Halloween Costume Guide
Fell from the sky. Forgot everything. Still somehow the most important person in the room.
The Stranger crashes onto Middle-earth in a meteor and spends the entire first season trying to remember who he is. The cloak is the build. Everything else adds texture, but without that outer layer the costume reads as nothing in particular. Recognition at a general Halloween party will land as “wizard” before it lands as “The Rings of Power specifically,” which is worth knowing before you commit. Daniel Weyman plays the character in the Amazon Prime Video series (Wikipedia), and the show confirmed at the end of season one that he is an Istar, one of the order of wizards that includes Gandalf.
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The cloak has to look like it belongs to someone who has been sleeping outdoors. If it arrives clean and neat, the costume reads as a store-bought Halloween wizard, which is not the same thing. The specific detail that separates The Stranger from a generic fantasy wanderer is that his clothing has texture and weight. Run your hands through the wig before you put it on. If the beard is too orderly, rough the edges slightly with your fingers. Nothing about this look should appear deliberate.
There is a moment in the show where he stands over Nori, enormous and confused, and she is the one comforting him. He is a being of immense power who cannot remember how to use it or even what it is. That disorientation is the character. At the party, calm and slightly confused reads more accurately than mysterious and brooding. He is not performing mystery. He genuinely does not know what is happening.
Test the beard adhesive the night before
Fake beard adhesive works differently on different skin types, and a full thick beard has more surface area to hold than a small mustache. Apply it at home the day before Halloween, leave it on for an hour, and check whether it shifts. If it does, switch to a stronger spirit gum or use skin-safe double-sided tape along the top edge. Finding this out at the party, two hours in, with half a beard hanging off is a specific kind of problem you do not want.
Dirty hands read better than dirty face
If you want to add grime to the costume, focus on the hands and forearms rather than the face. A little brown eyeshadow rubbed into the knuckles and wrist creases reads as someone who has been traveling through a forest. Heavy face makeup reads as theatrical and takes the character in a different direction than the show’s look, which is grounded and realistic.
Group Idea: The Rings of Power Companions
Strong group for a crowd that watches the show. The visual contrast between the enormous Stranger and the Harfoot characters is genuinely funny in person, which gives this group something to work with beyond just standing in a row. Galadriel and Elrond are more broadly recognized from the Peter Jackson films, so they carry recognition weight for people who have not seen the Amazon series. Everyone needs to know their character, though. This group falls apart if half the people are vague about who they are supposed to be.
Group Idea: Amnesiac Wanderers
Excellent group concept in terms of recognition spread. All four characters are well-known, and three of them have that specific quality of being powerful beings dropped into an unfamiliar situation with incomplete information. Thor works because of the Asgardian crash landing. Eleven works because of the memory and power dynamic. Geralt is a looser connection but his visual is strong enough to carry it. The concept makes sense to anyone you explain it to for ten seconds.
Group Idea: Robed Masters of Magic
Might work, but only at a convention or a party where everyone is already deep in fantasy and comic book material. Gandalf and Harry Potter will be recognized by almost anyone. Dr. Fate requires Black Adam knowledge to land. The Stranger requires Rings of Power knowledge. That is two characters out of four with limited general recognition. The concept is coherent as a theme, but the crowd has to be the right crowd or half the group spends the night explaining themselves.
This is one of the simpler builds on the site. Three items, no props, no complex layering. The difficulty is in making the cloak look worn rather than purchased.
The character is not brooding or intimidating. He is confused, gentle, and occasionally does something that should not be physically possible. That combination is the interesting part.
The costume is built around three items: a gray wig, a thick fake beard, and a camouflage cloak or tattered robe. The cloak is the most visible piece and needs to look rough and worn. Pair with dirty bare feet or wrapped boots, and keep everything as unkempt as possible. The look reads best when nothing about it appears intentional.
Recognition depends entirely on your crowd. The Rings of Power has a dedicated fanbase but never reached the cultural saturation of the Peter Jackson films. Most people at a general party will read this as “mysterious old wizard” rather than “The Stranger specifically,” which still works as a costume even if the character name does not land.
Two lines define him in the first season. The first, spoken with confusion: “When I am lost, I think of the fireflies.” The second, at the end of the season, when he begins to recover his sense of purpose: “When in doubt, always follow your nose.”
The Stranger is played by Daniel Weyman, a British actor. The character falls from the sky in a meteor at the start of the series and spends most of the first season without a clear identity or memory of who he is. The show streams on Amazon Prime Video (IMDb).
The show confirms in the season one finale that The Stranger is an Istar, one of the order of wizards that includes Gandalf. Whether he is specifically Gandalf is something the showrunners have kept deliberately open, though the final episode’s dialogue points strongly in that direction.
The cloak is the one you cannot cut. It carries the visual read of “mysterious robed figure.” The wig and beard matter too, but if you already have long gray or white hair and a full beard, you can skip both and just age the look down with dirt and texture on the robe.
The Stranger spends much of the first season barefoot or with minimal foot coverings. Brown leather sandals or wrapped cloth around bare feet are accurate. Bare feet at an indoor party in October is a personal call. Most people just wear plain brown boots and no one will notice the difference.
Yes. The size contrast between The Stranger and Nori is one of the most visually distinctive things about their pairing in the show, and it works well as a costume duo for exactly that reason. If your group has a significant height difference between two people, this is worth considering.