the character: confident, a little cruel, and completely sure she’s right. Play it flat and businesslike, not cartoonishly mean.
Test the dress color under real lighting before the event
Party lighting, especially anything warm or dim, can wash a turquoise dress toward plain blue. Check it under a lamp or outside in daylight the day before, not just under your bathroom’s fluorescent bulb. If it looks blue in two different lighting setups, it’s probably the wrong shade for photos.
Decide who you’re going to pull the football away from
The bit only works if you actually do it, and doing it to a stranger at a party can land oddly if they don’t know the reference. Save it for someone who’ll recognize the gag, or announce what you’re doing first. A silent football yank on someone confused just looks like you’re being weird for no reason.
Classic Duo
Excellent pairing and one of the most recognizable two-person costumes in American animation. The football gag alone tells the whole story without either of you saying a word. Anyone who has ever seen a single Peanuts special will get it on sight.
Peanuts Trio
Excellent trio and about as safe a group costume as exists. Three completely different silhouettes, zero risk of anyone mixing up who’s who, and every person at the party will know exactly what strip you’re from before you say a word.
Cartoon Girls Group
Strong group if your friends span a few cartoon generations. All three characters are confident to the point of being a little much, and each look is visually distinct enough that no one gets confused. The connection is more “vibe” than “canon,” so expect to explain the theme once or twice.
Cartoon Kids Group
Might work, but this spans three shows from three different decades with almost no shared audience. Someone who grew up on Peanuts might not know Eliza Thornberry, and someone who grew up on Dexter’s Lab might not know either of the other two. It works as “cartoon girls with strong opinions” more than as a coherent reference.
This is one of the more thrift-friendly builds on the site if you’re willing to hunt for the right dress color.
Lucy has an opinion about everything and no interest in softening it. That’s easy to play because it just means saying what you think, immediately, without qualifying it.
Wear a saturated turquoise dress, not general blue, with a short black bob wig cut close to the brows. Add blue crew socks pulled to mid-calf and black-and-white saddle oxford shoes. Carry a junior football so people who miss the dress color still get the reference.
Yes. Peanuts specials still air every year around the holidays, and Lucy’s turquoise dress and the football gag are two of the most recognized bits in American animation. Kids know her from reruns, adults know her from growing up with the strip. Recognition holds up better here than most costumes this simple.
Her psychiatric booth sign-off, “Five cents, please,” is one of the most quoted lines in the strip. Right behind it is the football gag itself: “I’ll hold the ball and you come running up and kick it,” said to Charlie Brown right before she pulls it away. She’s also behind “Happiness is a warm puppy,” a line so well known it became the title of a Schulz book.
Not required, but worth carrying. The turquoise dress and black bob already identify the character. The football adds the bit: hold it out, let someone reach for it, pull it back. Any Peanuts fan at the party will get it instantly and probably groan on cue.
Yes. Lucy is a children’s character, the dress and shoes come in kids’ sizes, and the junior football is already scaled for smaller hands. It also holds up fine for trick-or-treating since there’s nothing fragile or hard to walk in.
Lucy van Pelt is from Peanuts, the comic strip Charles M. Schulz drew from 1950 to 2000. She’s also in the animated specials, including A Charlie Brown Christmas and It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown. She’s best known for pulling the football away from Charlie Brown and for running a five-cent psychiatric advice booth.
What color should Lucy van Pelt’s dress be, according to this guide?
What does Lucy charge for her psychiatric advice?
Who created Peanuts, and drew it for its entire run?